Townhall...
Signs,
Signs, Everywhere a Sign
By Kathryn Lopez
7/30/2011
Sometimes,
the yelling stops long
enough to remember that there are real people involved in abortions.
And
not just the youngest one, who
doesn’t get a say in the decision.
I
read the other day a piece about the
“safe and successful” telemedicine abortions, getting “high grades” in
Iowa.
That’s an abortion where a doctor doesn’t even have to be present. The
clinical
efficiency with which the story was written was jarringly chilling.
Clinical
efficiency, of course, being
the goal of the deed. Which was just one among many reasons to be
delighted
about a new law in Louisiana: the Signs of Hope Act. It brings a little
humanity to the debate and the reality of legal abortion in America (38
years
later and counting).
Written
in the reality, too, that
abortion isn’t a rewind button, what has happened and will be done will
have
impact.
With
Louisiana’s Signs of Hope Act,
women can’t get an abortion without a gentle reminder about options. In
other
words: actual choice. Written in the reality, too, that for some women,
who are
being coerced in one way or another, a sign may be a real liberation
for a
woman. For all the use and abuse of the word in relation to the issue
of
abortion, here it is, codified, complete with a website.
The
signs are straightforward enough.
“Notice: Women’s Rights and Pregnancy Resources” is the start off. It
then
descends into boldface and bullet points.
Point
1: “You can’t be forced. It is
unlawful for anyone to make you have an abortion against your will,
even if you
are a minor.”
Point
2: “You and the father. The
father of your child must provide support of the child, even if he has
offered
to pay for an abortion.”
Point
3: “You and adoption. The law
allows adoptive parents to pay costs of prenatal care, childbirth and
newborn
care.”
Point
4: “You are not alone. Many
agencies are willing to help you carry your child to term, and to
assist after
your child’s birth.”
The
sign features a website address
for abortion alternatives, which is easily accessible on a smartphone.
Originally
referred to as the “Women’s
Right to Know” Signs law -- an amendment for current
informed-consent-for-abortion laws that are in effect in about 30
states -- it
took on the more inspirational language when a woman who counsels
post-abortive
women said that the “signs in abortion clinics would be ‘signs of hope’
to
women who often feel hopeless and coerced due to a perceived lack of
alternatives,” New Orleanian and Bioethics Defense Fund counsel Dorinda
Bordlee
recalls. Bordlee, who drafted the legislation with fellow lawyer
Nikolas Nikas,
calls the Signs law “cutting-edge technology in the service of women
and their
unborn children” and a “love letter to women and their unborn children.”
But
are the Signs nothing but pro-life
propaganda? Bordlee denies the charge. The Signs “educate and inform
women of
concrete resources that she can consider with her intellect,” Bordlee
says.
“The
thousands of affidavits of
post-abortive women gathered by the Operation Outcry outreach confirm
that
women are often vulnerable to abortion coercion or pressure based on
the very
fact that they are in an emotional state based on their perceived lack
of
available resources or options,” she says. “These signs clear the fog
with
objective information.”
Bordlee
adds that, “As much as that
may irritate the owners of abortion clinics, the simple fact is that
ever since
the 1992 decision in Casey v. Planned Parenthood, the U.S. Supreme
Court has
recognized that ‘a State has legitimate interests from the outset of
the
pregnancy in protecting the health of the woman and the life of the
fetus.’ So,
we have clearly established that the Signs of Hope Act is pro-life in a
not-so-veiled manner.”
Despite
the fact that the Signs of
Hope Bill, which will be implemented in the Pelican State in November
and
requires abortion-clinic websites to post a link to this alternatives
website,
may sway some women from not having abortions, it was a bipartisan vote
for the
bill. You can imagine some of the objectors (a Planned Parenthood rep
called
them “condescending” and “offensive”), but it’s hard to argue with
informed
consent in a matter of life and death, even if nascent. Bordlee
presents it as
flowing from a “holistic feminism,” a reintegration of “the best
interests of
women, children and families based on the understanding that we are at
our best
when we reach out to help one another.”
She
adds: “It never ceases to amaze me
when abortion advocates take the patronizing attitude that we should
hide
information from women because of their fragile emotional state. Women
are
strong and intelligent. Each of us deserves the dignity of full
information.”
In
that spirit, Bordlee and the BDF
hope to use the Cajun model as a nationwide effort, helping pro-life
groups
with similar legislation. If a state’s government won’t bite, she won’t
be
discouraged: “Even if a state does not have a Signs of Hope law,
individuals
who counsel in front of clinics and elsewhere can just as easily have
postcards
or flyers to hand to women so they can access the information on their
smartphones.”
It’s
an alternative, too, to much of
the sound bites and rallies, complete with familiar rhetoric that
people,
especially those desperate for help, might simply tune out. It’s a sign
that a
revolution of love may just be what the doctor ordered.
Read
it at Townhall
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