Posted: 03/03/10 20:34
by Dave Mindeman
I classify myself as an ardent pro-choice advocate. I hope that we always keep the number of abortions as few as possible. And I hope we can build a society that will support any woman who chooses to have a baby.
But there are just too many complications involved with rape, incest and the like....as well as issues involving fetal development and genetics that are just way beyond my pay grade.
I strongly feel that a woman and her doctor are the only ones who should be making any decision of that nature.
But, let me digress a second and tell you that this is NOT a post about abortion. Rather it is a somewhat related post about life already experienced and lived. Life that is not at its beginning, but struggling to maintain its own meager existence.
This is about GAMC.
As negotiations continue, there is a dichotomy of thought that seems to run through all of this. Republicans just don't seem to get the correlation. If you say you are FOR life in its absolute, then be consistently for it. People that depend on GAMC have not been blessed with the most desirable circumstances in life. Some of it is their own fault, some of it is not. But they have got to be more than a statistical dollar sign on an unallotment chopping block. They still live. They were once a baby...they once had a family. They still live.
They are living, breathing people...who depend on us. They depend on all of us. And by all that is holy in heaven, we are failing them.
They aren't parts of a balance sheet. They'll never appear at one of Pawlenty's high brow fundraisers. Some of them merely exist. They live day to day....never quite sure if this particular day won't be there last.
I watched the override vote in the House. There was a lot of silence in the room. I assume that the NO votes in the chamber were well aware of what they were doing. This shouldn't have been just another partisan issue. And the same individuals who have such a passion about eliminating abortion should have been on the same side of this vote for life.
Because in all reality, it still is a vote about life. More real than the mysteries of birth, these are people for whom life is not a certainty. It is a day to day struggle to exist.
This bill was carefully crafted and it had as much of a bipartisan nature to it as any bill brought before the legislature. It wasn't a perfect bill...nothing is perfect. But it met a need that most everyone outside of Presidential politics could agree upon.
I am not sure what happens next. I hope that some kind of fix can be worked out.
But one thing I did learn from those NO votes on the House floor. The support for life in that part of the chamber seems to have confusing limitations.... the definitions of which completely escape me for now.



