Apocalyptic Hope
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Princeton University Professor Robert George
Congressional Statement on:
" Born Alive Infants Protection Act HR 4292 "
July 20, 2000 Washington D.C.
My name is Robert P. George. I am McCormick Professor of
Jurisprudence in the Department of Politics at Princeton
University. At Princeton, I teach courses in constitutional
interpretation, civil liberties, and philosophy of law. I am
author of two books in the field of moral and political
philosophy and editor of several others. I have published
numerous articles and review essays in journals of law,
philosophy, and political science. From 1993 to 1998, I served on
the United States Commission on Civil Rights, and in that
capacity I previously had the honor of testifying before this
Committee.
My basic philosophy of civil rights is simple. It is the
philosophy of the Declaration of Independence and, I believe, the
Constitution of the United States. At its core is the
self-evident principle that all human beings are created equal.
Each member of the human family, as a unique and irreplaceable
child of God, is endowed with inestimable and equal worth and
dignity.
We human beings may be unlike each other (or, if you will,
"unequal") in various respects --- some are endowed
with greater, some with lesser, intelligence, ability, physical
strength and vigor, etc.--- but none of these factors vitiates
the fundamental sense in which we are truly "created
equal" and entitled as a matter of right to "the equal
protection of the laws."
Of course, any of us, by the wrongful exercise of his or her
freedom, may forfeit liberty and certain other rights. But none
of us exists at the pleasure of others or merely to serve their
interests or fulfill their desires. There are no natural slaves
or masters. No human being is the mere property of anyone else,
or disposable at others' whims.
Our most basic rights --- including the right to life --- are
inherent and in no way contingent on a grant from the state or
any other merely human source. As an inherent right, the right to
life, which, properly specified, is a right not to be killed
either as an end in itself or a means to any other end, comes
into being for us when we come into being.
It is not a privilege that we earn by achieving a certain level
of consciousness or intelligence or other ability; it is not
something that comes or goes with age, size, stage of
development, or condition of disability or dependency; it is
certainly not something that depends on whether someone else
happens to "want" us or would prefer, all things
considered, that we not exist.
If my philosophy of civil rights were uncontroversial, there
would be no need for me and the other witnesses to be here today
or for you to trouble yourselves with this hearing. Infanticide
would be unthinkable. Even those who believe in abortion, as I do
not, would draw the line at birth, if not before, on the ground
that the physical separation of mother and child eliminates any
concern that protecting the life of the child would violate the
rights of her mother.
But today the philosophy of civil rights I hold is far from
undisputed. Infanticide is openly defended and even put forward
as itself a right. Indeed, in the academy the intellectual
groundwork is already in place to extend the right to abortion
into the post-natal phase.
In an article entitled "Killing Babies Isn't Always
Wrong"
(The Spectator, 16 September 1995, pp. 20-22),
Professor Peter Singer, who has since become my colleague at
Princeton where he is DeCamp Professor of Bioethics in the
University Center for Human Values, made the following proposal:
Perhaps, like the ancient Greeks, we should have a ceremony a
month after birth, at
which the infant is admitted to the community. Before that time,
infants would not be recognized as having the same right to life
as older people.
Now, I understand that Professor Singer has since backed away
from the proposed ceremony, but he has not altered his view that
we should do away in law and ethics with the principle at the
core of traditional concepts of human rights and equality,
namely, that it is always wrong intentionally to kill innocent
human beings; nor has he abandoned his claim that newborn human
beings are not "persons" with a right to life that must
be respected and protected by law.
He continues to insist that human beings only become
"persons," and acquire a right to life, sometime well
after birth. He denies that we are "created equal" and
affirms a concept which, frankly, makes me shudder: that of a
class of human beings, including newborn infants, who are, in
effect, nonpersons.
Is Professor Singer alone in these beliefs or in their public
advocacy?
Far from it. In fact, his position isn't even new. Something very
much like it was articulated in a mainstream philosophical
journal as early as 1972 by philosopher Michael Tooley.
("Abortion and Infanticide," Philosophy and Public
Affairs, Vol. 2.) Writing even before legal prohibitions of
abortion were swept away by the Supreme Court's decisions in Roe
v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton, Professor Tooley bluntly declared that
human fetuses and infants "do not have a right to life.
" Only "persons" have a right to life, and fetuses
no doubt that infants (or, for that matter, fetuses) are human
beings. He acknowledged, as does Singer, the plain fact that from
the beginning of our lives --- well before birth --- we are
distinct, whole, living members of the species Homo sapiens. But,
he insisted, we do not become "persons" --- we do not
acquire the right to life --- until well after we are born.
According to Professor Tooley, a human being (or other organism)
"possesses a serious right to life only if it possesses the
concept of a self as a continuing subject of experiences and
other mental states, and believes that it is itself such a
continuing entity." Infants do not qualify.
Here in Washington, D.C., American University philosophy
professor Jeffrey Reiman, while expressly declining "to
settle the issue about the moral status of infanticide,"
also claims that infants are not "persons" with a right
to life. (Critical Moral Liberalism: Theory and Practice (Lanham,
Md:
Rowman and Littlefield, 1997), ch. 8, "Abortion and
Infanticide.")
While he offers some reasons why people might nevertheless think
it generally wrong to kill newborn babies, he promoted the view
that infants, unlike more mature human beings, do not
"possess in their own right a property that makes it wrong
to kill them." He denies that infants are members of the
community who share equal worth, dignity, and rights, and
explicitly holds that "there will be permissible exceptions
to the rule against killing infants that will not apply to the
rule against killing adults and children."
I could go on with examples. For now, though, suffice it to say
that people who wish to destroy an "unwanted" child
have today in the academy --- here in the United States ---
influential scholars who are willing to say that the baby they
seek to have killed is not, in fact, a "person" with an
equal right to life. Some of these scholars promote the idea that
killing an infant at the request of its parent --- presumably a
father as well as a mother in view of the fact that the physical
separation of the child from the mother seems to confer on a
father an equal right to command the death of the child --- is
morally acceptable and ought to be legally permitted.
The legitimization of infanticide constitutes a grave threat to
the principle of human equality at the heart of American civil
rights ideals.
If weak and vulnerable members of the human family --- and
infants are surely among the weakest and most vulnerable --- can
be defined out of the community of "persons" whose
fundamental rights must be respected and protected by law, the
constitutional principle of equal protection becomes a sham. We
must begin now putting into place bulwarks against this threat.
I therefore respectfully urge passage of H.R. 4292, the Born
Alive Infants Protection Act.
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P.S. From Apocalyptic Hope:
For more articles and poems on this matter, please see
"Special Child"
www.cybertime.net/~ajgood/child.html
If you would like to express your opinion on this matter, you may
e-mail your
Congressional Representative at: www.house.gov/writerep
AND your Senators at
www.senate.gov
Remember, the unborn are depending on us to speak for them. God's
blessings upon you.
