A few months ago, when I wrote about a proposed ballot initiative in Colorado that would define a fertilized egg as a person, I was hoping that I'd been fooled by an Onion headline.
But alas, it's true. Proposed Amendment 48 (PDF), which will indeed be on the ballot in November, is described as an amendment to change the definition of the term "person" to "include any human being from the moment of fertilization as 'person' is used in those provisions of the Colorado constitution relating to inalienable rights, equality of justice, and due process of law."
Yikes. I usually try to see both sides of things -- and while I do understand how people could consider abortion murder (even if I don't agree with them), I've got to say, this one crosses the line. I already enunciated a lot of my objections in my previous post, but this editorial by Gail Schoettler in the Denver Post lays down a few more.
What about cancer treatments, Schoettler asks, which can kill a fetus -- could a woman on chemotherapy be considered a murderer? Or how about birth control or in vitro fertilization (which can waste fertilized eggs)? Stem cell research? Could a fetus have property rights?
"The proposal says a handful of cells is just as important as the woman whose egg might have been fertilized," Schoettler writes. "Is it just as important as a mom with three kids to take care of? Should it be given the same rights as a woman who has dedicated her life to teaching or medicine or community service?"
I like to think that women who don't have three kids and haven't devoted their lives to community service still have at least the same importance as their unborn children, but I suppose that's a small point to quibble with. The bottom line -- which is laid out thoughtfully and convincingly in this article (PDF) -- is that Amendment 48 is creepy as hell. I hope that Colorado's citizens have the sense not to pass it.
The abortion doctor
Susan Wicklund has received death threats and worn a bulletproof vest to work. But what really scares her, she writes in "This Common Secret," is the war on reproductive rights.
By Eryn Loeb, Salon
How abortion changed the world
From a sketchy underground doctor to the American fight against communism, a look at the unlikely forces that helped spread global family planning.
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What's wrong with the new pro-lifers
The progressive anti-abortion movement still doesn't truly value the life and identity of the mother.
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Is there a next generation of abortion providers?
As if the threat of violence and divisive politics weren't enough, getting trained is almost impossible.
By Kate Harding, Salon
When abortion was a crime
Reagan, an assistant professor of history, medicine and women's studies at the University of Illinois, dedicates her disturbing work on abortion in America before Roe v. Wade to "the lives of... women who died trying to control their reproduction."
The abortion debate
An incredibly interesting debate that looks at both the pros and cons of abortion from a secularist viewpoint.