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| Related Pages Ending Abortion How You Can Help in Any of a Number of Ways Consider This Overall Plan Plan to End AbortionSource: http://www.priestsforlife.org/articles/strategic-plan.pdf (We invite the input of pro-life leaders and activists in regard to this outline of a plan to end abortion, so that together we can put together a comprehensive approach to achieve our goal once and for all. Please share your comments at www.ProLifeStrategy.com -- Fr. Frank Pavone, National Director, Priests for Life)
IntroductionOn the day after Roe vs. Wade (1973) no child in the womb had legal protection from abortion. In 2008, no child in the womb has legal protection from abortion. While there has been some movement of public opinion in our direction, we are in the midst of a long deadlock in the attitudes of the American people, which can best be described as "conflicted." Many strategies have been developed, and a multitude of projects have been implemented, but the overall effect has been less than the sum of the parts, either because the strategies are not comprehensive enough to take account of the many dynamics at work in the abortion movement and the pro-life movement, or because the implementation does not coordinate the various aspects of the movement, or simply because sufficient resources of people and money are lacking. An overall, comprehensive plan is needed for the pro-life movement. This is not the same as a merger of groups or having one group in charge. Rather, it is an effort to map the dynamics of the pro-life movement, to identify those activities which have the best strategic effect, to describe how the various activities interrelate with one another, and to obtain the funds and personnel necessary for those activities. Back to menu
Summary of Strategic ElementsIn order to bring about an end to abortion in this country, three things are needed: 1) an overall strategy backed up by research and experience; 2) a detailed plan which transforms the strategy into concrete steps with goals and deadlines; and 3) the resources to implement that plan. The strategic plan described here takes account of 1) the laws of supply and demand as they apply to the business of abortion, 2) what research reveals about the current conflicted attitude of the American people regarding abortion, and 3) the many and varied activities of the pro-life movement with a view toward what seems to be working and what elements of the movement can support other elements, while avoiding artificial "mergers" of groups. Abortion continues because of a) supply: the existence of a half-billion dollar a year industry providing abortions, b) demand: some 3500 requests daily for legal abortions, and c) license: the fact that this activity is legally permitted and protected, reinforced by various laws and court decisions not only allowing abortion but introducing obstacles to those who try to stop it. These three aspects are closely related, and one key manner in which they are related is that the money obtained by the abortionist is in large measure directed toward the efforts to keep it legal and to produce the propaganda of the "prochoice" movement. A significant "momentum" is thus generated in terms of the flow of money and the influence it produces in the realms of government, media, and education. To slow this momentum, the source of its power needs to be cut off, namely, the incredibly high numbers of abortions. Only after the actual numbers are brought down can the fundamental license of abortion be changed. The pro-life movement from the beginning has primarily sought to change the laws. While that is always an essential aspect of the task at hand, primary attention needs to be directed to the ways in which abortions can be stopped before the law changes. Moreover, the pro-life movement needs to use its strengths against the abortion industry's weaknesses. Those weaknesses are primarily in the area of supply and the manner in which abortions are carried out. The goal of the pro-life movement is not simply to make abortion illegal. That is one aspect of the whole effort. The goal is to make it unavailable, unnecessary, and unthinkable. This requires drying up the supply of abortionists, strengthening the effectiveness of alternatives to abortion, and resolving the conflict in the attitudes of the American people, many of whom admit that abortion is murder but believe it needs to be available anyway. Back to menu
Strategic Elements of Plan to End Abortion1. Supply (Abortionists and Abortion Mills)This is the weak spot of the abortion industry, in terms of the number of people we are dealing with and the vulnerability of those people. Numerous admissions by the abortion industry indicate that it cannot carry out its work because of "a turn-off of physicians coming into this field" (Abortionist Ed Boaz, speaking on ABC World News Tonight, January 16, 1998). The number of abortion facilities in the US has decreased by over 50% since the early '90's. It is further evident that when women do not have easy access to abortion, they tend to bring the child to birth rather than undergo difficult measures to obtain an abortion elsewhere. In short, fewer abortionists means fewer abortions, and this creates a more realistic situation for changing the laws. We can contribute to the "supply" problem by playing up the incurable stigma of "abortion" and "abortionists", exposing the corrupt practices within the industry, and using legal and judicial recourse to force places closed and abortionists out of business. The bottom line is that the abortion-supporters may be left with a nation in which the act of abortion is fully supported by the government, but there is nobody to perform the procedure. Specific Initiatives:
2. Demand (Abortion-minded women and men)In regard to "demand", alternatives to abortion have to be strengthened, in terms of the quality of the help offered and our ability to get the message out. Women do not get abortions because of "freedom of choice," but precisely because they feel they have no freedom and no choice. Many women, when presented with real alternatives, will choose life for their children. Others, despite the presence of help to get through a pregnancy, are only interested in help to get out of the pregnancy. They too need to be reached and shown that abortion is far more horrifying than any of their fears about the alternatives. The current number of abortions is largely explained by the fact that the abortion industry is reaching these women before the pro-life movement has a chance to alert them to the horrors of -- and the alternatives to -- abortion. It is noteworthy that in 1992, when the Supreme Court reaffirmed Roe vs. Wade by the Planned Parenthood vs. Casey decision, the Court essentially said that even if Roe was wrongly decided, so many women have abortions that it is unrealistic to put a stop to it now. This, along with the reasoning of many legislators, reinforces the need to bring the numbers down before changing the law. This involves reaching the abortion-minded woman. Efforts which can correct this situation and which need to be strengthened and publicized include the following:
3. License (The abortion procedure is legal in our nation.)To effect change in this area requires reaching and persuading many more people than do the previous two areas. To change the law, abortion has to become less common (as explained above) and less socially acceptable. The following section deals with strategies and activities for changing the public opinion about abortion. Opinion polls of the American people on abortion show a deep conflict. The picture is captured by a CBS/NY Times poll which asked, "Is abortion the same thing as murdering a child...?", to which 50% of the respondents said YES. Of this group, the question was then asked, "Do you agree or disagree that abortion is sometimes the best course in a bad situation?" Those who said yes were 32%. A growing number of people call abortion murder but think it should still be available. They have heard the message from both sides: the pro-life movement has convinced them that the child is a child and that abortion destroys that child. The pro-choice movement has convinced them that such destruction is a necessary evil. Both sides have won, but on different battlegrounds. It is time for the pro-life movement to take and win the battleground on which the pro-choice movement stands. We cannot presume that the conclusion, "Abortion is murder," automatically leads people to say, "Well, then, it can't be permitted." Rather than the end point of the moral analysis, the conclusion "Abortion is murder" is for many people only the first step of a moral analysis that involves the weighing of values: i.e. the value of the unborn child and the values at stake for the pregnant mother. The reason many think abortion, though murder, needs to be kept legal and available is that they believe a) there are no alternatives, and b) the abortion provides a benefit to the mother. The pro-life movement must therefore stress a) the existence of the alternatives, and the fact that the pro-life movement consists primarily in the effort to develop and provide those alternatives; b) the growing evidence that what harms the baby always harms the mother as well. This does not mean we stop working to persuade the people that abortion is the killing of a child. It means, rather, that we show the full truth of the evil of abortion, that it harms both mother and child, and that we re-frame the question as "Why can't we love them both?" A further revelation from opinion studies shows that many people are uncomfortable with the timing and the ease (legally speaking) with which abortions can be obtained. We should obviously, therefore, be focusing on this theme in our educational efforts. A key factor in molding public opinion, furthermore, is the image most people have of the pro-life and pro-abortion movements. The image of the pro-life movement certainly needs to be changed.
Likewise, the image of the abortion industry has to be changed.
Practical programs that can implement the above points include the following:
The post-abortion aspects of pro-life work strengthen all of the above in a number of ways.
Specific post-abortion areas to strengthen include:
Other points of implementation for public education include:
Training A lot of information and good advice exists for would-be pro-life activists. This info needs to be more systematically presented in good training seminars that are not limited to the interests of one or another particular group. The development of online training is critical. Back to menu
4. Activation of the Churches for all of the aboveAfter summarizing the work he and his colleagues did to launch the abortion industry, Dr. Bernard Nathanson has said to the clergy, "We would never have gotten away with what we did if you had been united, purposeful, and strong." The pro-abortion forces still know that the biggest obstacle in their way is the Church of Jesus Christ. Only the Church has the Divine guarantee that it will conquer the Culture of Death. Given its vast system of communication, and the fact that those attending church regularly are statistically the most likely to be pro-life and therefore to do something about it, on a natural level alone it is evident that all that the pro-life movement wants to do will benefit, and in fact stands in need of, the resources that can be generated from the members of the Church. Combining this with the supernatural gifts of truth and grace which belong to the Church, it is clear that the full activation of the Church is a critical step for ending abortion. This does not primarily mean creating new structures. It simply means infusing the existing structure with greater vigor and effectiveness. Specific Initiatives to focus on: Seminars for Clergy, seminarians, and pastoral ministers presented by specially trained clergy who travel to parishes, schools, and pro-life groups throughout the nation. (This is the main work being done by Priests for Life.) Similar activity can be done in other Christian denominations through fostering the growth of the National Pro-life Religious Council. Back to menu -end-
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