Archive for December, 2006

Good ideas bad results

Saturday, December 2nd, 2006

One of the big elephants in a room of conservative and progressive Christians is the pro-life pro-choice debate. It is a classic wedge issue which has been used to manipulate voters and identify whether you are part of the “we” camp or the “them” camp.

I don’t think that the issue will ever be settled to everyone’s satisfaction. That’s because choosing to define conception as the moment when life and the full rights of personhood begin also simultaneously restricts the rights of women to control their own bodies and lives. Instead we have to look to issues of women’s health that we can all agree on and look for areas of compromise there that give us a way to move forward.

I think that we CAN all agree that, if possible, abortion should be a medical procedure of last resort. No woman wants to have an abortion.

History already proves that you don’t reduce abortions by making them illegal. You simply force women to take much larger medical risks.

The most practical way to dramatically reduce abortions is to dramatically reduce unwanted pregnancies. But here’s where policy appears to run headlong into ideology. Many of those who object to abortion on demand also object to education on safe sexual practices as well as easy access to contraceptive medication and devices. They argue that abstinence and Christian values should be the exclusive focus of sex education.

I’ve got no problem with abstinence education. I believe that those couples who wait until marriage to consummate their relationship receive a special blessing. I think that every child that is interested in learning more about these blessings should hear about them at home, in church, and in school.

Abstinence education alone, however, just doesn’t work. The CDC’s Youth Risk Behavior Survey attributes only 20% of the drop in teen pregnancies to abstinence and 80% to access to effective birth control methods. A recent study from Columbia University supports these facts and questions federal funding of abstinence programs that don’t also discuss contraception. Yet the Bush administration recently appointed Dr. Eric Keroack to head the nation’s family planning program. Dr. Keroack was the head of what the Chicago Sun Times calls “an extremist group” which opposes birth control of any sort. He is now responsible for $283M in Public Health Service Title X funds earmarked to underwrite contraceptive services to women who need them.

If you are curious about what the results of an “abstinence-only“ approach might be, you need look no further than Africa. AIDS infection rates, deaths from illegal abortions, and the number orphaned or abandoned children have skyrocketed there over the past six years as a direct result of the US funding cuts to family planning clinics dispensing condoms and performing abortions. Those cuts were the direct result of the Bush administration replacing international public health policy experts with ideological extremists like Dr. Keroack.

So here’s my take on it. We as a country have to decide what is really important. If dramatically reducing the number of abortions is really important, then we have to take the steps in education (including abstinence) AND easy availability of contraceptives that will dramatically reduce unprotected intercourse. Those parents who don’t want their kids to participate in those classes or have access to those resources can opt out, just as they can today.

Abstinence may be appealing from a purity of purpose point of view, but the results that we are already seeing in Africa suggest that as public policy it is terribly wrong.

Only Christians need apply

Friday, December 1st, 2006

There is a disturbing movement in this country to change history and alter the basic agreements on which this country was founded. It springs from the sincere belief that Bible-based Christian values would do a better job of guiding this country than our current set of laws. But it doesn’t stop there. It goes on to suggest that the original intent of the founding fathers was to create an evangelical Christian nation and that it is the duty of every “person of faith” to reclaim this country for Christ.

I think that I qualify as a person of faith. I’m a Christian who reads the Bible every day and believes in the power of prayer. That’s my choice, not my obligation. My “right to choose” is what this country was founded on and not the choice itself.

The founding fathers were deeply religious but also came from colonies with official Christian religions. In early New England biblical law was common law. Much like some political evangelicals of today, the Puritans felt they had a holy mission to demonstrate the “right way” to worship, think, and govern. Their colonial history included not only witch burning and Quaker hanging, but also military action against unbelievers.

The promise of our nation is that we offer everyone the same opportunities regardless of gender, color, or creed. Whether you believe in the Bible, the Koran, the Torah, Darwin, or Budweiser; you are equal under the law. Individual religions have every right to believe that they know the only way to heaven. They have no right to dictate how anyone else should believe or live.

When it comes to questions of history, don’t just believe your pastor or me. Find out for yourself. I recommend mainstream historian Garry Wills’, Under God: Religion and American Politics for an unbiased view.

Democracy is messy. It challenges us to make difficult choices. It’s a moving rough and tumble target. When you contrast this with the clarity and pure ideals of most religions, it’s easy to be tempted. But just as Jesus had to reject the desert temptation of ruling the world in order to save it, we have to reject the current false promise that our country’s salvation lies in adopting a “Christians preferred” Bible-based form of government.