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Archives for March 2011

So you think you’re pro-choice

March 9, 2011 by Jennifer Derwey 7 Comments

The debate last night at Dalhousie started off as expected. The posters on the doors had been torn down and crumpled, then were reattached. A small group of people on campus had littered the auditorium with helium filled balloons dangling signs that read: “Access to Safe Abortion On Demand IS NOT UP FOR DEBATE”

But the speakers weren’t discouraged.

For the pro-life side, Stephanie Gray, executive director of the Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform, began the debate by describing the medical definitions of human being and illustrating how those differ from our current standards of ‘personhood’. Ms. Gray was thoughtful and concise, her points were clear and didn’t fall victim to emotionalizing the debate. Regardless of whether or not one agreed with the CCBR’s controversial methods, they couldn’t help but recognize Gray’s ability to give compelling arguments and coherently question what difference it made to be in the womb or outside it, a few seconds conceived or 20 years old. Was a person not a person regardless of their time spent on earth?

During her opening, a young gentleman had left stink-bombs, yes you read it right, stink-bombs, on a chair in the auditorium which temporarily interrupted the debate while the chair and its smelly protest were removed. Ms. Gray commented, “I thought we were at a university.”

When Dr. Mark Mercer took the podium for the pro-choice argument, he proceeded to follow a Peter Singer train of thought. Dr. Mercer had previously published an article entitled “A Fetus is not a Person” in The Ottawa Citizen, this article has been removed. He argued that ‘personhood’ did not actually occur until around 18 months to 2 years of age, that until a human being was able to rationalize, make plans, be a ‘locus’ of experience, and feel pain and joy, it was not in fact a person. As such, we should not be “morally troubled” by it. He conceded that though abortion was killing a human being it was not killing a ‘person’ and that there was no moral difference between killing a baby in the womb and killing a baby prior to its ‘personhood’. Dr. Mercer, unfortunately, lacked the ability to convey these beliefs coherently to the audience, many of whom actually laughed at some of his remarks.

During the question period, Ms. Gray continued to illustrate respect for her questioners and thoughtfulness in her answers, even though one young woman stormed out just when it was her turn to question yelling “This b*tch isn’t worth my time!”. Dr. Mercer, however, was questioned primarily about why he was even chosen to represent the pro-choice view, as none of the pro-choice audience members believed he was speaking on their behalf. Those audience members even went so far as to claim that Pro-Life at Dal (the group who put together the debate) had purposefully chosen a poor speaker for the pro-choice side, demanding to know who else was contacted about participating.

In my empathy for Dr. Mercer and his obvious confusion to his reception, I spoke to him afterward. He asked me,”What could I have done or said differently?” I offered my opinion that perhaps the pro-choice audience members expected a more ‘pro-woman’ argument to be made. He replied,”But I’ve written numerous times and shown how those ‘pro-woman’ arguments don’t work, they have no basis.” And at that, I was pleased.

Perhaps those who consider themselves pro-choice in the audience might have realized that evening that Dr. Mercer was arguing the morality of abortion without the usual ‘choice’ rhetoric, the rhetoric that abortion should be legal because women will acquire illegal abortions (which Dr. Mercer has shown is not a solid argument). That the pro-choice/pro-abortion philosopher kings, like Dr. Mercer and Peter Singer, aren’t people the general pro-choice population agrees with or even likes. And this is hopeful, because eventually everyone will have thrown off the shackles of ‘choice’ rhetoric and will have to look at abortion as starkly as Dr. Mercer, the man nobody agrees with and who represents no one, does.

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Modern heroes

March 9, 2011 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

David Warren writes in the Ottawa Citizen about Linda Gibbons as a modern-day hero:

For those who have never heard of her -her story is seldom mentioned in our media -Linda is Canada’s longest serving political prisoner.

She will soon surpass, cumulatively, the time spent in prison by Karla Homolka -who knowingly led three girls, including her own sister, to rapes, tortures, and murders in which she participated. Homolka, as everyone probably knows, plea-bargained her way to a modest sentence and was released more than five years ago. According to one press report (in La Presse) she was back in Ontario and studying law. Other reports placed her in the Caribbean with a new husband and child.

Linda Gibbons, by contrast, has no prospect of release. She is a grandmother, age 62. Her crime was praying, publicly, inside the 60-foot “bubble” around a Morgentaler abortion clinic in Toronto.

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Confession

March 9, 2011 by Véronique Bergeron 5 Comments

Isn’t it ironic that I was not able to post anything on International Woman’s Day, me, the busy working mother of 6? So consider this my Woman’s Day well-wishes, symbolically one day late and rushed (I have 10 minutes, having finished lunches early this morning).

What did I do yesterday? I drove children around while listening to a CBC radio panel on the status of women (listen to it here)  The comments of the 25-year-old gave me hope. After the usual milk run of school and preschool drop-offs, I headed shortly into my part-time job on Parliament Hill, having recently downgraded from full-time work in a effort to bring more balance into my life. I say “shortly” because I was just picking-up a few work items to bring home: my toddler has been fighting a string of bugs since January and was feverish. Again.

So what did I, a highly educated female in my prime earning years, do on International Woman’s Day? I was living the dream! Caught between my work and family obligations, missing work to care for a sick child as I have done at least once a week for the last 6 weeks, happily sabotaging my professional ascension to better pay and more serious responsibilities. You may wonder what my husband was doing and why wasn’t he taking time off work to care for the sick child? The reason is simple: he makes, oh, about 10 times more money than I do. To use round numbers, if a day off for me costs our family $10, my husband’s days off cost us $100. And the nature of the beast is that as long as I keep missing work to tend to my family, I will keep making $10 while my husband’s earnings will keep increasing. It’s not rocket science home economics. It’s just cold hard reality. And no government policy, national daycare program or pity pay-outs will change it.

Here’s your International Woman’s Day wisdom from the trenches, one day late and rushed between making lunches and wiping runny noses with my power suit: children need taking care of. Bosses need taking care of. There are 24 hours in a day. Choices have consequences. They are either work-related or family-related. Sort it out. Then deal with it.

You’re welcome.

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Happy International Women’s Day

March 8, 2011 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

My take on it, in today’s Ottawa Citizen.

___________________

Update: Some other women I like on the same topic. Tasha Kheiriddin in the Post, here and Margaret Wente in the Globe, here. Could it be? There’s a nascent sisterhood of reasonable women out there?

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Abortion debate tomorrow at Dalhousie

March 7, 2011 by Jennifer Derwey 5 Comments

Abortion Debate: Is it moral? Should it be illegal?

Tuesday, March 8 · 7:00pm – 10:00pm

Scotiabank Auditorium, Marion McCain Arts & Social Sciences Bldg 

6135 University Avenue
Halifax, NS
*On the 100th anniversary of International Women’s Day*
Free event, open to the public. There will be opportunities for the audience to pose questions to each opponent. 

Stephanie Gray of the controversial Canadian Centre for Bio-ethical Reform will debate Dr. Mark Mercer of Saint Mary’s University on whether abortion is moral, and the legal implications of its morality. Stephanie Gray will argue that abortion is immoral, while Dr.Mercer will argue it is not immoral.

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New report reveals startling numbers

March 7, 2011 by Jennifer Derwey Leave a Comment

Abortion numbers, they’re hard to come by, but POWER has been putting in the research to compile a comprehensive report. From Anastasia Bowles at the National Post:

No matter what your position on abortion, the study reveals unsettling facts about abortions in Ontario, and by extension, in Canada. For example, we learn that for every 100 babies born in Ontario, 37 are aborted.

The ratio for teens aged 15-19 is even more shocking. For every 100 babies born to Ontario teens, 152 are aborted.

The study noted that teens “were by far the most likely of any age group to have an abortion rather than a live birth.” And since it excluded abortions for girls under 15, the teen abortion rate is even higher.

It also revealed disturbing data about repeat abortions in Ontario hospitals. As many as 52% of women had one or more previous abortions. Even more disturbing, almost one fifth of teens aged 15-19 said they had already had at least one abortion. The study even cautioned that the percentage of repeat abortions was likely higher due to under-reporting.

And that’s just for hospitals. Abortion clinics were excluded from the repeat calculations even though they perform more than half the province’s abortions. And teens don’t need parental consent for clinic abortions (though they may at some hospitals), so more teens may go to clinics.

Even fairly liberal parents might squirm to think that their child, aged 14 or younger, could walk into a clinic to have an abortion — more than once — and they would never know.

Most Canadians are unaware that teens don’t need parental consent to have an abortion. They don’t even have to inform their parents. In fact, most Canadians — 80% according to a 2010 Angus Reid poll — don’t even know we have no legal restrictions on abortion.

For the record, abortion is fully legal in Canada at any stage of pregnancy, for any reason, and for any Canadian citizen, and taxpayers pay for almost all of them.

LifeCanada, a national organization educating on the value of human life, has commissioned Environics to poll Canadians annually from 2002-2009. Each year, a large majority, anywhere from 60% to 66%, supported some legal restrictions on abortion.

So even though most Canadians don’t know the facts or statistics on abortion, they don’t support the current legal vacuum in Canada. Imagine if they actually knew something about the subject.

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Event in Ottawa tonight

March 7, 2011 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

This comes recommended by a friend who says the speaker is great. An Interview with an Ex-Porn Producer will be happening at Club Saw in Ottawa at 7 pm tonight. More info, here and on Facebook, here.

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That’s some dog

March 6, 2011 by Jennifer Derwey Leave a Comment

The miraculous story of Wall-E,

A dog that an Oklahoma shelter “euthanized” and confirmed to be dead was recently found alive and well in the facility’s dumpster, News 9 in Oklahoma City has reported.

OK330.18772025-1-x

(The resurrected pup; Image: Petfinder.com)

The three-month-old male black and white puppy had supposedly been put to (permanent) sleep with injections to one of his limbs and to his heart. A stethoscope test at the Sulphur, Okla., shelter led to the declaration that he’d died.

“You might say that he’s an angel dog,” animal control officer Scott Prall told News 9, after Prall found the resurrected dog, now named Wall-e, wandering around inside the trash bin.

Disney-Pixar’s fictional Wall-e was a robot that was the last of his kind.

Four of puppy Wall-E’s littermates did die as intended during the euthanasia process. Someone had previously left the dogs outside of the shelter, already over-crowded with homeless pets. Staff there believed the puppies were thin and “appeared to be sickly,” so the decision was made to put them down.

Wall-e proved them wrong, however, by not just surviving but thriving.

“He was just as healthy as he could be,” Prall said after his surprise trash bin discovery, made a full day after the “euthanization” took place.

I can see proponents of euthanasia saying, “We would never let this happen with human beings. We would make sure there were no miracles!”

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It’s that time of year

March 5, 2011 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

The time of year for what, you might ask? Well, in Ottawa we are experiencing Winter Part Deux, snow, sleet, ice pellets, rain and puddles that are more like small lakes. I’m preparing for a birthday party tonight and knowing that we all need a little summer, I found a recipe for a drink called “Summer Breeze,” (pineapple juice, pink grapefruit juice, soda, mint leaves and two ounces of gin, if you must know.)

I’m sampling one right now–because gin is pretty much what is required for a gal like me to read an entire Judy Rebick column.*

Yes, it’s that time of year–International Women’s Day. The centennial, I gather.

I could go on about why I don’t see things Judy’s way. But quite frankly, I’m enjoying this Summer Breeze too much, plus I believe I’ll have a column in the Ottawa Citizen next week on this very topic. We don’t want to be like Sweden, ladies, is the only thing I’ll definitely write here. They have a very different concept of feminism, and it’s actually a whole lot more traditional than many of us (Judy included) realize. (All their social programs are geared to helping women stay home, such that most women do. Any given day in Sweden, there’s 20 per cent absenteeism on the job, and a much lower percentage of their corporate managers and CEOs are women in the private sector.)

I believe in freedom. I believe women ought to do what they want. I believe they should also fund what they want to do themselves, alone or within families. Relying on a husband’s wage to stay home with kids isn’t insulting, it’s common sense. I don’t think a government program makes women “more equal,” hence my constant railing against Status of Women Canada. And I believe if women work fewer hours in different industries, which they do, as per Statistics Canada, then they should actually be paid less, and that 100 per cent “pay equity” would be evidence that we gave up on the free market.

This may well be the gin talking. Here ends the rant. Enjoy the lead up to International Women’s Day. And make sure you have the beverage of your choice on hand for every time they mention “abortion as a hard fought right.”

*I really don’t drink very much. I had to use egg cups to measure out my ounces–perhaps too generous a proxy, come to think of it.

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On feminism

March 4, 2011 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

Ok, so maybe not everyone will find this so funny. However, even if you are a feminist, I’d still recommend watching at least the first 11 seconds, until her computer-generated cartoon arm makes a sweeping gesture about “the patriarchy.”

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05ro6fcj6Ek”>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05ro6fcj6Ek]

______________________

Brigitte adds: Hey! I’ve seen that gesture before! Right, Andrea? 🙂

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