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Abortion’s Devastating Impact Upon Black Americans

  

Category:  Op/Ed

Via:  donald-trump-fan1  •  5 years ago  •  20 comments

Abortion’s Devastating Impact Upon Black Americans
The inconvenient truth of “black genocide” significantly decreased the potential black population of Georgia over the past fifty years. According to recent Centers for Disease Control (CDC) statistics, while African-Americans constitute 32.2 percent of Georgia’s population, 62.4 percent of abortions in Georgia are performed on African-American women. By contrast, whites constitute 60.8 percent of the Georgia population, but only 24.7 percent of abortions were performed on white women. Even...

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



When Stacey Abrams lost her bid for Georgia governor last November, she explained away her loss with the common liberal talking point that racism deprived her fellow African-Americans and other minorities of their fundamental right to vote. Her campaign was largely focused on turning out the minority vote.

In contrast, her silence was deafening concerning a far more potent factor holding down the black vote: namely, the staggering number of abortions in the black community. The inconvenient truth of “black genocide” significantly decreased the potential black population of Georgia over the past fifty years. According to recent Centers for Disease Control (CDC) statistics , while African-Americans constitute 32.2 percent of Georgia’s population, 62.4 percent of abortions in Georgia are performed on African-American women. By contrast, whites constitute 60.8 percent of the Georgia population, but only 24.7 percent of abortions were performed on white women. Even pro-abortion groups like the Guttmacher Institute admit that “black women are more than 5 times as likely as white women to have an abortion.”

These abortion numbers have curtailed population increases in the African-American community. Michael Novak calculated in 2002 that without the incidence of abortion, the African-American population would show at least a 36-percent increase. Even this number does not take into account the number of children who may have been born to those who were aborted.

In its endorsement of Abrams, Planned Parenthood referred to her as an “unwavering champion for reproductive health and rights.” In proudly accepting their endorsement, Ms. Abrams emphasized that she would “not whisper” her campaign’s pro-choice position, proclaiming that abortion would be a “proud and central facet” of her campaign and governance. By aligning herself with Planned Parenthood’s agenda, Abrams ignored the warnings of community pastors such as Clenard Childress, Jr. , who warned, “If the current trend [of abortions in the black community] continues, by 2038 the black vote will be insignificant.”

Abrams’s strong support of Planned Parenthood highlights either her hypocrisy or her lack of knowledge concerning abortion’s devastating effect on the African-American population. This is also true for the myriad black-led liberal groups (such as the Congressional Black Caucus) that unequivocally endorse Planned Parenthood, the number-one killer within the African-American community. In spite of overall falling abortion rates in the U.S., numbers released in 2018 by the CDC  reveal that in certain time periods studied, for example 2007 to 2010, abortion ratios actually increased among black women as compared to white women. The abortion ratios of the latter decreased. Nationally , the Centers for Disease Control point out that nearly half of all pregnancies among black women end in abortion (472 per 1,000), while among white women only 16 percent of pregnancies are aborted (161 per 1,000). In New York City, where Planned Parenthood is headquartered, more black babies are aborted than are born alive (1,180 abortions for every 1,000 live births).

Culture and the Supreme Court

When the sexual revolution took off in the 1960s, the federal government—and especially the Supreme Court—began to help dismantle the traditional family structure. In 1960, the FDA approved the first oral contraceptive (Enovid), leading to an increase in sex without parenthood. In Griswold  v.  Connecticut  (1965), the Supreme Court struck down laws against contraception for married couples by creating a constitutional “right to privacy,” premised on a previously unknown “penumbra” of constitutional rights. In Baird v . Eisenstadt  (1972), the Court extended this right of privacy to any individual, without regard to marital status, by legalizing contraception for all persons. However, to overcome any failures of contraception, the Court shortly thereafter determined that abortion would become a viable second option to avert the birth of a child.

Recognizing that contraception alone would not necessarily prevent conception, in the very next year, Roe v . Wade  and Doe v . Bolton  (1973) fundamentally deconstructed human sexuality by separating procreative behavior from procreation. The Supreme Court further extended the right to privacy by striking down state laws against abortion. The Court thus either reinforced or created a cultural momentum toward the deconstruction of marriage and family (to which the creation of “no-fault divorce” in 1970 also contributed.)

Of course, the idea of abolishing the procreative family as a social unit is an ancient one, going back to Plato’s Republic and reappearing at intervals through history. However, it has truly gained momentum since the 1960s. Sex became a recreational activity thanks to people like Playboy founder Hugh Hefner, who helped radically change the social values and mores of America. “The percentage (of American adults) who believed premarital sex among adults was ‘not wrong at all’ was 29 percent in the early 1970s, 42 percent in the 1980s and 1990s, 49 percent in the 2000s, and 58 percent between 2010 and 2012.” The resulting narcissistic cultural climate became one of absolute individuality.

The single life has now become preferred to marriage (as has marriage without parenthood). Unmarried women now outnumber the married, and the idea of self-marriage or sologamy has begun to be reported . “Last year, the U.S. marriage rate reached a 93-year low,” reported a 2015 Archives of Sexual Behavior study. “With more Americans spending more of their young adulthood unmarried, they have more opportunities to engage in sex with more partners and less reason to disapprove of non-marital sex.”

Abortion’s Impact upon the African-American Community

Interestingly, as journalist Jason Riley points out, at the time of Roe  v . Wade  “blacks were less likely than whites to support abortion.” However, a 2017 Pew Research Center survey now shows blacks as the leading proponents of abortion rights, with 62 percent favoring legal abortion.

According to Riley,


Social scientists aren’t sure why black attitudes toward abortion have changed. One theory is that as more blacks migrated out of the conservative Deep South and settled in other regions of the country with more liberal views on reproductive rights, their attitudes changed accordingly. Another possibility is that people with higher incomes and more education tend to be pro-choice, and since the early 1970s the socioeconomic status of blacks has increased dramatically.

Most liberals reject these explanations, countering that black women are more likely than women of other races to live in poverty . Citing poverty as the driving factor, liberal advocates for abortion, such as the Guttmacher Institute , point to inadequate access to health care in the black community as a consequence of its poverty and the cause of its high abortion rates.

Pro-life leaders in the black community disagree. Observing that “the most dangerous place for an African-American is in the womb,” they argue that abortion (often referred to as “population control”) is “the most institutionalized form of racism” in America. The Rev. Walter Hoye , founder of the Issues for Life Foundation, points out the ominous implications of the high black abortion rate. He warns that because the black fertility rate is well below the replacement rate of 2.1, “within a few decades, African-Americans may well be an endangered species.”

Indeed, pro-life advocates have consistently argued that blacks have been specifically targeted by the abortion industry. After all, in 1939, Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood, stated her desire to “exterminate the Negro population.” In fact, research done a few years ago by the Life Issues Institute found that “79 percent of abortion-offering Planned Parenthood facilities are within walking distance of black or Hispanic neighborhoods,” and “62 percent are near black neighborhoods.”

Defenders of Planned Parenthood, on the other hand, counter these statistics by arguing that Planned Parenthood “runs as a business so that the motivation is to locate abortion clinics most strategically.” Monique Chireau, a professor at Duke University School of Medicine, argued that this location disparity was not motivated by racism but by supply and demand, explaining that Planned Parenthood is “going to locate themselves where their business model is going to thrive.”

But that still does not answer the question: why is demand for abortion greater among African-Americans? Statistics do seem to show that African-Americans have more sexual interaction than Caucasians. According to a report in the Daily Beast , “African-Americans have 8.2 percent more sex than Caucasians,” and other research finds that many blacks “object to the use of condoms” as a contraceptive device. Yet an 8.2-percent disparity in sexual activity alone cannot account for a five-fold difference in abortion rates between blacks and whites.

Msgr. Charles Pope argues that “the breakdown of the black family” first identified by Daniel Patrick Moynihan has also increased abortion in the African-American community. Although he notes that “the breakdown of the Black Family is complicated,” he points out that “A huge factor is the welfare system, which has and continues to reward single parent scenarios and punishes marriage.” To support his thesis, he cites the “astounding fact” that only 37 percent of black women have ever been married. However, as noted above, rising rates of singlehood are not restricted to the black community

Importance of Shared Traditional Values

Statistical and sociological questions aside, there is a deeper moral question at play here. Thanks to the sexual revolution, and its  ongoing dismantling of traditional family structures, “for the first time in recorded history, a predominantly G-dless society” has been born. Instead of asking what G-d wants from us, we are now asking: what do we want for ourselves,” thereby shifting from a “theocentric, collectivist value” to an “anthropocentric, individual goal.” This narcissism has created a toxic brew of family instability. “With these mores, having children . . .  went from expected, to optional, to quaint, to passé.” Without an understanding of the shared human dignity of all races, eugenic impulses can easily make their way into our culture’s policies and practices.

When it comes to abortion, the shared values of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are clear. The foundational principles of the Noahide Code declare that prenatal life cannot be disposed of at will; every unborn child has a soul and is beloved by G-d. There is a clear biblical prohibition against killing a fetus based on the injunction in Genesis 9:6 against shedding the blood of a person. Even apart from biblical revelation, reason leads to the inescapable, absolute truth that it is always wrong to kill intentionally an innocent human being. Clearly, no one is more innocent than an unborn child.

Abortion cannot be allowed on economic, social, or racial grounds—whether to afford a higher standard of living, for the convenience of uncommitted relationships, or because a minority racial group is involved. The opposition of our major religions to the abortion of an unborn life, except in very special circumstances, embodies one of the deepest norms of human society: the protection of life.

These universal values—accessible via both reason and revelation—make the protection of all  human life paramount, inside the womb or out, regardless of race.

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XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
1  seeder  XXJefferson51    5 years ago

“When it comes to abortion, the shared values of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are clear. The foundational principles of the Noahide Code declare that prenatal life cannot be disposed of at will; every unborn child has a soul and is beloved by G-d. There is a clear biblical prohibition against killing a fetus based on the injunction in Genesis 9:6 against shedding the blood of a person. Even apart from biblical revelation, reason leads to the inescapable, absolute truth that it is always wrong to kill intentionally an innocent human being. Clearly, no one is more innocent than an unborn child.

Abortion cannot be allowed on economic, social, or racial grounds—whether to afford a higher standard of living, for the convenience of uncommitted relationships, or because a minority racial group is involved. The opposition of our major religions to the abortion of an unborn life, except in very special circumstances, embodies one of the deepest norms of human society: the protection of life.”

 
 
 
lady in black
Professor Quiet
1.1  lady in black  replied to  XXJefferson51 @1    5 years ago

Not your unplanned pregnancy, NOT your business. 

 
 
 
epistte
Junior Guide
1.1.1  epistte  replied to  lady in black @1.1    5 years ago

It's a radical concept for some people to comprehend, but maybe it isn't the place of old white men to be telling black women what they can do with their bodies.

Slavery in the Bible is still a sore spot for many blacks,

New Testament writers lived in the Roman Empire and likewise adopted widespread attitudes about slaves. Some New Testament passages rely on negative stereotypes, such as slaves being lazy ( Matt 25:26 ). Other passages use slavery as a metaphor for faithfulness. Paul calls himself a “slave of Jesus Christ” as a sign of devotion ( Rom 1:1 ). Jesus compares the impossible task of a slave serving two masters to followers who must choose between wealth and God ( Matt 6:24 , Luke 16:13 ). Several passages address slaves directly, which is evidence that they were attracted to the early Jesus movement ( 1Cor 7:21 , 1Tim 6:1 , 1Pet 2:18 ). Christian slaves navigated the complex world of enslavement with their new faith.
 
 
 
epistte
Junior Guide
1.1.3  epistte  replied to    5 years ago

What color is his skin?

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
1.1.5  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  lady in black @1.1    5 years ago

It seems that Margaret Sanger was more successful in her goals regarding abortion in minority communities that she could have imagined.  

 
 
 
charger 383
Professor Silent
1.1.6  charger 383  replied to  epistte @1.1.1    5 years ago
old white men

I think I am one of the biggest supports of abortion rights on NT and I am an old white man, grumpy at times too (said the Charger grumbling to himself)

 
 
 
epistte
Junior Guide
1.1.7  epistte  replied to  charger 383 @1.1.6    5 years ago
I think I am one of the biggest supports of abortion rights on NT and I am an old white man, grumpy at times too (said the Charger grumbling to himself)

You're not telling women what they can do with their bodies, according to your religious beliefs. 

 
 
 
charger 383
Professor Silent
1.1.8  charger 383  replied to  epistte @1.1.7    5 years ago

all us old white men ain't bad, and I agree with you on a lot of things

 
 
 
Gordy327
Professor Expert
1.1.9  Gordy327  replied to  XXJefferson51 @1.1.5    5 years ago
It seems that Margaret Sanger was more successful in her goals regarding abortion in minority communities that she could have imagined.  

Her goal was women's health and to keep them from dying due to botched back alley or self abortions. As far as minorities (or anyone else for that matter) having abortions, is anyone forcing them to have abortions? No? Then any claim about abortion targeting or devastating minority groups is just hyperbole and lacks any merit. Besides, it's none of your or anyone else's business who decides to have an abortion or why!

 
 
 
CB
Professor Principal
1.2  CB  replied to  XXJefferson51 @1    5 years ago

This is some fine speechifying. However, how shall church organizations CHAMPION its privacy rights under law, while advocating a removal of privacy rights of others? 

Our society is in flux. People are adjusting to the rush of science and capability/ites pressing all around us. In time enough, and in time of need, I trust the men and women of this country will supply the patriotic and positive tribalism needed to keep this country "booming."

Have faith in multiculturalism and in us.

 
 
 
Dismayed Patriot
Professor Quiet
2  Dismayed Patriot    5 years ago

What they don't tell you in this intentionally slanted opinion piece is that in Georgia black Americans have double the rate of poverty than their white counterparts. 

" The single most common reason women cite for wanting an abortion is because they cannot afford to raise a child, Foster said."

“Women anticipate economic consequences, and when they’re denied an abortion, they experience negative economic consequences – poverty,” Foster said.

“When they receive an abortion, they slowly gain employment, and their income goes up,” she said. “But when they’re denied an abortion, they’re set back economically, and it takes them years to get where they would have been if they had received an abortion.”

The study’s findings don’t surprise Rachel K. Jones, a sociologist and researcher at the Guttmacher Institute in New York.

Most women who seek abortions are poor or low-income and already have children, she said in an email. “Adding another member to the family requires women to stretch limited resources even further, resulting in higher levels of poverty and reliance on social welfare benefits,” she wrote.

 
 
 
charger 383
Professor Silent
3  charger 383    5 years ago

Too many kids is a major cause of poverty 

 
 
 
epistte
Junior Guide
3.1  epistte  replied to  charger 383 @3    5 years ago
Too many kids is a major cause of poverty 

It is also a cause of overpopulation when women are forced to bear children that are unplanned and cannot be supported. 

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
3.1.1  Split Personality  replied to  epistte @3.1    5 years ago

Overpopulation is always criticized by Charger 383.

He is very consistent in that and his pro woman's choice advocacy.

 
 
 
epistte
Junior Guide
3.1.2  epistte  replied to  Split Personality @3.1.1    5 years ago
Overpopulation is always criticized by Charger 383. He is very consistent in that and his pro woman's choice advocacy.

Overpopulation is a serious issue that has yet to be addressed but its also a political 3rd rail because of claims of forced abortion and "death panels" by conservatives.

 
 
 
charger 383
Professor Silent
3.1.3  charger 383  replied to  epistte @3.1.2    5 years ago

that is one of the reasons politicians are scared to talk about it 

 
 
 
nightwalker
Sophomore Silent
4  nightwalker    5 years ago

This article rates a cartload of bulls--t, because if it were true, you and the other ultra-conservatives would be HOWLING pro-abortion.

Nice try.

 
 
 
Dismayed Patriot
Professor Quiet
4.1  Dismayed Patriot  replied to  nightwalker @4    5 years ago
This article rates a cartload of bulls--t, because if it were true, you and the other ultra-conservatives would be HOWLING pro-abortion.

They take what most of these worthless bigots see as a silver lining and weaponize it against their opponents. They couldn't be happier about black Americans in Georgia not being a voting majority. Their party even actively works towards intentionally disenfranchising eligible black Americans from voting and have been caught by the courts who concluded the GOP "targeted with surgical precision" eligible black voters with their onerous voter ID laws. You simply can't trust the GOP weasels any farther than you could throw them, and by the looks of the diabetes and obesity epidemic in Southern Republican strongholds, that's not very far.

 
 

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