Arkansas Online

End of an era?

Star Parker Star Parker is president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

After a covid-19 driven timeout last year, March for Life returns this year to Washington, D.C., for the 49th year, noting the anniversary of and support to overturn the Roe v. Wade decision of Jan. 22, 1973. This began the era of legal abortion in the United States.

A high turnout is expected due to last year’s hiatus, but even more so, to express optimism that this could well be the last March for Life with Roe v. Wade the law of the land.

The Supreme Court heard last December Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, challenging the constitutionality of Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act, passed in 2018, posing a frontal assault on Roe v. Wade.

Should the Mississippi law be found constitutional, the Roe v. Wade era, after a half-century, would be over. Given that we now have the most conservative Supreme Court in years, pro-lifers anticipate history in the making.

The Mississippi law alters the viability standard, key to Roe, which permits abortion up to the 24th week of pregnancy—the period after which the child is deemed able to survive outside the womb.

The Gestational Age Act moves the focus to when the infant first can feel pain, rather than alleged viability, substantially reducing the time when abortion would be permitted.

Looking back over the last half century that abortion has been part of our national culture, it is difficult to imagine how anyone can see anything but damage that this decision has done to our nation and to our national soul.

The most obvious statistic to consider is the some 63 million children whose lives were taken over those 49 years.

Those whose lives were taken in 1974 would be 48 years old now, at the height of their working careers and, if not for the cultural damage that has been done, may have been well into building their own families.

Surveying our national culture since 1973, I cannot identify a single cultural institution that is better. On the contrary, regarding our core social institutions, everything is uniformly worse.

The American family is in far worse shape today than in 1973. According to the Census Bureau, in 1968, 85.4 percent of American children lived with two parents. By 2020, this was down to 70.4 percent.

Fewer and fewer of our young people are interested in marriage and children. In 1970, per the Census Bureau, the median age at first marriage for men was almost 24 and for women a little over 20. By 2021, for men this reached almost 31 and for women almost 29.

The overall implications are an aging society. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, in 1970, 10.1 percent of Americans were over 65. Today, almost 17 percent are over 65.

An increasing burden of caring for the elderly falls each year on a shrinking number of working Americans. Per the Kaiser Family Foundation, those over 65, now 17 percent of the population, account for over 35 percent of our health care expenditures.

How can anyone not see all this as flashing danger signs to our national future?

A country with a future is a country that values and respects the sanctity of life.

With all the supposed concerns of woke culture, the truth is that respect between people—whether between races and ethnicities, or between men and women—begins with respect for the sanctity of life.

Let us all pray, as we begin a new year, that this will be the last year that pro-lifers need to march in Washington to protest the Roe v. Wade regime.

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2022-01-20T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-01-20T08:00:00.0000000Z

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