REBUTTAL
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I was deeply saddened when I read Peggy Normandin’s inflammatory
letter about Planned Parenthood [“Letter to the Editor: Planned
Parenthood is not honorable group,” Jan. 30]. I understand that many in
this country disagree with the morality of allowing legal abortions, but
what I do not understand is how being close-minded and uninformed helps
any of us move towards resolution.
Understandably, not everyone has a clear conception of the birth
control movement. Ms. Normandin asserted that while “we cannot be sure
what Margaret Sanger intended when she started the Planned Parenthood
Movement in 1917 . . . we can be sure today of what her vision has
wrought on our country’s culture.”
I would argue to the contrary, that in fact Sanger’s motives were
quite clear in 1921 when she started the American Birth Control League.
She held the un-sinister belief that “no woman can call herself free who
does not own and control her own body. No woman can call herself free
until she can choose consciously whether she will or will not be a
mother.”
Further, Ms. Normandin accused Planned Parenthood of allowing “a young
girl who cannot receive even an aspirin without parental consent to
receive a free and immediate abortion.”
With that, Ms. Normandin is making the kind statement that makes
positive dialogue difficult. Starting in 1983 with Planned Parenthood vs
Ashcroft, the Supreme Court has consistently upheld state laws requiring
the parental consent of at least one of the minor’s parents or a ruling
from a judge that the minor is mature enough to make the decision to
terminate her pregnancy.
These rules regulating a minor’s access to abortion were upheld in
Hodgson v Minnesota (1990), Ohio v Akron Center for Reproductive Health
(1990), and in Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v Casey
(1992). In Casey, the Court even upheld a law requiring 48 hours between
parental notification and the abortion procedure.
Finally, I agree with Ms. Normandin that this country has done a great
disservice to many of the women and children that live here. However, I
respectfully submit that guaranteeing all woman the right to birth
control and helping them to terminate their pregnancies if they so desire
is not anti-women’s rights or even a “moral or sociological failure.” I
embrace debate about the morals of Planned Parenthood as long it is about
the facts and not rhetoric.
* STEFANIE WARREN is a Newport Beach resident.
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