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- <text id=90TT1798>
- <title>
- July 09, 1990: Abortion's Hardest Cases
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 09, 1990 Abortion's Most Wrenching Questions
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- COVER STORIES
- Abortion's Hardest Cases
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Should parents have a say in a teenager's decision to end her
- pregnancy? Do rape victims have special rights? In the Supreme
- Court and in Louisiana, the abortion battle lines are redefined
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson--Reported by Jerome Cramer/Washington,
- Melissa Ludtke/Boston and Elizabeth Taylor/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> Afterward, when their daughter was buried and their hearts
- broken, the Bells could see everything clearly. Until then,
- they had not thought about their teenager's getting pregnant
- or what they would do if she did. They did not know that there
- was any such thing as a parental-consent law.
- </p>
- <p> But there is such a law in Indiana, where the Bells live and
- where their daughter Becky, 17, died after an illegal abortion.
- In 1984 the state legislature voted to require a minor to get
- a parent's permission for an abortion or else to convince a
- judge that she is mature enough to make the decision on her
- own.
- </p>
- <p> Becky, whose room in Indianapolis is still filled with
- stuffed animals and riding gear, felt she could do neither. She
- had gone to Planned Parenthood for a pregnancy test, the Bells
- learned as they tried to retrace the steps she took during
- those final days, and there she was told of the Indiana law.
- No one knows what happened between that moment and her death
- two months later. When the Bells went through Becky's purse
- after she died, they found telephone numbers of abortion
- clinics in Kentucky, which did not require parental consent.
- "Becky just happened to live in the wrong state," says her
- father.
- </p>
- <p> Should a teenage girl have the right--and the burden--of deciding about abortion on her own? Isn't abortion at least
- as serious a medical procedure as a tonsillectomy or a tooth
- extraction, both of which require parental involvement in most
- states? Shouldn't the law force a parent and a child to
- communicate, especially if the child is in trouble?
- </p>
- <p> Last week the Supreme Court faced these tough questions in
- its first abortion rulings since the landmark Webster decision
- last July. In a 5-to-4 vote, the Justices upheld a Minnesota
- law requiring unwed teenagers to notify both parents before an
- abortion if the law allows minors to go to a judge instead. In
- a 6-to-3 vote, the court upheld Ohio's requirement that a
- physician notify one parent of a pregnant minor of her intent
- to have an abortion; it also provided for judicial bypass.
- </p>
- <p> The close votes and the widely divergent opinions reveal a
- court still divided over abortion and, in these cases, over the
- state of the family. Justice Anthony Kennedy voted to uphold
- the Minnesota law, with or without the judicial bypass,
- reasoning that to keep parents in the dark about a daughter's
- abortion "is to risk, or perpetuate, estrangement or alienation
- from the child when she is in the greatest need of parental
- guidance and support." But even he conceded that at times
- "notifying one or both parents will not be in the minor's best
- interest."
- </p>
- <p> Just two days after the court's ruling, pro-life activists
- were applauding an even more stunning victory: the Louisiana
- legislature gave final approval to the nation's most
- restrictive abortion law. The bill would make abortion a
- punishable criminal act unless the life of the mother was at
- stake. It allows no exception for victims of rape or incest.
- </p>
- <p> The Louisiana bill and the court's rulings bring to a head
- the two fierce battles fought this past year: the pro-life
- movement's push to deny abortion to all pregnant women, even
- victims of rape and incest; and the pro-choice movement's
- effort to strike down parental-involvement laws as back-door
- ways to restrict abortion that do nothing to improve
- communication between parent and child.
- </p>
- <p> How to deal with rape and incest and parental involvement
- are so-called wedge issues, a way for each side in the abortion
- debate to prove the unreasonableness of the other side. Even
- those who strongly favor a woman's right to choose find
- themselves troubled by the notion of a girl's right to choose,
- so parental consent or notification has been a comparatively
- easy sell: 33 states have passed such laws. By forcing the
- pro-choice movement to challenge this trend, the pro-life
- movement has been able to paint its opponents as anti-family,
- bent on weakening the bond between the generations, encouraging
- teenage promiscuity and fostering a libertine attitude toward
- sex that results in more than 400,000 teenage abortions a year.
- </p>
- <p> If this seems extreme, the same is true--but with the
- sides reversed--on the equally emotional issue of what to do
- about a child conceived in the violence of rape or incest. The
- pro-life movement brooks no exception to the absolute position
- that all abortions, except those to save the life of the
- mother, are wrong, even ones intended to terminate the progeny
- of a rapist. Yet this stance may be their undoing. Louisiana's
- Governor Buddy Roemer, a self-described "right-to-lifer," has
- promised to veto the just-passed antiabortion bill because it
- makes no exceptions for rape and incest.
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes when it is not feasible to make abortions
- following rape or incest illegal, the movement settles for
- cutting off Medicaid funds. "Rape and incest are tragedies,"
- says Illinois Congressman Henry Hyde, author of the federal
- restriction, "but why visit on the second victim, the unborn
- child that is the product of that criminal act, capital
- punishment?" Forcing only poor women to have the children of
- their rapists, says the pro-choice movement, shows how heartless
- the right-to-life movement is.
- </p>
- <p> Yet this issue, like that of parental involvement, is not
- so simple. The victim of rape or incest is often herself an
- innocent child in need of saving. Pamela (a pseudonym) was a
- seventh-grader in Washington when she was allegedly raped by
- her stepfather. When her mother discovered she was pregnant,
- she took her to a Planned Parenthood clinic just ten blocks
- from the White House to arrange an abortion. "She was pitiful,"
- recalls clinic director Mary Vandenbroucke, who had to break
- the news that Medicaid would not pay the $400 cost of an
- abortion, even for a case like Pamela's. Although the mother
- works two jobs, as a part-time government clerk and a cashier
- in a fast-food restaurant at night, she takes home just $289
- every two weeks. Rather than turn away an indigent victim of
- incest, Planned Parenthood agreed to perform the procedure for
- $100.
- </p>
- <p> Because cases like Becky's and Pamela's are so difficult to
- sort out, they have become this year's combat zone. In the
- fight to win over the ambivalent majority of Americans, the
- pro-choice movement is on the wrong side of parental consent:
- 69% of adult Americans favor laws requiring a teenage girl to
- get her parents' permission before having an abortion,
- according to a TIME/CNN survey. Similarly, pro-lifers lose
- support over rape and incest: 84% of those polled believe the
- Government should pay when a rape victim needs an abortion and
- cannot afford it, and 77% when incest is involved.
- </p>
- <p> Both sides in the abortion fight could score political
- points by showing moderation on these issues, and both would
- remove easy targets for their adversaries. "Parental
- notification is not a battle pro-choicers should fight in
- public, although the pro-lifers force them to. It defies the
- common sense of most people," says William Schneider, resident
- fellow of the American Enterprise Institute. "The same goes for
- being against abortion for victims of rape and incest. People
- think you're from Mars; it offends them." But neither side is
- backing down. Their reasons show how intractable are abortion's
- hardest cases.
- </p>
- <p>Parents, Teenage Sex and Abortion
- </p>
- <p> Better than a parent's control over abortion would be a
- world in which children too young to understand the power of
- sex did not engage in it, and one in which those unprepared to
- be pregnant did not become so. Since long before Juliet met
- Romeo, adults have been trying to convince adolescents barely
- able to decide what to wear in the morning that they are not
- mature enough to manage the complicated and overwhelming
- feelings that come with a sexual relationship. But for just as
- long, teenagers have been unpersuaded. Surveys show that at
- least half the young people between the ages of 15 and 19 are
- sexually active, and 24% of teenage girls will become pregnant
- by age 18.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, communication about sex between parents and
- children is stuck in the Dark Ages. Says one Washington
- psychiatrist: "Parents and children don't want to know about
- each other as sexual beings. Sex is the point of separation,
- the country into which a parent does not travel with a child."
- That is one reason why school sex-education courses, which put
- the subject at a clinical remove, have become the norm.
- </p>
- <p> But when sex moves from the private to the open and a
- teenager is pregnant, children who normally turn to a parent
- in a time of trouble will usually do so whether or not there
- is a law requiring it and whether or not they have been talking
- about sex. In Massachusetts, which requires teens to obtain the
- permission of both parents or of a judge, about 75% of the
- girls who have abortions share the decision with their parents.
- Levels of parental involvement are equally high in neighboring
- Connecticut and New Hampshire, where such consent is not
- required. "I see no point whatsoever in the parent-involvement
- laws," says Jamie Ann Sabino, an attorney who chairs the
- Lawyer Referral Panel on Judicial Consent for Minors in
- Massachusetts. "These girls didn't go to their parents because
- of them."
- </p>
- <p> Teenagers who do not want to talk to their parents often
- find a way to avoid it: they go before a judge, or they go out
- of state; they wait until their condition becomes obvious and
- have a dangerous, second-trimester abortion; or they have a
- baby by default. Justice Thurgood Marshall described the
- dilemma in his dissent in the Minnesota case: "This scheme
- forces a young woman in an already dire situation to choose
- between two fundamentally unacceptable alternatives: notifying
- a possibly dictatorial or even abusive parent or justifying
- her profoundly personal decision in an intimidating judicial
- proceeding to a black-robed stranger."
- </p>
- <p> There is some evidence supporting the contention that
- parental-involvement laws restrict access to abortions. In a
- brief, opponents of the Minnesota law, which took effect in
- 1981, cite a study conducted between 1980 and 1984 indicating
- that the birthrate for 15-to-17-year-olds in Minneapolis rose
- 38.4%, while the birthrate for 18-to-19-year-olds, not covered
- by the law, rose only 0.3%. In the 20 months after Massachusetts
- put its parental-consent law into effect in 1981, 1 of every
- 3 teenage abortions was done out of state, while those within
- the state dropped 43%. Former Superior Court Judge Paul
- Garrity, who is pro-life by sentiment, feels that the law
- exists to "harass these kids."
- </p>
- <p> Garrity, who presided over hundreds of judicial-bypass
- hearings, also believes that a youngster can be a good judge
- of whether parents can handle an unwanted pregnancy on top of
- their own difficulties or even whether the parents want to be
- involved. Of the teenagers who came before him, Garrity says,
- "To a person, they were scared to death, but they did know what
- they wanted." An alcoholic mother, a drug-addicted father, an
- absent or neglectful parent are some of the reasons teenagers
- cite for not going home for help. The fact that only half the
- minors in Minnesota live with both biological parents persuaded
- Justice Sandra Day O'Connor to agree with the more liberal
- Justice John Paul Stevens on the need for judicial bypass.
- </p>
- <p> An anomaly in the movement to require a parent's consent to
- an abortion is that there is no law requiring parental approval
- of staying pregnant and bearing a child, with its
- life-changing, lifelong consequences. There are compelling
- health and safety arguments against pregnancy: teenage girls
- are 24 times as likely to die of childbirth as of a
- first-trimester abortion, according to the Alan Guttmacher
- Institute. While having a child is one part of the full and
- complex life of a woman, it often turns out to be the defining,
- and confining, fact of a teenager's existence. Eight out of 10
- girls who have babies at 17 or younger drop out of high school.
- Children born of teenagers are much more likely to grow up in
- poverty and be undereducated and poorly housed. Children born
- of teenage mothers are twice as likely to die in infancy as are
- those born of women in their 20s, and they are much more likely
- to be raised in resentment and rage.
- </p>
- <p> It is unlikely that politicians could write laws to improve
- communications in unhappy families, or keep teenagers from
- becoming pregnant, or provide wise and caring parents when they
- do. Still, making the argument against parental involvement is
- like arguing for the right to burn the American flag--politically, it is a tough case no matter how right the
- reasoning. Now that the Supreme Court has put its stamp of
- approval on some notification laws, the two sides head back to
- the legislatures. Says Kate Michelman, executive director of
- the National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL): "On the
- heels of this week's court decisions, we again confront the
- reality that the right to choose literally hangs by a thread
- in post-Webster America."
- </p>
- <p>Rape and Incest
- </p>
- <p> Two wrongs do not make a right, both sides argue. Pro-life
- advocates say an unborn child, innocent of the actions of the
- father, should not become a second victim; murder should not
- follow a rape. The pro-choice side responds that a woman forced
- to bear a child conceived in rape or incest is violated twice,
- once by the criminal and then by an uncaring state that forces
- her to carry and give birth to the incarnation of her
- assailant.
- </p>
- <p> Until recently, the primary arena for this fight has been
- Congress, where since 1977 the Hyde Amendment has denied
- Medicaid funding for abortions unless a woman's life is
- endangered. A significant triumph for the right-to-life
- movement in the first years after abortion was legalized, the
- amendment has become the lightning rod for pro-choice advocates
- on the Hill. Last year Congresswoman Barbara Boxer introduced
- a proposal to restore abortion funds for women who are
- assaulted. "Why should the Government leave their side at such
- a moment of crisis?" she demanded. Hyde called his opponents
- "the death squads of the left" and "the pro-killer crowd."
- California Democratic Congressman George Miller, arguing for
- the Boxer amendment, implored his colleagues not to turn the
- "disgusting, violent, solitary act of rape into a gang rape by
- the Congress of the U.S."
- </p>
- <p> The Boxer amendment passed both houses in October 1989,
- garnering the votes of otherwise pro-life legislators like
- South Carolina Republican Congressman Arthur Ravenel Jr. But
- George Bush vetoed the bill, and the House failed to muster the
- two-thirds majority required for an override. While Hyde and
- his supporters contend that abortion is wrong no matter what
- the circumstances, Bush says abortion should be legal for
- victims of rape or incest. He just does not want to pay for
- such abortions, a stance that allowed Boxer to tag him as "a
- kinder and gentler man [who] executes the cruelest veto on the
- poorest, most vulnerable victims of society."
- </p>
- <p> Twenty-nine states have legislated the equivalent of the
- Hyde Amendment and restrict Medicaid funds to women in
- life-threatening situations. Ten states pay for abortions in
- which rape and incest are involved; twelve states, including
- Washington, New York and California, still fund all abortions.
- </p>
- <p> The congressional fight is a holding action until the
- right-to-life movement can push through a state law that forces
- the Supreme Court to review Roe v. Wade. Louisiana's law might
- be the one. Right-to-life leaders think they have a chance to
- override Governor Roemer's threatened veto. But they may lose
- more conservatives like Garey Forster, a self-described
- "confused Catholic," who voted against the bill because it was
- "too harsh, too final." A doctor can be sentenced to a minimum
- of one year at hard labor and charged a $10,000 fine; a woman
- can be punished as an accessory to the crime, just as if she
- were driving a getaway car.
- </p>
- <p> Short of banning abortion outright, the pro-life movement
- is lobbying legislatures to impose reporting requirements on
- victims of rape and incest that would make such abortions
- nearly impossible to obtain. Says the National Right to Life
- Committee's spokeswoman, Susan Smith: "We do everything we can
- to eliminate abortions and to prevent funding for rape and
- incest, but where it is inevitable we lobby for tight reporting
- requirements to prevent fraud." The new tactic was explained at
- the National Right to Life Committee convention in Sacramento
- last month by Scott Fischbach, the group's field coordinator:
- Laws that ban some abortions, he said, "can lead up to the
- point of stopping them all."
- </p>
- <p> Smith and Fischbach scored a temporary victory in Idaho last
- March with passage of a bill that would have permitted legal
- abortions only if a woman's life was endangered, if an incest
- victim was under 18, or if the rape was reported to the police
- within seven days (when a victim would not yet know whether she
- was pregnant). Pro-life Governor Cecil Andrus vetoed the bill,
- calling the seven-day provision punitive and "without
- compassion." He added, "On the eighth day, [the woman] ceases
- to be the victim and becomes a criminal."
- </p>
- <p> Strict reporting requirements are a vestige of the way the
- legal system treats rape victims. It has taken years to reverse
- the assumption that women fabricate claims of rape and incest
- or that they somehow bring the crime on themselves. Until
- recent reforms, a victim's testimony alone was not enough to
- convict a rapist, although it was enough to convict any other
- kind of criminal. Even now, a rape victim who goes to court
- often finds herself on trial as much as her attacker is. As a
- result, rape is one of the most underreported crimes in
- America. The Senate Judiciary Committee estimates that a woman
- is raped every six minutes in the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> The Idaho veto and the pending one in Louisiana have not
- caused pro-lifers to retreat from their position on rape and
- incest. National Right to Life Committee spokeswoman Smith
- cites Pennsylvania's experience to show that women lie about
- rape. When the state did not require that rape or incest be
- reported to appropriate authorities, an average of 36
- rape-related abortions a month were paid for by the state. When
- reporting requirements took effect in 1988, that number went
- down to about three a month.
- </p>
- <p> Relatively few abortions are at stake here--less than 1%
- of the 1.6 million abortions performed annually result from
- rape or incest--yet the pro-life movement is determined to
- fight over each one. The movement insists that its position
- springs from religious beliefs that allow no compromise.
- Indeed, the harsh logic of the abortion argument makes the
- exception for rape and incest vulnerable to a charge of
- hypocrisy. If all fetal life is sacred, as pro-lifers insist,
- there should be no distinction between pregnancies that result
- from consensual sex and those that result from force.
- Otherwise, bearing a child becomes a woman's punishment for
- sex.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the political costs, activists on each side of the
- abortion debate have vowed to battle it out, somehow assured
- they can win over the middle. NARAL's Michelman is determined
- to convince the public that parental-consent laws are a sham.
- Pro-life and pro-choice forces in Congress pledge to wage the
- fight over funds for rape and incest victims again and again,
- every time Boxer or her allies attach a rider to a bill. "We'll
- debate this till we're blue in the face, and there will be
- blood all over the chamber," says Hyde. And despite the defeat
- snatched from the jaws of victory in Idaho, and perhaps
- Louisiana, the pro-life lobby will continue to press for
- recriminalizing abortion in all the states.
- </p>
- <p> Polls show that most Americans feel ambivalent about
- abortion and that the two sides in the debate fail to express
- the moral ambiguity at the heart of the matter. The
- irreconcilable answers people give to pollsters are, in part,
- an expression of society's inability to come to grips publicly
- with so private an issue. In a Los Angeles Times poll last
- year, 61% of those interviewed said abortion is morally wrong;
- 57% of them believe it is murder, yet 51% think it should
- remain a woman's decision. When rape and incest and parental
- authority enter into the mix, the numbers become ever more
- confusing.
- </p>
- <p> What happened last week in Louisiana and the court was as
- much about the state of the family as it was about abortion.
- The Louisiana legislation conjures up a world where all
- children are born into families that will take care of them,
- whether their conception came about through love or violence.
- By contrast, the court decisions addressed a world that seems
- to have spun out of control, where pregnant children have to
- be forced to talk to their parents. Who would not wish for a
- Father Knows Best kind of life, where teenagers delayed
- becoming parents until they were no longer children, where
- youngsters in trouble could turn to families full of wise
- advice, where rape and incest were unknown and abortion was an
- unusual remedy for a rare misfortune? But dealing with the
- world as it is, the Justices, like most Americans, still find
- themselves struggling for a messy middle ground.
- </p>
- <p>Do you favor or oppose a law requiring a teenager to have her
- parents' consent before an abortion?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Favor<cell type=i>69%
- <row><cell>Oppose<cell>26%
- <row><cell>Not Sure<cell>5%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>If a rape victim becomes pregnant and cannot afford an abortion,
- should the government pay for it?
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Yes<cell type=i>84%
- <row><cell>No<cell>13%
- <row><cell>Not Sure<cell>3%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>If your teenage daughter becomes pregnant, would you advise her
- to:
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Marry the father<cell type=i>14%
- <row><cell>Raise the child alone<cell>22%
- <row><cell>Give the child up for adoption<cell>15%
- <row><cell>Get an abortion<cell>11%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>If your teenage son made someone pregnant, would you advise him
- to:
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Marry the mother<cell type=i>20%
- <row><cell>Help pay for the abortion<cell>7%
- <row><cell>Help pay for medical expenses and child support<cell>52%
- <row><cell>Try to get out of the situation<cell>1%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>Should a teenager be able to do the following without parental
- consent:
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell>Should<cell>Should Not<cell>Not Sure
- <row><cell type=a>Have a tooth pulled<cell type=i>63%<cell type=i>34%<cell type=i>3%
- <row><cell>Donate blood<cell>59%<cell>38%<cell>3%
- <row><cell>Obtain birth control<cell>53%<cell>42%<cell>5%
- <row><cell>Have an abortion<cell>38%<cell>57%<cell>5%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>[From a telephone poll of 1,000 adult Americans taken for
- TIME/CNN on May 8-9 by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman. Sampling
- error is plus or minus 3%.]
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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