Bioethics, healthcare policy, and related issues.
Chris Smith, Republican anti-choice obsessive in the House of Representatives, keeps flogging “Holly’s Law”, a bill to make RU-486 illegal, and named after Holly Patterson, a young woman who obtained a medical abortion and later died of septic shock. It was introduced last session, languished, and reappeared like a bad fungus. Her parents endorse the bill.
No one can say now, of course, but it occurs to me that one person who likely would not endorse the bill is Holly Patterson. She made a choice to use the medication after being informed of the known risks : that at most 6 (now 7) out of over half-a-million users of RU-486 had died afterwards, and that that rate compares with deaths from septicemia following childbirth or surgical abortion, and is actually lower than those from all causes associated with full-term pregnancy. Surely she did not hope for or expect the tragic consequences in her case, but it’s clear she thought, beforehand, that the existence a low level of risk was not reason enough to ban the drug. Almost certainly not agreeing with the proposed legislation would be the half-million women who used this medication safely and effectively. Those who wish to ban the drug seek to supplant every one of these women’s choices - and those of any of the millions of women every year for whom RU-486 is a potential treatment choice - with their commands, and to replace women’s decision-making with obedience to others’ authority. I suspect none of these women, and likely not Holly herself, would grant their informed consent to that prospect.
I don’t mean to put words in Holly Patterson’s or anyone else’s mouth. I dislike the use of women who have died following abortion - legal or illegal - as symbols of someone else’s cause. But I do wish to point out that the decision to use this medication is one that can easily be taken on rational and informed grounds, indeed it is in many cases the safest alternative a pregnant woman has, and that the women who have made that decision have acted intelligently and with knowledge beforehand in a rational defense of their own interests.
This bill, by banning one particular treatment that, even in the face of a number of recent deaths, has a lower mortality overall compared with any other alternative simply cannot rationally be an attempt to protect women from fatal complications in unwanted pregnancy. What it is is an attempt to capitalize on a number of adverse incidents deliberately publicized by anti-choice forces for just that purpose, in order to remove the most convenient abortion option from women’s grasp. It is an attempt to coerce women’s choices about unwanted pregnancy by eliminating one safe possible option. And I doubt any woman who values her autonomy and has confidence in her own ability to make her own choices would endorse the coercion of all women out of pretended sympathy.
Hat tip: Joseph Bryars at Abortion Watch.
One Response to ““Holly’s Law” Attempts to Violate Holly’s Autonomy Posthumously”
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April 1st, 2006 at 1:55 am
The problem is this: either you respect the ‘other’ or you don’t. Autonomy demands that you not only expect respect for your paradigm, it demands that you respect the other point of view (with the expected caveate of don’t tread on me). That is the main problem with religion as I see it, there is simply no respect for the other. If you don’t tow my company line, you are a heretic. And death to you. I get my 72 virgins, yada, yada, yada. I respect a person’s autonomous choice to be religious, but they seldom return the favor of allowing me to differ from their beliefs. You know, as far as I know a big part of religious belief is ‘judge not lest ye be judged’. Yet, judging others without walking in their shoes seems to be a major part of religious paradigms. I myself have many questions about the ethics of abortion. However, I do not have any moral qualms about letting another person decide for themselves what the morality of abortion means to them. I will try to convince them, not condemn them. As long as the ‘other’ does not stamp on my rights, I could care less what they do. That is for God to decifer. Those who seek to limit a woman’s right to choose for herself are seeking to limit EVERYONE’S choices. They want us to believe that there is no right to privacy in the Constitution. Anyone who has actually read the Constitution would know that the document is replete with a right to privacy for individuals. That right is found in the Bill of Rights. Can anyone honestly tell me that the Bill of Rights does not speak DIRECTLY to an individual’s right to privacy? Why then have a right to free speech, freedom of association, freedom of religion, etc. All of these rights speak directly to a right to privacy. Take that King George Bush.