The Pro-life Argument Against Bush

HoustonChronicle.com – Why abortion rate is up in Bush years By GLEN HAROLD STASSEN and GARY KRANE

When President Bush took office, the nation’s abortion rates were at a 24-year low, after a 17.4 percent decline during the 1990s. This was a steady decrease averaging 1.7 percent per year. (The data come from Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life using the Guttmacher Institute’s studies.)

Enter George W. Bush in 2001. One would expect the abortion rate to continue its consistent course downward, if not plunge. Instead, the opposite happened.

We found four states that have posted three-year statistics: Kentucky’s increased by 3.2 percent from 2000 to 2003. Michigan’s increased by 11.3 percent from 2000 to 2003. Pennsylvania’s increased by 1.9 percent from 1999 to 2002. Colorado’s rates skyrocketed 111 percent. We found 12 additional states that reported statistics for 2001 and 2002. Eight states saw an increase in abortion rates (14.6 percent average increase), and four saw a decrease (4.3 percent average).

Under Bush, the decade-long trend of declining abortion rates appears to have reversed. Given the trends of the 1990s, 52,000 more abortions occurred in the United States in 2002 than would have been expected before this change of direction.

For anyone familiar with why most women have abortions, this is no surprise:

Two-thirds of women who have abortions cite “inability to afford a child” as their primary reason (Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life). In the Bush presidency, unemployment rates increased half again. Not since Herbert Hoover had there been a net loss of jobs during a presidency until the current administration. Average real incomes decreased, and for seven years the minimum wage has not been raised to match inflation. With less income, many prospective mothers fear another mouth to feed.

Half of all women who abort say they do not have a reliable mate. And men who are jobless usually do not marry. In the 16 states, there were 16,392 fewer marriages than the year before, and 7,869 more abortions. As male unemployment increases, marriages fall and abortion rises.

Women worry about health care for themselves and their children. Since 5.2 million more people have no health insurance now than before this presidency — with women of childbearing age overrepresented in those 5.2 million — abortion increases.

My wife and I know — as does my son David — that doctors, nurses, hospitals, medical insurance, special schooling and parental employment are crucial for a special child. David attended the Kentucky School for the Blind, as well as schools for children with cerebral palsy and other disabilities. He was mainstreamed in public schools as well. We have two other sons and five grandchildren, and we know that every mother, every father and every child needs public and family support.

What does this tell us? Economic policy and abortion are not separate issues; they form one moral imperative. Rhetoric is hollow, mere tinkling brass, without health care, insurance, jobs, child care and a living wage. Pro-life in deed, not merely in word, means we need a president who will do something about jobs, health insurance and support for mothers.

Glen Stassen is the Lewis B. Smedes Professor of Christian Ethics at Fuller Theological Seminary, in Pasadena, Calif. He can be e-mailed at gstassen@fuller.edu.

Krane is an independent investigative journalist in Philadelphia.Readers can write to him at 151 Tulpehocken, Philadelphia, PA 19144 or Coordinator@FairElections.us.

Wow. Talk about the law of unintended consequences. mjh

“Rhetoric is hollow, mere tinkling brass, without health care, insurance, jobs, child care and a living wage. Pro-life in deed, not merely in word, means we need a president who will do something about jobs, health insurance and support for mothers.”

Rich White People Still Doing Well

FresnoBee.com: Nation: Study: Recession widened racial wealth gap

The enormous wealth gap between white families and blacks and Hispanics grew larger after the most recent recession, a private analysis of government data finds.

White households had a median net worth of greater than $88,000 in 2002, 11 times more than Hispanics and more than 14 times that of blacks, the Pew Hispanic Center said in a study being released Monday. …

Only white homes recouped all their losses between 2001 and 2002. Both Hispanics and blacks lost nearly 27 percent of net worth between 1999 and 2001; the next year Latinos had gained almost all back (26 percent) though blacks were up only about 5 percent.

Does this have more to do with the supposed recession or Bush economic policy? mjh

‘Sinclair is more conservative than the Fox network’

HoustonChronicle.com – Broadcast company unafraid to push agenda By ALEX DOMINGUEZ, AP

Sinclair owns more TV stations than anyone outside the major networks. And it is not at all shy about using its clout to advance a conservative agenda.

The company, run by the Smith family, finds itself in the middle of a political storm over an anti-John Kerry documentary it plans to air before the election. The company has asked its 62 television stations — many of them in swing states — to pre-empt regular programming to run the documentary, which is critical of Kerry’s anti-war activities after he returned from Vietnam three decades ago.

The impact of the documentary could be large, considering the Sinclair Broadcast Group reaches about a quarter of all U.S. television households from California to Maine. …

The company amassed its stations as federal regulations were relaxed on station ownership [mjh: under Raygun?]. At the same time, it became a generous political donor, giving $172,454 to Republican causes and $6,750 to Democratic campaigns since 1994.

Robert Zelnick, chairman of the journalism department at Boston University, said Sinclair is more conservative than the Fox network.

But he said that while Fox “maintains at least a public claim of objectivity — ‘We report, you decide’ ” — Sinclair is blatant about its conservative bent.

Though they have a far reach, if Sinclair is mostly cable AND well-known to be conservative, they’re probably reaching Bush supporters, not undecided voters. They’ll disgust many with their self-serving manipulation. mjh