Jan 8, 2013
As the pro-life movement contemplates four decades of legalized abortion in the United States and asks itself what really needs doing to halt this hideous scandal, pro-lifers should consider adding a new word to their vocabulary: ambivalence.
According to the dictionary, ambivalence is the state of having mutually conflicting emotions or thoughts about something. And where abortion is concerned, that obviously is how things stand with a substantial number of Americans. They don't like abortion, but they want it to be legally available.
The annual March for Life in the nation's capital will be Jan. 25 this year instead of Jan. 22, the actual date of the Supreme Court's 1973 abortion decision. Ironically, the switch was necessary to avoid conflict with President Obama's inauguration. As usual, the marchers will be signaling their determination to keep up the fight.
But which fight is that? In fact, there are two fights that need to be fought, and the less obvious is also the more important of the two.