In the past several weeks, two events taking place 857 miles
apart show just how absurd our ideas about freedom
have become.
One of the events involved a 13-year-old girl known only as
L.G. L.G. has been in the custody of the
Floridas Department of Children & Families (DCF) since
she was nine. In late January, L. G. ran away from
the DCF shelter and, during her absence, became pregnant.
After her return, her caseworker arranged for an abortion. On
the day the abortion was scheduled, DCF requested a court order
delaying the abortion. DCF argued that it has the custodial
responsibility to do what is in the best interest of the
child.
At the hearing, L.G., who was represented by the
Florida ACLU, justified her decision by saying that it
would make no sense to have the baby. She asked the judge,
Why cant I make my own
decision?13-year-old girl.
The judge delayed the abortion long enough for
L.G. to be examined psychologically. When, as
expected, she passed the exam, he ruled that she could have an
abortion. Florida officials announced that they would
respectfully comply with the courts decision.
The truth is that they didnt have any choice. A 2003
Florida Supreme Court ruling struck down a state law requiring
parental notification in the case of a minor seeking an abortion.
If parents dont have the right to be notified, what good
does it to require parental consent?
At the same time this was going on, the House of
Representatives debated a law that makes it illegal to
dodge parental-consent laws by taking minors across state lines
for abortions. As the law now stands, an unrelated adult
who takes a 13-year-old from, say, Pennsylvania to New Jersey to
have an abortion without her parents knowledge hasnt
violated any law. Well, the majority in Congress is trying to
change this.
But, predictably, an ACLU spokesman said that the bill
reflects a lack of compassion toward teens. Just as
predictably, abortion-rights advocates tried to tack
on exceptions that would have swallowed the rule.
Whats missing in all of this talk about
decisions and compassion is any
appreciation of the absurdity that underlies the abortion debate.
In any other context, the idea that a 13-year-old has a
constitutional right to choose against her parents wishes
an invasive surgical procedure, or even consent to one, would be
absurd. Schools need parental permission to dispense
over-the-counter medications. And a 13-year-old cant get
her ears pierced without mom or dad being present.
Similarly, an unrelated adult who took a minor out-of-state
for another medical procedure would be called a
kidnapper. Wed issue an Amber
Alert, and her picture would be on CNN and Fox 24/7. Upon
apprehension, the adult would face possible charges of
endangering the welfare of a minor or interference with parental
custodyboth of these are felonies.
Yet, because the procedure in question is
abortion, none of this applies. Abortion is not a right anymore;
its the right. It trumps everything else and, thus,
embodies our deepest commitments and most treasured values.
Now, most people would deny this but it only proves that they
havent been paying attention. If they had, 13-year-olds
like L.G. wouldnt feel entitled to make life
and death decisions.
Copyright (c) 2005 Prison Fellowship. Used with permission.