By Bill Donohue, Catholic
League president
Most Americans are conflicted about abortion,
and most are reluctant to condemn a woman who has had one. But they are also
reluctant to honor those who have. Not the Bidens.
At the State of the Union on March 7, the
Bidens will showcase Kate Cox, a woman who left Texas in December to have her
baby aborted. The First Lady and the president spoke to her in January after
the abortion.
Cox’s child was diagnosed as having Trisomy 18,
more popularly known as Edwards syndrome. It is a severe genetic disorder that
typically results in a miscarriage during the first three months of pregnancy;
95 percent of these babies do not make it to term. Cox was 20 weeks pregnant
when she had her abortion.
We first learned of the decision to honor Cox
on January 24. That is when Kelly O’Donnell of NBC asked White House
Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre if the Biden administration had plans to
personalize the issue of abortion. Three days earlier, Jean-Pierre said, “The
First Lady invited Kate to join her as a guest at the State of the Union, and
Kate accepted.”
According to Jean-Pierre, Cox was “forced to go
to court to seek permission for the care she needed for a non-viable pregnancy
that threatened the life—that threatened her life.” But the justices in Texas
who ruled on this case did not all see eye to eye on this issue.
It is true that the District Court of Travis
County said that Cox’s doctor, Damla Karsan, concluded that her patient’s life
was threatened and merited a D&E abortion. But the Texas Supreme Court
noted that “Dr. Karsan did not assert that Ms. Cox has a ‘life-threatening
physical condition’ or that, in Dr. Karsan’s reasonable medical judgment, an abortion
is necessary because Ms. Cox has the type of condition the exception requires.”
Turning to the medical community, a study
published in the America
Journal of Perinatology in
2017 concluded there was no increased maternal risk involved in Trisomy 18 pregnancies.
Whether Cox’s condition met the criteria for an
abortion is an important matter, but it has nothing to do with the decision to
glamorize her. To say it is in bad taste is an understatement.
Cheering Cox on is the Center for Reproductive
Rights who, with Cox, sued Texas. It is one of the most well-funded
pro-abortion institutions in the world. It is disturbed that so many
disabilities organizations are decidedly pro-life. “At times,” it says, “the
disability rights movement has in fact alienated feminists by forging strategic
alliances with anti-abortion groups to advance shared priorities, or by
remaining silent on the abortion issue in order to avoid controversy within
their own movement.”
The history of the eugenics movement, in this
country with its racist agenda, and in Nazi Germany with its genocidal agenda,
should be enough to give all disabled persons and organizations pause. They are
always one step removed from experiencing the “compassion” of the population
control crowd.
In a poll taken last month, 58 percent of
Americans believe that babies born with Down syndrome should not be aborted.
Among Republicans, 75 percent are against aborting these babies; 58 percent of
independents are opposed; but the figure for Democrats is only 42 percent—56
percent support such abortions. Count Jill and Joe among the latter.
It is bad enough that the Bidens are flagging Kate Cox’s decision to abort her baby. It is worse that they deliberately chose a woman to be honored who was carrying a baby with disabilities. Quite frankly, Jill Biden is exploiting this woman to enhance the political capital of her husband.
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