Maybe the makers of "The Big Bang Theory" don't watch "Meet the Press."
Clinton was merely noting that some restrictions on abortions are permitted under the law. But the real kerfuffle was over the idea that a person can exist in America without any rights -- or that fetuses are people at all.
Clinton is rarely that blunt. She usually likes to use the term "women's health." That way she can claim that people who are against abortion-on-demand are against "women's health."
Anyway, it was hardly a big controversy -- more like a Twitter dust-up. That's probably why the writers of the hit
One of the characters, Bernadette, recently got pregnant. In the episode that aired
Howard replies, "We did!"
This highlights a phenomenon I've written a lot about: On some issues,
And so it is with abortion. With the exception of "Maude," an awful left-wing 1970s TV show (along with some "edgy" HBO series), there have been no major sitcoms in which a character has had an abortion.
Why? Well, one reason is abortions aren't funny. There's no reason to write a storyline in which a character gets pregnant only to decide later not have a baby. That's not a punch line, it's a tragedy. Even the very liberal
Maybe you could write a funny scene where a woman goes to the doctor to get a mammogram or deals with some other aspect of "women's health." I don't know. But you really can't write a knee-slapper about a woman deliberately terminating an unborn person's life.
Sometimes the pregnant character agonizes about her choice (and occasionally there's a miscarriage), but the moment Rachel from "Friends" or Murphy Brown or Bernadette chooses to keep it, the "it" stops being an it, and becomes a he or she.
Emotionally, that's how it works for many, perhaps most, people. When a woman wants to keep her baby, it becomes a baby long before it's born. No father speaks to a belly full of "uterine contents," and no mother thumbs through a book of baby names for a fetus she is going to dispose of anyway.
That's how a lot of public policy works, too. Under federal law and many state laws, if you murder a pregnant woman, you can be charged with two homicides.
The
Unborn children? Yes, both parties want to protect unborn children from disease-carrying mosquitoes. But that bipartisanship falls apart when it comes to Planned Parenthood.
This emotional parsing is understandable. The problem is that emotion isn't the best foundation for law. In the past, emotion led lots of Americans to think blacks weren't persons either. Logic, science and, finally, moral reasoning said otherwise. If over here an unborn child is a person but over there it isn't, and the only thing distinguishing the two is someone's feelings, we've got a problem. And it's not just a problem of language.
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Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and editor-at-large of National Review Online.
