The Awl http://www.theawl.com/ Be Less Stupid Wed, 20 Apr 2011 13:20:33 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.2 Is 'Roe v. Wade' Effectively Dead? http://www.theawl.com/2011/04/is-roe-v-wade-effectively-dead http://www.theawl.com/2011/04/is-roe-v-wade-effectively-dead#comments Wed, 20 Apr 2011 13:20:33 +0000 Alex Balk http://www.theawl.com/2011/04/is-roe-v-wade-effectively-dead "Supporters and opponents of abortion agree on nothing. One side says this is a conversation about fertilized eggs; the other says it's about fetuses. One side says the debate is about personal autonomy; the other says it's about murder. One side sees exceptions to abortion restrictions for reasons of maternal life or health as necessary to protect life; the other sees them as cunning 'loopholes.' Increasingly, however, there is a fundamental assumption both sides seem to share, even if they don't say so, and it may well shape the future of abortion rights in America: Opponents and supporters of abortion appear to have taken the position that Roe v. Wade is no longer the law of the land."

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"Supporters and opponents of abortion agree on nothing. One side says this is a conversation about fertilized eggs; the other says it's about fetuses. One side says the debate is about personal autonomy; the other says it's about murder. One side sees exceptions to abortion restrictions for reasons of maternal life or health as necessary to protect life; the other sees them as cunning 'loopholes.' Increasingly, however, there is a fundamental assumption both sides seem to share, even if they don't say so, and it may well shape the future of abortion rights in America: Opponents and supporters of abortion appear to have taken the position that Roe v. Wade is no longer the law of the land."

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Only 14 More Hours of Family Planning Hostage-Taking http://www.theawl.com/2011/04/only-14-more-hours-of-family-planning-hostage-taking http://www.theawl.com/2011/04/only-14-more-hours-of-family-planning-hostage-taking#comments Fri, 08 Apr 2011 10:04:46 +0000 Choire Sicha http://www.theawl.com/2011/04/only-14-more-hours-of-family-planning-hostage-taking You know what would help solve the fake "deadlock" that may shut down the government at midnight? If Planned Parenthood could save money by not having to go state by state to defend legal abortion in courts from Arizona to Ohio to Missouri to Connecticut to Iowa. Since their public policy expenditures are something like $55 million, and Planned Parenthood's government contracts and grants are only something like $363 million, none of which is used to pay for abortion services, they could get closer to not needing your government money if half the states in the country would stop pushing stupid laws. (Though the best part is, Planned Parenthood and its fellow litigants often get their legal bills paid, since they frequently win their cases against these stupid laws.) Also, everyone needs to stop saying that "abortion" is what is leading to the government shutdown, since the federal government is not allowed to provide funds for abortions. Really, the Republicans in actuality just don't want you to get your sexually transmitted diseases treated.

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You know what would help solve the fake "deadlock" that may shut down the government at midnight? If Planned Parenthood could save money by not having to go state by state to defend legal abortion in courts from Arizona to Ohio to Missouri to Connecticut to Iowa. Since their public policy expenditures are something like $55 million, and Planned Parenthood's government contracts and grants are only something like $363 million, none of which is used to pay for abortion services, they could get closer to not needing your government money if half the states in the country would stop pushing stupid laws. (Though the best part is, Planned Parenthood and its fellow litigants often get their legal bills paid, since they frequently win their cases against these stupid laws.) Also, everyone needs to stop saying that "abortion" is what is leading to the government shutdown, since the federal government is not allowed to provide funds for abortions. Really, the Republicans in actuality just don't want you to get your sexually transmitted diseases treated.

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South Dakota By The Hours http://www.theawl.com/2011/03/south-dakota-by-the-hours http://www.theawl.com/2011/03/south-dakota-by-the-hours#comments Tue, 22 Mar 2011 15:20:19 +0000 Alex Balk http://www.theawl.com/2011/03/south-dakota-by-the-hours "South Dakota Gov. Dennis Daugaard signed a law Tuesday requiring women to wait three days after meeting with a doctor to have an abortion, the longest waiting period in the nation." Should, however, you be in the market for a handgun, the wait is a more manageable two days.

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"South Dakota Gov. Dennis Daugaard signed a law Tuesday requiring women to wait three days after meeting with a doctor to have an abortion, the longest waiting period in the nation." Should, however, you be in the market for a handgun, the wait is a more manageable two days.

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240 Politicians Come Together In Support of Teens Having STDs http://www.theawl.com/2011/02/240-politicians-come-together-in-support-of-teens-having-stds http://www.theawl.com/2011/02/240-politicians-come-together-in-support-of-teens-having-stds#comments Fri, 18 Feb 2011 14:45:49 +0000 Choire Sicha http://www.theawl.com/2011/02/240-politicians-come-together-in-support-of-teens-having-stds 240 members of the House of Representatives voted to deny federal funding to Planned Parenthood. Because you know what we should all be against? Healthcare, unbiased information and STD prevention. Enjoy your uneducated and pregnant kiddos, Republican America! Should anyone have any money left after the politician-induced recession, perhaps they could give some to Planned Parenthood.

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240 members of the House of Representatives voted to deny federal funding to Planned Parenthood. Because you know what we should all be against? Healthcare, unbiased information and STD prevention. Enjoy your uneducated and pregnant kiddos, Republican America! Should anyone have any money left after the politician-induced recession, perhaps they could give some to Planned Parenthood.

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The Personhood Movement is Quietly Rolling Along (Over Your Rights) http://www.theawl.com/2011/02/the-personhood-movement-is-quietly-rolling-along http://www.theawl.com/2011/02/the-personhood-movement-is-quietly-rolling-along#comments Tue, 15 Feb 2011 09:50:21 +0000 Choire Sicha http://www.theawl.com/2011/02/the-personhood-movement-is-quietly-rolling-along South Dakota is going to vote on a bill that amends its justifiable homicide law! They want to make sure that you can kill people with justification if someone is going to harm your unborn child "or the unborn child of that person's spouse, partner, parent, or child." The amendment passed out of committee with a handy 9-3 vote. So you can see where this is going. (Fun fact: the law as written already allows you to kill to prevent a felony being performed upon your master or your servant.) The personhood movement is achieving success state by state (just like the gay marriage movement, sort of!) and they are going to try out a new tactic in Ohio: banning abortions after pregnancies of four weeks.

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South Dakota is going to vote on a bill that amends its justifiable homicide law! They want to make sure that you can kill people with justification if someone is going to harm your unborn child "or the unborn child of that person's spouse, partner, parent, or child." The amendment passed out of committee with a handy 9-3 vote. So you can see where this is going. (Fun fact: the law as written already allows you to kill to prevent a felony being performed upon your master or your servant.) The personhood movement is achieving success state by state (just like the gay marriage movement, sort of!) and they are going to try out a new tactic in Ohio: banning abortions after pregnancies of four weeks.

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For Your Own Good: Chipping Away at 'Roe' http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/for-your-own-good-chipping-away-at-roe http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/for-your-own-good-chipping-away-at-roe#comments Mon, 24 Jan 2011 14:00:32 +0000 Chris Lehmann http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/for-your-own-good-chipping-away-at-roe The Supreme Court’s historic Roe v. Wade decision turned 38 last week, and regardless of one’s ultimate view of the issue, the legal right to abortion on demand is clearly in the throes an awkward middle age.

This year’s Roe anniversary coincides with the indictment of Philadelphia abortion provider Kermit Gosnell on eight counts of murder. Gosnell appears to have been the sort of unscrupulous abortion mill operator you’d find in a Jack Chick comic—an answer to the many fervid prayers of pro-life activists keen to make the public abortion understand as murder in the most brutal and forceful terms. When state inspectors suspended his license and closed his clinic down in February, they noted that he performed abortion in any term of a pregnancy, heedless of basic health, safety or sanitation measures.

They reported finding “blood on the floor and parts of fetuses in jars”—though as the Philadelphia district attorney’s office notes, these conditions prevailed only in the high-turnover main facility of Gosnell’s clinic, which catered chiefly to low-income and immigrant pregnant women in the middle Atlantic. A separate part of the clinic, designed to serve better-heeled suburban white patients, was safer and cleaner, the DA reports. Gosnell himself got rich in the process, even though he was never actually licensed as an OB-GYN, charging about $3,000 per procedure, and making $1.8 million; the DA’s office had found $240,000 in cash in his home.

The grand jury report on the indictments spells out the routine butchery of the Gosnell operation in a wealth of horrifying, heartbreaking detail. Seven of the eight murder counts involve him (or one of his all-too-often untrained assistants) ending the lives of viable fetuses—another routine malpractice alleged in the indictments involved Gosnell blithely disregarding or misrepresenting the gestation of a fetus, so as to sidestep Pennslyvania’s Abortion Control Act, which forbids abortions after the 24th week. Gosnell or his fellow clinicians would terminate these more mature fetuses by crushing their spines or slitting their throats. The one non-fetus count in the indictment is a wrenching character study unto itself: In November 2009, a 41-year-old patient named Karnamaya Mongar died after an unlicensed employee of the clinic administered too much anesthesia to her. Mongar had arrived in the United States just four months earlier together with her husband, after spending almost twenty years in a Nepalese refugee camp; the couple had been expelled from Bhutan along with thousands of other dissidents for taking part in pro-democracy protests, and Mongar’s husband, Ash, had just found work at a Virginia chiecken factory. After a Virginia clinic refused her an abortion because Mongar was in her second trimester, she was referred to Gosnell’s operation; there, a clinic’s aide performed an ultrasound, and while Gosnell signed a form stipulating he’d met with Mongar beforehand, he hadn’t bothered to, instead leaving an aide who was by all accounts his least competent anesthesia hand to administer what the indictment. The initials of both Mongar and her daughter, who drove her to the clinic, were affixed to consent and waiver forms, even though Mongar spoke no English and her daughter scarcely spoke any. Mongar was a diminutive 4’11” and weighed 110 lbs, even well into her second trimester; a competent physician would have taken that into account with her anesthesia; but then again, a competent physician would have actually met with his patient and not signed a form falsely representing that he had done so. Over a grueling six-hour ordeal that sought to chemically induce cramping and labor, Mongar was administered heavy doses of sedative to be kept asleep. As the grand jury report tersely notes, “repeated injections of strong narcotics, administered in accordance with Gosnell’s standard procedure, killed Mrs. Mongar.”

Clearly, there is nothing for pro-choice activists to cheer in this grisly saga. And critics of the absolutist, no-slippery-slope defense of reproductive rights—“abortion on demand, without apology,” as the slogan has it—are seizing on Gosnell’s story as a limit-case of where this reasoning leads. The terms of engagement, as always, are the entirely arbitrary trimester-scheme of fetus viability that the Roe decision bequeathed to the partisans as its own sort of scripture. In the worldview of choice absolutism, as Slate’s Will Saletan writes...

...there's no moral difference between eight, 18, and 28 weeks. No one has the right to judge another person's abortion decision, regardless of her stage of pregnancy. Each woman is entitled to decide not only whether to have an abortion, but how long she can wait to make that choice.... You can argue that what Gosnell did wasn't conventional abortion—he routinely delivered the babies before slitting their necks—but the 33 proposed charges involving the Abortion Control Act have nothing to do with that. Those charges pertain strictly to a time limit: performing abortions beyond 24 weeks. Should Gosnell be prosecuted for violating that limit? Is it OK to outlaw abortions at 28, 30, or 32 weeks? Or is drawing such a line an unacceptable breach of women's autonomy?

Yes, the Gosnell case does raise these well worn issues anew—though one obvious rejoinder to Saletan’s rhetorical questions is that it’s not too much to ask that the state competently administer both later-term abortion limits and standard medical regulation and licensing protocols.

Still, Gosnell’s grotesque brand of malpractice, in the Mongar case especially, also touches on the emerging new legal and moral battleground of the abortion debate. As Mother Jones writer Sarah Blaustein notes, abortion foes are increasingly citing the well-being of the mother as the basis for restricting and—so they hope—eventually outlawing the procedure all together. South Dakota’s controversial 2005 bill virtually banning abortion was redrafted to stress the alleged long-term mental-health harm that abortions wreak on women who endure the procedure. And the U.S. Supreme Court, in its 2007 Gonzales v. Carhart ruling upholding the congressional ban on later-term abortions, employed a version of the same rationale. The majority opinion, written by Justice Kennedy, conceded that the proposition holding that abortions harmed the mental health of patients was “unexceptionable,” even though “no reliable data” actually upholds that view. In lieu of such data Kennedy cited the anecdotal testimony presented before the South Dakota legislature—even though, as Blaustein observes, that legislation itself contained no exception for the mother’s physical health.

Such acrobatics point up the rhetorically overloaded character of the seemingly never-to-be-resolved moral debate over abortion. For pro-life absolutists, the fetus in gestation possesses a sort of emotional supra-life, despite so much of the legal debate’s preoccupation of just when a fetus can be said to be defined as an independent human life. In this righteous scheme, the crocodile tears shed over the alleged mental health perils the procedure wreaks on would-be mothers almost entirely crowds out the actual plight of people like Karnamaya Mangar, who was no “culture of death” libertine. She had two daughters in addition to the one who drove her to Gosnell’s clinic, and a grandchild as well; in all likelihood, she and her husband reckoned an unplanned pregnancy was an economic burden they couldn’t fathom facing in a strange land on a chicken worker’s salary. And there’s no rhetorical percentage for the anti-abortion crowd to make the debate about victims such as her, since an outright abortion ban would vastly increase the volume of unscrupulous and unlicensed providers like Gosnell in the marketplace, and thereby multiply the body count among women seeking outlawed abortions.

Meanwhile, for pro-choice absolutists, the hard-fought legal goal of women’s bodily autonomy is the higher good that tends to suborn other moral or legal claims. As Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote in a stinging dissent to Kennedy, the Carhart opinion rested on “an antiabortion shibboleth for which [the Court] concededly has no reliable evidence.... This way of thinking reflects ancient notions about women's place in the family and under the Constitution—ideas that have long since been discredited.”

Still, one can’t help but thinking how little meaning such notions of choice and autonomy wound up having for Mongar, especially after she’d paid so heavily for agitating for democracy in her own homeland. The pat, passionately held certitudes on both sides of the abortion debate fall oddly silent before a system of health care that deliberately ensures a higher quality of basic care for the more affluent—and as the Philadelphia DA observed, even a shitheel like Gosnell knew enough about the real workings of the class-segmented health care market to reproduce its logic in his own facility.

Perhaps it’s no coincidence that the debate over universal health care is prey to the same theatrically gnat-straining brand of moral absolutism—or what amounts to the same thing, the wan subject of difference-trimming resolutions from clerics that are most notable for their eagerness to sidestep the culture-war landmine of abortion rights. The Gossnell indictment doesn’t note what religious beliefs Mongar may have held, but one thing seems clear: She was a collateral casualty of a sclerotic public discourse that, in its patent disregard for making choice a nonlethal good in a fiercely privatized medical marketplace, can fairly be described as faithless.



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The Supreme Court’s historic Roe v. Wade decision turned 38 last week, and regardless of one’s ultimate view of the issue, the legal right to abortion on demand is clearly in the throes an awkward middle age.

This year’s Roe anniversary coincides with the indictment of Philadelphia abortion provider Kermit Gosnell on eight counts of murder. Gosnell appears to have been the sort of unscrupulous abortion mill operator you’d find in a Jack Chick comic—an answer to the many fervid prayers of pro-life activists keen to make the public abortion understand as murder in the most brutal and forceful terms. When state inspectors suspended his license and closed his clinic down in February, they noted that he performed abortion in any term of a pregnancy, heedless of basic health, safety or sanitation measures.

They reported finding “blood on the floor and parts of fetuses in jars”—though as the Philadelphia district attorney’s office notes, these conditions prevailed only in the high-turnover main facility of Gosnell’s clinic, which catered chiefly to low-income and immigrant pregnant women in the middle Atlantic. A separate part of the clinic, designed to serve better-heeled suburban white patients, was safer and cleaner, the DA reports. Gosnell himself got rich in the process, even though he was never actually licensed as an OB-GYN, charging about $3,000 per procedure, and making $1.8 million; the DA’s office had found $240,000 in cash in his home.

The grand jury report on the indictments spells out the routine butchery of the Gosnell operation in a wealth of horrifying, heartbreaking detail. Seven of the eight murder counts involve him (or one of his all-too-often untrained assistants) ending the lives of viable fetuses—another routine malpractice alleged in the indictments involved Gosnell blithely disregarding or misrepresenting the gestation of a fetus, so as to sidestep Pennslyvania’s Abortion Control Act, which forbids abortions after the 24th week. Gosnell or his fellow clinicians would terminate these more mature fetuses by crushing their spines or slitting their throats. The one non-fetus count in the indictment is a wrenching character study unto itself: In November 2009, a 41-year-old patient named Karnamaya Mongar died after an unlicensed employee of the clinic administered too much anesthesia to her. Mongar had arrived in the United States just four months earlier together with her husband, after spending almost twenty years in a Nepalese refugee camp; the couple had been expelled from Bhutan along with thousands of other dissidents for taking part in pro-democracy protests, and Mongar’s husband, Ash, had just found work at a Virginia chiecken factory. After a Virginia clinic refused her an abortion because Mongar was in her second trimester, she was referred to Gosnell’s operation; there, a clinic’s aide performed an ultrasound, and while Gosnell signed a form stipulating he’d met with Mongar beforehand, he hadn’t bothered to, instead leaving an aide who was by all accounts his least competent anesthesia hand to administer what the indictment. The initials of both Mongar and her daughter, who drove her to the clinic, were affixed to consent and waiver forms, even though Mongar spoke no English and her daughter scarcely spoke any. Mongar was a diminutive 4’11” and weighed 110 lbs, even well into her second trimester; a competent physician would have taken that into account with her anesthesia; but then again, a competent physician would have actually met with his patient and not signed a form falsely representing that he had done so. Over a grueling six-hour ordeal that sought to chemically induce cramping and labor, Mongar was administered heavy doses of sedative to be kept asleep. As the grand jury report tersely notes, “repeated injections of strong narcotics, administered in accordance with Gosnell’s standard procedure, killed Mrs. Mongar.”

Clearly, there is nothing for pro-choice activists to cheer in this grisly saga. And critics of the absolutist, no-slippery-slope defense of reproductive rights—“abortion on demand, without apology,” as the slogan has it—are seizing on Gosnell’s story as a limit-case of where this reasoning leads. The terms of engagement, as always, are the entirely arbitrary trimester-scheme of fetus viability that the Roe decision bequeathed to the partisans as its own sort of scripture. In the worldview of choice absolutism, as Slate’s Will Saletan writes...

...there's no moral difference between eight, 18, and 28 weeks. No one has the right to judge another person's abortion decision, regardless of her stage of pregnancy. Each woman is entitled to decide not only whether to have an abortion, but how long she can wait to make that choice.... You can argue that what Gosnell did wasn't conventional abortion—he routinely delivered the babies before slitting their necks—but the 33 proposed charges involving the Abortion Control Act have nothing to do with that. Those charges pertain strictly to a time limit: performing abortions beyond 24 weeks. Should Gosnell be prosecuted for violating that limit? Is it OK to outlaw abortions at 28, 30, or 32 weeks? Or is drawing such a line an unacceptable breach of women's autonomy?

Yes, the Gosnell case does raise these well worn issues anew—though one obvious rejoinder to Saletan’s rhetorical questions is that it’s not too much to ask that the state competently administer both later-term abortion limits and standard medical regulation and licensing protocols.

Still, Gosnell’s grotesque brand of malpractice, in the Mongar case especially, also touches on the emerging new legal and moral battleground of the abortion debate. As Mother Jones writer Sarah Blaustein notes, abortion foes are increasingly citing the well-being of the mother as the basis for restricting and—so they hope—eventually outlawing the procedure all together. South Dakota’s controversial 2005 bill virtually banning abortion was redrafted to stress the alleged long-term mental-health harm that abortions wreak on women who endure the procedure. And the U.S. Supreme Court, in its 2007 Gonzales v. Carhart ruling upholding the congressional ban on later-term abortions, employed a version of the same rationale. The majority opinion, written by Justice Kennedy, conceded that the proposition holding that abortions harmed the mental health of patients was “unexceptionable,” even though “no reliable data” actually upholds that view. In lieu of such data Kennedy cited the anecdotal testimony presented before the South Dakota legislature—even though, as Blaustein observes, that legislation itself contained no exception for the mother’s physical health.

Such acrobatics point up the rhetorically overloaded character of the seemingly never-to-be-resolved moral debate over abortion. For pro-life absolutists, the fetus in gestation possesses a sort of emotional supra-life, despite so much of the legal debate’s preoccupation of just when a fetus can be said to be defined as an independent human life. In this righteous scheme, the crocodile tears shed over the alleged mental health perils the procedure wreaks on would-be mothers almost entirely crowds out the actual plight of people like Karnamaya Mangar, who was no “culture of death” libertine. She had two daughters in addition to the one who drove her to Gosnell’s clinic, and a grandchild as well; in all likelihood, she and her husband reckoned an unplanned pregnancy was an economic burden they couldn’t fathom facing in a strange land on a chicken worker’s salary. And there’s no rhetorical percentage for the anti-abortion crowd to make the debate about victims such as her, since an outright abortion ban would vastly increase the volume of unscrupulous and unlicensed providers like Gosnell in the marketplace, and thereby multiply the body count among women seeking outlawed abortions.

Meanwhile, for pro-choice absolutists, the hard-fought legal goal of women’s bodily autonomy is the higher good that tends to suborn other moral or legal claims. As Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote in a stinging dissent to Kennedy, the Carhart opinion rested on “an antiabortion shibboleth for which [the Court] concededly has no reliable evidence.... This way of thinking reflects ancient notions about women's place in the family and under the Constitution—ideas that have long since been discredited.”

Still, one can’t help but thinking how little meaning such notions of choice and autonomy wound up having for Mongar, especially after she’d paid so heavily for agitating for democracy in her own homeland. The pat, passionately held certitudes on both sides of the abortion debate fall oddly silent before a system of health care that deliberately ensures a higher quality of basic care for the more affluent—and as the Philadelphia DA observed, even a shitheel like Gosnell knew enough about the real workings of the class-segmented health care market to reproduce its logic in his own facility.

Perhaps it’s no coincidence that the debate over universal health care is prey to the same theatrically gnat-straining brand of moral absolutism—or what amounts to the same thing, the wan subject of difference-trimming resolutions from clerics that are most notable for their eagerness to sidestep the culture-war landmine of abortion rights. The Gossnell indictment doesn’t note what religious beliefs Mongar may have held, but one thing seems clear: She was a collateral casualty of a sclerotic public discourse that, in its patent disregard for making choice a nonlethal good in a fiercely privatized medical marketplace, can fairly be described as faithless.



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New York City Has Healthier Babies, Because They Want Them http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/new-york-city-has-healthier-babies-because-they-want-them http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/new-york-city-has-healthier-babies-because-they-want-them#comments Fri, 07 Jan 2011 10:33:25 +0000 Choire Sicha http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/new-york-city-has-healthier-babies-because-they-want-them In 2009, according to the numbers just released by the City at the end of 2010, New York City had 126,774 live births! And 90,000 pregnancies—that were reported, at least!—ended in chosen termination. So of course the Archbishop is weeping and freaking out.

According to the Department of Health: "For women under the age of 25, more pregnancies end in induced termination than in a live birth or spontaneous termination."

Other fun facts: almost 15% of abortions in NYC were for married women. I don't know if that sounds low or high to me!

Anyway, nobody tell the Church, but this doesn't even taken into account the thousands upon thousands of morning-after pills dispensed in the City. (There's a reason it doesn't take them into account, by the way!) It also doesn't count the most likely hundreds of thousands of would-be pregnancies that last only a few minutes or hours, that are then ended by God, due to his mysterious ways and designs—would-be pregnancies that no one ever knows about, and boy howdy, don't you just think that if the Catholics ever stopped to think about this, they'd never get anything done ever again and wouldn't have any time to object to art shows?

All this reproductive health and choice means—or, to be fair to our statistics-minded friends, is associated with, if not related to!—that Manhattan has one of the best infant health rates in the country.

In case you are preparing to be an infant yourself, rest easy. You're doing pretty great (especially if you're a white infant), what with the infant mortality rate in NYC now being just 5.3 per 1000 births. (One hundred years ago, it was about 120 per 1000 births in New York City.)

In the U.S. overall, the rate is now about 6.6 per 1000. But if you live in Manhattan, it's just 4.1 per 1000 births.

In other news, only 389 people died from firearms in 2009. And only 57 of them were 19 or younger!

In slightly less good news: are you black in New York City and 35 and a half years old? Congratulations! You're at the exact statistical midpoint of your life.

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In 2009, according to the numbers just released by the City at the end of 2010, New York City had 126,774 live births! And 90,000 pregnancies—that were reported, at least!—ended in chosen termination. So of course the Archbishop is weeping and freaking out.

According to the Department of Health: "For women under the age of 25, more pregnancies end in induced termination than in a live birth or spontaneous termination."

Other fun facts: almost 15% of abortions in NYC were for married women. I don't know if that sounds low or high to me!

Anyway, nobody tell the Church, but this doesn't even taken into account the thousands upon thousands of morning-after pills dispensed in the City. (There's a reason it doesn't take them into account, by the way!) It also doesn't count the most likely hundreds of thousands of would-be pregnancies that last only a few minutes or hours, that are then ended by God, due to his mysterious ways and designs—would-be pregnancies that no one ever knows about, and boy howdy, don't you just think that if the Catholics ever stopped to think about this, they'd never get anything done ever again and wouldn't have any time to object to art shows?

All this reproductive health and choice means—or, to be fair to our statistics-minded friends, is associated with, if not related to!—that Manhattan has one of the best infant health rates in the country.

In case you are preparing to be an infant yourself, rest easy. You're doing pretty great (especially if you're a white infant), what with the infant mortality rate in NYC now being just 5.3 per 1000 births. (One hundred years ago, it was about 120 per 1000 births in New York City.)

In the U.S. overall, the rate is now about 6.6 per 1000. But if you live in Manhattan, it's just 4.1 per 1000 births.

In other news, only 389 people died from firearms in 2009. And only 57 of them were 19 or younger!

In slightly less good news: are you black in New York City and 35 and a half years old? Congratulations! You're at the exact statistical midpoint of your life.

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Happy New Year, Ross Douthat, Let's Talk About Abortion http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/happy-new-year-ross-douthat-lets-talk-about-abortion http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/happy-new-year-ross-douthat-lets-talk-about-abortion#comments Mon, 03 Jan 2011 15:30:14 +0000 Dave Bry http://www.theawl.com/2011/01/happy-new-year-ross-douthat-lets-talk-about-abortion "Since 1973, countless lives that might have been welcomed into families like Thernstrom’s—which looked into adoption, and gave it up as hopeless—have been cut short in utero instead. And lives are what they are. On the MTV special, the people around Durham swaddle abortion in euphemism. The being inside her is just 'pregnancy tissue.' After the abortion, she recalls being warned not to humanize it: 'If you think of it like [a person], you’re going to make yourself depressed.' Instead, 'think of it as what it is: nothing but a little ball of cells.' It’s left to Durham herself to cut through the evasion. Sitting with her boyfriend afterward, she begins to cry when he calls the embryo a 'thing.' Gesturing to their infant daughter, she says, 'A ‘thing’ can turn out like that. That’s what I remember ... ‘Nothing but a bunch of cells’ can be her.' When we want to know this, we know this."
The arguer in me wants me to seize upon the word "want" in that last sentence, and tell Ross Douthat, Sure, yes, when we want to believe something, so as to make the world line up with our personal religious inclination, we can make ourselves—we can blur the line between personal experience and logic, and, semantically, between "believing" and "knowing," too. But that is a type of cheating. And it doesn't change the fact that abortion should be kept legal and available to any pregnant woman who so chooses. But the reader in me is thankful for a compelling challenge to my own views.

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"Since 1973, countless lives that might have been welcomed into families like Thernstrom’s—which looked into adoption, and gave it up as hopeless—have been cut short in utero instead. And lives are what they are. On the MTV special, the people around Durham swaddle abortion in euphemism. The being inside her is just 'pregnancy tissue.' After the abortion, she recalls being warned not to humanize it: 'If you think of it like [a person], you’re going to make yourself depressed.' Instead, 'think of it as what it is: nothing but a little ball of cells.' It’s left to Durham herself to cut through the evasion. Sitting with her boyfriend afterward, she begins to cry when he calls the embryo a 'thing.' Gesturing to their infant daughter, she says, 'A ‘thing’ can turn out like that. That’s what I remember ... ‘Nothing but a bunch of cells’ can be her.' When we want to know this, we know this."
The arguer in me wants me to seize upon the word "want" in that last sentence, and tell Ross Douthat, Sure, yes, when we want to believe something, so as to make the world line up with our personal religious inclination, we can make ourselves—we can blur the line between personal experience and logic, and, semantically, between "believing" and "knowing," too. But that is a type of cheating. And it doesn't change the fact that abortion should be kept legal and available to any pregnant woman who so chooses. But the reader in me is thankful for a compelling challenge to my own views.

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Women Find a Way to Actually Set the Internet on Fire http://www.theawl.com/2010/11/women-find-a-way-to-actually-set-the-internet-on-fire http://www.theawl.com/2010/11/women-find-a-way-to-actually-set-the-internet-on-fire#comments Thu, 04 Nov 2010 15:50:19 +0000 Choire Sicha http://www.theawl.com/2010/11/women-find-a-way-to-actually-set-the-internet-on-fire

This is meeting with some predictable fuss.

You know, like:

Wow, what a sick feed #ihadanabortion There's nothing honorable in killing a developing child. There's nothing 2 be proud of, a baby is deadWed Nov 03 22:10:54 via Twitter for iPhone

And on the other side, why yes:

Why is saying #ihadanabortion "provovative?" I had my wisdom teeth out. Is that needlessly provocative? Or "i had a baby at 15?" No?Thu Nov 04 16:23:19 via web

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This is meeting with some predictable fuss.

You know, like:

Wow, what a sick feed #ihadanabortion There's nothing honorable in killing a developing child. There's nothing 2 be proud of, a baby is deadWed Nov 03 22:10:54 via Twitter for iPhone

And on the other side, why yes:

Why is saying #ihadanabortion "provovative?" I had my wisdom teeth out. Is that needlessly provocative? Or "i had a baby at 15?" No?Thu Nov 04 16:23:19 via web

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The Way We Note The Declining Standards Of Society Now http://www.theawl.com/2010/09/the-way-we-note-the-declining-standards-of-society-now http://www.theawl.com/2010/09/the-way-we-note-the-declining-standards-of-society-now#comments Fri, 10 Sep 2010 14:55:45 +0000 Alex Balk http://www.theawl.com/2010/09/the-way-we-note-the-declining-standards-of-society-now

There is seriously something wrong with our society when we are trending #AbortionClinicPlaylistSongs ..I thought ScoobyDoo was bad but FUCKless than a minute ago via web


Everything about this.

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There is seriously something wrong with our society when we are trending #AbortionClinicPlaylistSongs ..I thought ScoobyDoo was bad but FUCKless than a minute ago via web


Everything about this.

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