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- <text id=91TT2279>
- <title>
- Oct. 14, 1991: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 14, 1991 Jodie Foster:A Director Is Born
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 32
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST
- Who Owes What to Whom?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Having babies is not Darlene Johnson's problem. Raising
- them is. Until recently, Johnson, 28, was in a California
- prison for having beaten two of her four children with a belt
- and an electric cord. What makes the Johnson case unusual is not
- the nature of her crime, which is all too common, but the
- choice offered her by the sentencing judge in Tulare County: the
- chance to cut her jail time if she agreed to the surgical
- implantation of Norplant, the new birth-control device that
- prevents conception for up to five years. That choice, which
- Johnson accepted and which many perceive as coercive, despite
- the ease with which Norplant can be removed, highlights a
- growing national debate about the proper balance between
- competing interests: the desire to protect individual liberties
- while recognizing a citizen's obligations to the community, and
- society's interest in encouraging, and in some instances
- forcing, responsible behavior.
- </p>
- <p> Bolstered by polls that show strong support for their
- proposals, legislators in several states have introduced bills
- that would require convicted female drug addicts to choose
- between Norplant and jail.
- </p>
- <p> "Reproductive freedom is an important right," says Kansas
- state representative Kerry Patrick, "but a child's right to be
- born healthy is paramount over a woman's right to bear a
- drug-impaired baby. And we, the community, have a right to be
- spared unnecessary costs. Simply to provide welfare payments and
- education from kindergarten through the 12th grade for a healthy
- child costs $205,000 in Kansas, a figure that climbs
- astronomically if that kid is born drugged."
- </p>
- <p> The same conflict arises in the controversy over testing
- hospital patients for AIDS. Some people argue for mandatory
- testing; others insist that it be voluntary. But both groups
- seem concerned only with the patient's rights. "No one on either
- side wonders if the patient has a responsibility to his fellow
- human beings," says George Washington University sociologist
- Amitai Etzioni. "The language focuses almost exclusively on
- individual rights, which are quickly described as absolute and
- which are then disconnected from societal obligations."
- </p>
- <p> To Etzioni and his followers, the question is how best to
- promote responsibility before imposing it. "In the end, free
- people are going to decide for themselves how to act," says
- Roger Conner of the American Alliance for Rights &
- Responsibilities, a bipartisan public-interest group. "How they
- feel about a duty that may be imposed on them is crucial. Way
- before something like Norplant is coerced, there has to be
- serious education and the widespread availability of birth
- control. If those conditions are met, there is a far greater
- possibility that both the individual and society will accept
- imposition. A regime that reaches for the penalty first is close
- to being a police state."
- </p>
- <p> There is much to noodle here, and there soon may also be
- the opportunity to see if these issues can support a
- presidential campaign. The leading Democratic advocate of civic
- obligation is Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton, who announced his
- candidacy last week. Beyond sharing the views of Etzioni and
- Conner, Clinton has actually succeeded in having some of the
- "responsibilities" philosophy codified in law. For example,
- Arkansas parents who fail to attend parent-teacher conferences
- can be fined, and students who drop out of school are denied
- driver's licenses. "Not everything we do that is wrong is
- illegal," says Clinton. "The trick is to provide the incentives
- and disincentives that can curb such behavior."
- </p>
- <p> In Clinton's mind, the driver's-license question is simple
- because driving is a privilege, not a right. "But there's even
- more to it," he says. "If you drop out of school, your earnings
- can be in free fall--that is if you're lucky enough to get a
- job in the first place. You end up dragging down the whole
- society. You cost us more than you contribute. So obviously we
- have the right to attach conditions designed to keep you in
- school."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton acknowledges that some see parental fines as
- clashing with the right to public education, which he concedes
- is absolute. But, he observes, "everything has a context. It is
- clear that too many parents and students believe that all kids
- cannot learn or that their ability to learn is more a function
- of genetic makeup than of how much effort you put in. I think
- both those notions are wrong, so I believe anything society does
- to strengthen family responsibilities and give schools the
- chance to teach is acceptable. And given that parents are an
- integral part of a child's education, I don't see anything at
- all wrong in fining them for failing to do their part."
- </p>
- <p> Many of Clinton's ideas, which include instituting a
- system of national service that would oblige youngsters to
- perform various community-based tasks in exchange for college
- assistance, are viewed by liberal Democrats as neo-Republican.
- So his task is difficult. Clinton's views may well appeal to
- voters in a general election, but they will surely be less
- attractive to the more liberal electorate that has controlled
- the Democratic Party's nominating process for 20 years.
- </p>
- <p> The politics aside, an activist like Clinton would be
- better placed than a conservative to push the "responsibilities"
- agenda. Most Republicans see government as "the problem"; their
- views are "trapped by their antitax and antigovernment
- rhetoric," says Conner. "When they talk about rights and
- responsibilities, the red flags go up. People see them as being
- demanding without being supportive, as wanting to take without
- being willing to give." On the flip side, adds Conner, in an
- analysis Clinton shares, "liberals are going to have to realize
- that the only way to generate public support for expanding the
- programs they see people needing is to accept linking that help
- to some very tough disincentives, and even coercion, for those
- who don't understand that along with government's help come
- serious obligations."
- </p>
- <p> Exactly.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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