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Mark Steyn: Go forth and multiply
National Post (Canada) ^ | 01/28/03 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 01/28/2003 9:47:16 AM PST by Pokey78

This will be an important week for the world, and I've no idea how it's going to go. So let me come at it from another direction:

Abortion.

Last week was the 30th anniversary of Roe v. Wade. If the greying harpies of the abortion movement were looking to get their groove back on anniversary fever, it didn't work out that way. As has been noted, polls show more and more Americans are opposed to more and more abortions. This isn't the way it's supposed to go. The assumption behind judicial activism is that the guys in the fancy robes are ahead of the curve: Being more educated, intelligent and sophisticated than the unwashed masses, our judges reach today the positions that the grunting, knuckle-dragging public won't come round to for another decade or so. But eventually we will, and we'll wonder what all the fuss was about.

Well, America has had constitutionally mandated abortion absolutism for a third of a century, and it's further away from broad social acceptance than ever. If Roe v. Wade hasn't caught on by now, it never will. In abortion as in war, Americans are at odds with their Canadian and European "allies." My colleague Patricia Pearson thinks this is because "Canadians are becoming more tolerant, Americans more conservative" -- conservatism being the opposite of tolerance, presumably.

I'd say the abortion crowd's problem is that they're up against science. There are those of us who are opposed to all abortion -- I'm one, at heart -- and those who are hot for a woman's right to kill full-term healthy partially delivered babies. But in the middle are a big swath of people whose position is more nuanced, and the trouble for the abortion absolutists is that, thanks in part to advances in medical science, all the nuances are moving in the pro-life direction. The most fascinating of last week's polls, for ABC News, found that 57% of Americans thought that abortion should be legal in "all or most cases," which must have heartened the "pro-choice" types. But when "all or most cases" were spelt out one by one the numbers were very different: over 80% of Americans will support abortion in cases of rape or incest or to save a woman's life; 54% will support the abortion of a "physically impaired baby." But, when it comes to terminating an "unwanted pregnancy," only 42% approve.

But that's what abortion is: the "unwanted pregnancy" category accounts for 95% of cases. The rest -- the stuff with the 80% approval ratings -- are a tiny number of exceptions to the overwhelming rule -- that abortion for most of its devotees is a belated, cumbersome and inefficient form of contraception. Which is what "a woman's right to choose" boils down to. When the crazed ideologues at The New York Times ran a story on the Administration's approach to abortion under the headline "Bush's War On Women," they overlooked the inconvenient fact that the President's views are now more reflective of American womanhood than the Times' or the abortion groups'. Only 40% of women are in favour of the right to end an unwanted pregnancy. In other words, 60% of women don't support a woman's right to choose. The euphemism doesn't work any more.

Right now, the only significant demographic moving toward Roe v. Wade absolutism are the ever swelling numbers of Democratic Presidential candidates. That's because the Democrats brook no qualms on the subject. In the candidates' big panderfest at a "pro-choice" rally, the former Vermont Governor, Dr. Howard Dean, was so anxious to demonstrate his bona fides that he all but offered to perform a partial-birth abortion on audience volunteers. Dr. Dean's candidacy is unlikely to be carried to term, or even survive the first trimester of 2004, so he need not detain us long. But what's more interesting is the broader phenomenon his creepy suck-up represents.

For what it's worth, I don't accept "a woman's right to choose." Given that humanity's only current widely available method of reproduction involves access to a woman's womb, society as a whole has a stake in this question. But, even if one subscribes to the premise of Roe v. Wade -- that abortion is a privacy issue for individual women to decide -- why would one half of the political establishment in America and pretty much the whole shebang in the rest of the West choose to fetishize "a woman's right to choose" as an approved goal of state policy?

Here's the reality: When feminists talk about "women's reproductive rights," they mean the right of women not to reproduce. Fine. That may make sense as a personal decision, but the state has no interest in promoting it generally.

Why? Because the state needs a birth rate of 2.1 children to maintain a stable population. In Italy, it's now 1.2. Twenty years ago, a million babies were born there each year. Now it's half a million. And the fewer babies you have today, the fewer babies are around to have babies in 20 years. Once you're as far down the death spiral as Italy is, it's hard to reverse. Most European races are going to be out of business in a couple more generations.

If you think that a nation is no more than (in our Booker Prize-winning novelist's famous phrase) a great "hotel," you can always slash rates and fill the empty rooms. But, if you think a nation is the collective, accumulated wisdom of a shared past, then a dependence on immigration alone for population replenishment will leave you lost and diminished. God's first injunction to humanity couldn't have been plainer: Go forth and multiply. In the 1995 referendum, when Lucien Bouchard made his unfortunate faux pas about Quebec women having one of the lowest fertility rates of any "white race" in the world, he was on to something. Given that young francophones trend separatist, had Quebec Catholics of the Seventies had children at the same rate as their parents, he and M. Parizeau would almost certainly have won their vote. Instead, Quebec's shrivelled fertility rate has cost them their country.

And why wouldn't it? A society whose political class elevates "a woman's right to choose" above "go forth and multiply" is a society with a death wish. So today we're the endangered species, not the spotted owl. We're the dwindling resource, not the oil. Abortion is like the entirely mythical "population bomb" touted by the award-festooned Paul Ehrlich, who predicted millions of Americans would be starving to death by the 1980s: It's a prop of the Western progressive's bizarre death-cultism. We are so bad, so racist, so polluting, so exploitative that we owe it to the world not to be born in the first place. Abortion fetishism and our withered birth rate are only the quieter symptoms of the West's loss of self-confidence manifested more noisily elsewhere, from last weekend's Saddamite demonstrations to Chirac and Schroeder's press conference. The issue this week, according to the Ottawa Citizen's David Warren, is simple: "Is what we are worth defending?" If you think the Euro-appeasers' answer is pretty pathetic right now, wait another decade, after the birth rate's fallen even lower and their bloated welfare programs are even more dependent on an increasingly immigrant workforce.

The abortionists respond that every child should be "wanted." Sounds nice and cuddly, but it leads remorselessly to Italian yuppie couples having just the one kid in their thirties. In a healthy society, not every baby is exactly "wanted": things happen, and you adjust to them. Legal abortion was supposed to make things better for that small number of women who found themselves clutching a handful of cash and riding the bus to a backstreet abortionist in the next town. But "unwanted" is a highly elastic term: in Romania in the Nineties, three out of four pregnancies were being terminated. Europe, in eliminating "unwanted" pregnancies, is eliminating itself. In Canada, meanwhile, Patricia Pearson assures us there's plenty of other folks to take up the slack:

"Immigrants to Canada from China and Eastern Europe are, I think it's fair to say, more secular and more accustomed to official support for abortion and gender equality espoused in the socialist and communist states they have fled from, than those immigrants to the United States who come from Catholic Latin America."

Well, that's one way of putting it. "Official support" means China telling you how many babies you can have: not a woman's right to choose, but the state's right to choose for the woman. Some "tolerance."

Those of us less persuaded than Miss Pearson by the benefits of totalitarian approaches to birth control will just have to do our bit as we can. Next time you're in a rundown diner and the 17-year-old waitress is eight months pregnant, don't tut "What a tragedy" and point her to the nearest Planned Parenthood clinic. Leave her a large tip instead. She's doing the right thing, not just for her, but for all of us.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aboriton; canada; deathcultivation; italy; marksteynlist; populationcontrol; un; unesco; unicef
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To: arthurus
Thus, I take it that you define pregnancy at the age of 17 in modern society as "irresponsibility".

Yep. (Statement corrected to re-insert the relevant context, in such a way as to foreclose irrelevant observations about the days when people often married at 15 and died at 40.)

41 posted on 01/28/2003 11:06:16 AM PST by steve-b
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To: Pokey78
"Dr. Howard Dean, was so anxious to demonstrate his bona fides that he all but offered to perform a partial-birth abortion on audience volunteers."

Another great one from Steyn.

Hey, conservative movement/celebrity lurkers: Steyn makes a good point above. At the NARAL convention, 'Dr.' Dean made the comment, "partial birth abortion isn't even an issue". In other words, it's a nonsensical point.

Why doesn't someone ask Dean if he'd be willing to perform a PBA. Maybe send a camera crew along to film it live? Maybe Dr. Dean could show us why it's such a great thing?

42 posted on 01/28/2003 11:06:37 AM PST by HumanaeVitae
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To: Thorondir
It has no readily discernable relation to the article or discussion at hand. What am I to take from it?

As someone who spent 4 years working in a restaurant, and now tends bar part-time for extra cash, here's my take. I think steve-b is one of those patrons that goes out with the calculator running in his head. His evening consists of running his waiter/waitress/bartender in circles to calculate the level of service. However, no matter how many times you promptly fill his coffee cup, wipe the wet spots off his table or perfectly pour his beer, his high point is 15% while ticking off every real or imagined slight in service so he can feel justified leaving a $1.50 tip on a $30.00 bill.

Do us all a favor and stay home.

43 posted on 01/28/2003 11:10:18 AM PST by Cable225
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To: steve-b
Charity is not the act of giving something to one less fortunate. It is an attitude of goodwill towards others. Its physical manifestation can be the giving of "alms" or the support of someone who has made a right decision against adversity even if that decision does not personally aggrandize oneself.
44 posted on 01/28/2003 11:10:38 AM PST by arthurus
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To: Damocles
Not much compassion in that there conservatism...

That's because it's not conservativsm, it's neo-Bolshevism, er libertarianism.

45 posted on 01/28/2003 11:11:35 AM PST by HumanaeVitae
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To: Orangedog
Good point.
46 posted on 01/28/2003 11:12:16 AM PST by arthurus
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To: steve-b
Physiologically a woman is in better condition to have a baby at 17 than at 30 or even 25. As I said before, I bet you harumph a lot.
47 posted on 01/28/2003 11:14:53 AM PST by arthurus
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To: Cable225
I tip 20% minimum. Waiters bust their a$$es and take cr@p out the yang from jerks...
48 posted on 01/28/2003 11:16:55 AM PST by HumanaeVitae
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To: Pokey78; JohnHuang2; MeeknMing
How can I best say it?

How does:
THANK GOD FOR MARK STEYN!
sound?

49 posted on 01/28/2003 11:22:03 AM PST by Brian Allen (This above all; to thine own self be true)
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To: Pokey78

50 posted on 01/28/2003 11:22:50 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (9 out of 10 Republicans agree: Bush IS a Genius !!)
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To: HumanaeVitae
<< Cable225

I tip 20% minimum. Waiters bust their a$$es and take cr@p out the yang from jerks... >>

Good onyah!

Me too.
51 posted on 01/28/2003 11:23:21 AM PST by Brian Allen (This above all; to thine own self be true)
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To: arthurus
Physiologically a woman is in better condition to have a baby at 17 than at 30 or even 25. As I said before, I bet you harumph a lot.

Only when I encounter foolishness.

Harumph.

52 posted on 01/28/2003 11:23:25 AM PST by steve-b
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To: steve-b
I think that Steyn is not so much advising his gentle reader to reward the woman for getting pregnant at 17 ~~ The "crank 'em out for the Fatherland" ideology of the preceding paragraphs indicates otherwise.

I suppose that's one way to read Steyn's piece. A strangely Statist idea of Steyn's intent, but I suppose if that's the way you read it...

Personally, I read Steyn as saying that Western Civilization -- the font of individual liberty and the rule of law -- is killing itself off, and he thinks that's a bad thing. It would be "enough", demographically speaking, if we as a culture simply refused to Murder the infants whom we are already conceiving -- not that more conceptions in the aggregate "must" be encouraged.

53 posted on 01/28/2003 11:36:45 AM PST by OrthodoxPresbyterian (We are unworthy servants; we have only done our duty)
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
Personally, I read Steyn as saying that Western Civilization -- the font of individual liberty and the rule of law -- is killing itself off, and he thinks that's a bad thing.

What a simpleton you are to actually read an article to get the main point.

54 posted on 01/28/2003 11:51:34 AM PST by Taliesan
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To: OrthodoxPresbyterian
but it shoulda been addressed to "steve-b".

Woops! My bad!

55 posted on 01/28/2003 11:58:42 AM PST by Nonstatist
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To: Brian Allen
When feminists talk about "women's reproductive rights," they mean the right of women not to reproduce.

Thankfully they have decimated their own cause.

They personify the liberal death wish!!!
56 posted on 01/28/2003 11:59:42 AM PST by victim soul
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To: Brian Allen
I, too, tip 20% as a rule. Diffident service rates only 15%. Poor service rates 10%. If the service is so bad that 10% is too much, I get up and leave before the meal is served.

Waiting tables is hard work. When I get bad service, I tend to assume that the waiter or waitress in question is simply overworked and not able to give all his/her customers their full attention -- which is generally the case. Most chain/fast-food restaurants are understaffed in order to save money; understaffing insures lower labor costs, since fewer workers are on the payroll. Understaffing also guarantees high employee turnover rates, thus getting rid of higher-paid senior staff in favor of low-paid new employees. Restaurant workers are easily replaced, employers find it more attractive to hire and fire them rather than to promote people from within and raise their wages -- and, since they get paid the same (low) base wage no matter how hard they work, there is no incentive (other than tipping) for your average waiter or waitress to work harder. Thus most restaurant workers (sensibly) do the bare minimum required to maintain their jobs.

These problems are intrinsic to all service-industry jobs. The fast food/chain business model is dependent upon low-wage, easily-replaceable workers to keep prices low. Tipping encourages good waiters and waitresses to work harder; stiffing them for poor service just encourages them to care less.

The solution to the Bad Service problem is not in being niggardly with the tips.The solution is to turn away from chain/mall/freeway restaurants with their armies of low-paid interchangeable workers and eat at family-run/owned neighborhood joints where Mom and Dad do the cooking and the Kids serve and clean up. The food (and service) tend to be better in a place where the cooks and staff have a personal stake in the business' success.

57 posted on 01/28/2003 12:04:57 PM PST by B-Chan (It Can Happen Here! Does your family have an Emergency Kit? www.fema.gov)
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To: Nonstatist
No harm done.
58 posted on 01/28/2003 12:05:33 PM PST by B-Chan (It Can Happen Here! Does your family have an Emergency Kit? www.fema.gov)
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To: Brian Allen
It's got to be truly dreadful service for me to leave less than 20%. Having been a waitress myself, I know the difference between a busy section and a lazy waiter.
59 posted on 01/28/2003 12:07:22 PM PST by nina0113
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To: victim soul
Mark Steyn BUMP!
60 posted on 01/28/2003 12:10:57 PM PST by EternalVigilance (abort NARAL!)
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