Wednesday, July 06, 2011

Memo to Southern Christians: so you're really concerned about the rights of the unborn? by gimleteye

The conservative right deploys right-to-life as its battle cry, but when it comes to rallying against environmental pollution that is arguably a greater threat to fetuses than abortion, the right is silent. With only a few exceptions, there is nary a whisper from the pulpits about organizing to protect the unborn by supporting tougher anti-pollution laws. Mercury exposure, for example, is known to cause deformities and developmental disorders. In Florida, mercury is as ubiquitous as fertilizer thrown on sugar fields by billionaire farmers, flowing downstream to God knows where.

Southern Christians (I'm singling out Southern Christians, because this writer is from Florida) ought to recognize that the rights of fetuses are as threatened by pollution as abortion. So why isn't the conservative right deploying their message machinery to educate Southern Christians about these underlying threats to the unborn?

Now comes "news": environmental factors play a greater role in autism rates than previously disclosed by science. Googling "rights of the unborn" turns up 11.3 million references on the web, in .15 seconds. Google "rights of the unborn and environment", and there are about 34 results in .1 seconds.

The rapid rise in autism spectrum disorders has been widely reported in the press. What is less remarked is that the percentage of children born with development disorders -- some of which may be attributable to toxins in the environment-- is higher per thousand than the incidence of abortion in the general population. According to the CDC, between 1997 and 2008, the number of children with a disability rose from 8.2 million to roughly 10 million, or more than 15% of all kids between the ages of 3 and 17. A more recent study indicates that 2 to 3 percent of American children suffer within the range of autism spectrum disorder. A 2008 report by the non-profit Guttmacher Institute notes that in the U.S. the abortion rate peaked in 1980 at 2.9 percent (per 1000 women) and declined to 2 percent by 2004.

Is it poverty of imagination that keeps Christians from being the nation's conscience on the environment or is something more sinister at work? That, for example, polluting corporations and their executives like the Koch brothers have invested millions to co-opt the conservative right?

These doubts about conservatives tie back to the refusal of the Republican Congress to unite behind efforts to stop environmental pollution from harming the fetus. Instead the GOP is holding agreement with President Obama on raising the debt ceiling hostage until the EPA is gutted. Instead of protecting the unborn, Republicans want to guarantee the rights of polluters. In Florida, a new day for conservatives could start by organizing churches and congregations to lobby Republican legislators in Florida and Governor Rick Scott so that fetuses are protected from a threat greater than abortionists: environmental polluters. Start, for example, with new laws to ensure that mercury contamination is stopped, even when it originates in the sugar fields of wealthy campaign contributors, harming fetuses and killing the Everglades.

Southern Christians cannot claim to be motivated by the rights of the unborn until they put environmental protection front and center.

4 comments:

Geniusofdespair said...

Don't forget endocrine disruption.

Anonymous said...

There is no such word as 'conscience'.

Anonymous said...

Southern Christian weighing in:

I agree with you, Gim. To add to your concern, I would ask this question - why are some Christians not concerned with the lives of babies conceived in incest and/or rape? The last Pro-Life initiative suggested that the state exclude these children from protection.

I think Southern Christian and Staunch Republican are getting mixed and mangled. Somehow, taking care of God's green earth and one's neighbors has become anti-Christian. How is that?

Miami Urbanist said...

Another Christian weighing in:

I also have lamented that Christians focus on abortion while ignoring other major causes of death that are largely preventable. Why aren't Christians rallying for safer streets, enforcement of protections for pedestrians and cyclists, and slower design speeds on highways and streets? These would reduce one of the most common means of death of children and young adults in our country! There are many other deleterious aspects of our built environment which kill more than abortion does, but they are completely silent on these issues.