Sean Parr
Abortion; or, the three chatty ideologues: a demonstration in two scenes
By Sean Parr
SCENE I — House of Mistress Elizabeth, the Liberal
Elizabeth and Mary are seated near a good fire.
ELIZABETH: Although I am a liberal and you, Mary, are a conservative — I believe that we can both agree that we are blessed to live in a country where a citizen's freedom of choice and right to privacy are so highly esteemed.
MARY: I am inclined to agree with you, Elizabeth, however in this country we enjoy so many liberties. Why do you exclusively dwell on privacy and choice?
ELIZABETH: Because they are the protections that allow for abortion rights — and the battle for abortion rights is the battle for equal rights.
MARY: I must admit that I disagree. I believe that, were abortion rights to become permanently obtained, any notion of equal rights would be destroyed.
ELIZABETH: Do you hold as much to be the case due to your tired conviction that a fetus somehow possesses rights? Do you subscribe to irrationality? Do you believe that abortion is murder?
MARY: Murder is precisely what is taking place. This is speaking bluntly, but the thing is very evident. It is crude, but clear.
ELIZABETH: This is why I abhor these discussions! You anti-choice fanatics always sneak murder into the abortion debate.
MARY: "Is it the word or the thing that frightens you?"
ELIZABETH: ... Silly Mary! On what else could the abortion debate depend, if not on a woman's privacy of choice?
MARY: I believe that I can demonstrate that LIFE is the discussion's core. Privacy and choice are important, my dear — as are liberty and property — but all rights are meaningless without life. Don't you agree?
ELIZABETH: Yes, however, a fetus is not a life. And I defy you to prove that it is!
MARY: But it is not necessary to determine such a thing. Only to understand government's proper role.
ELIZABETH: Please explain further.
MARY: Would you agree that it is the duty of the government to ensure to its people their natural rights? Unalienable rights , like those mentioned in the Declaration of Independence? Life? Liberty? Property? Do you grant it is the government's job to secure those rights?
ELIZABETH: I do. However, like I've said, a fetus cannot be proven to be a life and therefore has no guarantee to those rights.
MARY: If the babe in the womb cannot be known to be a life — and if the prevailing obligation of government is to protect the life of its people — then government should be compelled to err on the side of life.
ELIZABETH: I'm not sure I entirely understand your meaning.
MARY: Perhaps Dr. Ravi Zacharias explained it more aptly when he said:
Here is the question: Is that life within that mother's womb a life or not? If you don't know the answer to the question... how many more decisions are we going to base on an agnostic platform that could be costing millions of lives?
ELIZABETH: I see. So, from your perspective, life is the predominant right without which all others are secured in vain?
MARY: Correct.
ELIZABETH: And further, if there ever is a doubt as to whether or not the lives of a people are in danger, the protection of life rights should remain the prideful duty of a just government?
MARY: Correct.
ELIZABETH: And is it also your belief that this duty is to be executed not by the states, but by the federal government?
MARY: Only if the state governments fail to guarantee natural rights to their citizens.
ELIZABETH: I think there are many — like our friend, the libertarian — who would regard such centralized enforcement as an assault on federalism.
MARY: Shall we pay him a visit then?
ELIZABETH: A fresh perspective would be a delight!
SCENE II — House of Master Timothy, the Libertarian
Timothy and Mary are seated near a window overlooking a fine park. Elizabeth is seated across the room.
TIMOTHY: Mary, you and I see eye-to-eye on many things. How is it that a limited government proponent, such as yourself, can advocate federal encroachment into the affairs of the individual states?
MARY: Timothy, perhaps an analogy will help to explain my case?
TIMOTHY: Perhaps, Mary. Go ahead.
MARY: Very well. In the military, along with other concerns, it is the responsibility of the commander to ensure that his subordinates protect the lives of the soldiers under their command.
TIMOTHY: Okay...
MARY: What is the commander to do if his subordinates report to him their desire to implement an artillery strike on an enemy structure without first having determined whether or not the structure is occupied with friendly soldiers?
TIMOTHY: I suppose the commander should order his subordinates to cease the assault until the structure is known to be empty of all friendly soldiers.
MARY: In other words, the commander should err on the side of life.
TIMOTHY: I see. So in your analogy — the commander is the federal government, the subordinates are the individual states, and the soldiers are the citizens?
MARY: Correct.
TIMOTHY: And you feel that, as it is the duty of the commander to protect the lives of his soldiers, the federal government should protect the lives of its citizens.
MARY: What I am saying, more correctly, is that it is the job of the federal government to ensure that the individual states protect the unalienable rights of their citizens.
TIMOTHY: Mary, although I am personally against abortion, I respectfully disagree with your position. Per the Tenth Amendment, the states maintain the option to allow or disallow the practice of abortion because the protection of unborn life is nowhere enumerated in the U.S. Constitution as a federal responsibility.
MARY: But the Declaration of Independence states that...
TIMOTHY: I know what the Declaration states, however the Declaration, though part of the organic law of the United States, is not justiciable. It is not a legally actionable document. The Declaration is not the Law of the Land. It does not determine how we are to be governed — as the Constitution does. You should defer in your knowledge to me. I am a libertarian. And I know the Constitution.
MARY: Timothy, it is an entirely consistent view for the proponent of limited government — conservatives and libertarians, each — to advocate the federal encroachment into the affairs of the individual states, so long as that encroachment is in agreement with Declaration principles and finds its justification in the Constitution. Would you subscribe to my opinion if I could successfully argue for its constitutionality?
TIMOTHY: I suppose I would. I do not adhere to emotionalism. I am no liberal. If such an argument were valid, I would abandon my previous worldview and adopt the more sound option.
MARY: In that case, I will attempt to convert you. Are you familiar with Article 4, Section 4 of our Constitution?
TIMOTHY: I don't quite have it committed to memory.
MARY: It states that "The United States shall guarantee to every state in this union a republican form of government."
TIMOTHY: Yes, but what makes you claim that "a republican form of government" consists of the protection of life rights for the unborn?
MARY: Dr. Alan Keyes answered that question when he said:
Respect for unalienable rights is the goal and basic requirement of the republican form of government... Both logically and historically, the Declaration is the reference point for understanding the substance of the 'republican form of government.'
TIMOTHY: Historically? Bah! The Declaration has never been legally used as a basis for any enforcement of its principles! It's not justiciable!
MARY: Oh, but I believe that it is. And so did Abraham Lincoln when he referenced the Declaration in the Gettysburg Address by proclaiming that ours was a nation "dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal."
Lincoln's use of executive power to prosecute the war must be seen as a historical example of the enforcement of Declaration principles. If Declaration principles, natural rights, can be seen as necessary components of a republican form of government — and if the state governments fail in their obligation to secure those rights — then it becomes the responsibility of the federal government to do so.
TIMOTHY: Very interesting logic, Mary.
MARY: However Timothy, it is important to state that during the Civil War the unalienable right under contention was not life — but LIBERTY. And it is my belief that liberty ought to be granted to all, but first so must life be.
TIMOTHY: I knew we wouldn't finish this conversation without that word coming up!
MARY: What word do you mean?
TIMOTHY: Liberty! As if the fight for liberty is the same as that of your cause.
MARY: The fight for life is the fight for liberty because liberty, without life, becomes nothing.
TIMOTHY: This is why I abhor these discussions! You anti-choice fanatics always sneak liberty into the abortion debate.
ELIZABETH: (from across the room): "Is it the word or the thing that frightens you?"
© Sean Parr
March 23, 2011
SCENE I — House of Mistress Elizabeth, the Liberal
Elizabeth and Mary are seated near a good fire.
ELIZABETH: Although I am a liberal and you, Mary, are a conservative — I believe that we can both agree that we are blessed to live in a country where a citizen's freedom of choice and right to privacy are so highly esteemed.
MARY: I am inclined to agree with you, Elizabeth, however in this country we enjoy so many liberties. Why do you exclusively dwell on privacy and choice?
ELIZABETH: Because they are the protections that allow for abortion rights — and the battle for abortion rights is the battle for equal rights.
MARY: I must admit that I disagree. I believe that, were abortion rights to become permanently obtained, any notion of equal rights would be destroyed.
ELIZABETH: Do you hold as much to be the case due to your tired conviction that a fetus somehow possesses rights? Do you subscribe to irrationality? Do you believe that abortion is murder?
MARY: Murder is precisely what is taking place. This is speaking bluntly, but the thing is very evident. It is crude, but clear.
ELIZABETH: This is why I abhor these discussions! You anti-choice fanatics always sneak murder into the abortion debate.
MARY: "Is it the word or the thing that frightens you?"
ELIZABETH: ... Silly Mary! On what else could the abortion debate depend, if not on a woman's privacy of choice?
MARY: I believe that I can demonstrate that LIFE is the discussion's core. Privacy and choice are important, my dear — as are liberty and property — but all rights are meaningless without life. Don't you agree?
ELIZABETH: Yes, however, a fetus is not a life. And I defy you to prove that it is!
MARY: But it is not necessary to determine such a thing. Only to understand government's proper role.
ELIZABETH: Please explain further.
MARY: Would you agree that it is the duty of the government to ensure to its people their natural rights? Unalienable rights , like those mentioned in the Declaration of Independence? Life? Liberty? Property? Do you grant it is the government's job to secure those rights?
ELIZABETH: I do. However, like I've said, a fetus cannot be proven to be a life and therefore has no guarantee to those rights.
MARY: If the babe in the womb cannot be known to be a life — and if the prevailing obligation of government is to protect the life of its people — then government should be compelled to err on the side of life.
ELIZABETH: I'm not sure I entirely understand your meaning.
MARY: Perhaps Dr. Ravi Zacharias explained it more aptly when he said:
Here is the question: Is that life within that mother's womb a life or not? If you don't know the answer to the question... how many more decisions are we going to base on an agnostic platform that could be costing millions of lives?
ELIZABETH: I see. So, from your perspective, life is the predominant right without which all others are secured in vain?
MARY: Correct.
ELIZABETH: And further, if there ever is a doubt as to whether or not the lives of a people are in danger, the protection of life rights should remain the prideful duty of a just government?
MARY: Correct.
ELIZABETH: And is it also your belief that this duty is to be executed not by the states, but by the federal government?
MARY: Only if the state governments fail to guarantee natural rights to their citizens.
ELIZABETH: I think there are many — like our friend, the libertarian — who would regard such centralized enforcement as an assault on federalism.
MARY: Shall we pay him a visit then?
ELIZABETH: A fresh perspective would be a delight!
SCENE II — House of Master Timothy, the Libertarian
Timothy and Mary are seated near a window overlooking a fine park. Elizabeth is seated across the room.
TIMOTHY: Mary, you and I see eye-to-eye on many things. How is it that a limited government proponent, such as yourself, can advocate federal encroachment into the affairs of the individual states?
MARY: Timothy, perhaps an analogy will help to explain my case?
TIMOTHY: Perhaps, Mary. Go ahead.
MARY: Very well. In the military, along with other concerns, it is the responsibility of the commander to ensure that his subordinates protect the lives of the soldiers under their command.
TIMOTHY: Okay...
MARY: What is the commander to do if his subordinates report to him their desire to implement an artillery strike on an enemy structure without first having determined whether or not the structure is occupied with friendly soldiers?
TIMOTHY: I suppose the commander should order his subordinates to cease the assault until the structure is known to be empty of all friendly soldiers.
MARY: In other words, the commander should err on the side of life.
TIMOTHY: I see. So in your analogy — the commander is the federal government, the subordinates are the individual states, and the soldiers are the citizens?
MARY: Correct.
TIMOTHY: And you feel that, as it is the duty of the commander to protect the lives of his soldiers, the federal government should protect the lives of its citizens.
MARY: What I am saying, more correctly, is that it is the job of the federal government to ensure that the individual states protect the unalienable rights of their citizens.
TIMOTHY: Mary, although I am personally against abortion, I respectfully disagree with your position. Per the Tenth Amendment, the states maintain the option to allow or disallow the practice of abortion because the protection of unborn life is nowhere enumerated in the U.S. Constitution as a federal responsibility.
MARY: But the Declaration of Independence states that...
TIMOTHY: I know what the Declaration states, however the Declaration, though part of the organic law of the United States, is not justiciable. It is not a legally actionable document. The Declaration is not the Law of the Land. It does not determine how we are to be governed — as the Constitution does. You should defer in your knowledge to me. I am a libertarian. And I know the Constitution.
MARY: Timothy, it is an entirely consistent view for the proponent of limited government — conservatives and libertarians, each — to advocate the federal encroachment into the affairs of the individual states, so long as that encroachment is in agreement with Declaration principles and finds its justification in the Constitution. Would you subscribe to my opinion if I could successfully argue for its constitutionality?
TIMOTHY: I suppose I would. I do not adhere to emotionalism. I am no liberal. If such an argument were valid, I would abandon my previous worldview and adopt the more sound option.
MARY: In that case, I will attempt to convert you. Are you familiar with Article 4, Section 4 of our Constitution?
TIMOTHY: I don't quite have it committed to memory.
MARY: It states that "The United States shall guarantee to every state in this union a republican form of government."
TIMOTHY: Yes, but what makes you claim that "a republican form of government" consists of the protection of life rights for the unborn?
MARY: Dr. Alan Keyes answered that question when he said:
Respect for unalienable rights is the goal and basic requirement of the republican form of government... Both logically and historically, the Declaration is the reference point for understanding the substance of the 'republican form of government.'
TIMOTHY: Historically? Bah! The Declaration has never been legally used as a basis for any enforcement of its principles! It's not justiciable!
MARY: Oh, but I believe that it is. And so did Abraham Lincoln when he referenced the Declaration in the Gettysburg Address by proclaiming that ours was a nation "dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal."
Lincoln's use of executive power to prosecute the war must be seen as a historical example of the enforcement of Declaration principles. If Declaration principles, natural rights, can be seen as necessary components of a republican form of government — and if the state governments fail in their obligation to secure those rights — then it becomes the responsibility of the federal government to do so.
TIMOTHY: Very interesting logic, Mary.
MARY: However Timothy, it is important to state that during the Civil War the unalienable right under contention was not life — but LIBERTY. And it is my belief that liberty ought to be granted to all, but first so must life be.
TIMOTHY: I knew we wouldn't finish this conversation without that word coming up!
MARY: What word do you mean?
TIMOTHY: Liberty! As if the fight for liberty is the same as that of your cause.
MARY: The fight for life is the fight for liberty because liberty, without life, becomes nothing.
TIMOTHY: This is why I abhor these discussions! You anti-choice fanatics always sneak liberty into the abortion debate.
ELIZABETH: (from across the room): "Is it the word or the thing that frightens you?"
© Sean Parr
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