Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Where's The Evidence? There Isn't Any.

Here's a problem post:

"Submitted by FreedomDemocrats on Wed, 2008-09-03 11:36.

Megan McArdle on Bristol Palin and being pro-choice:

I realize that many pro-choicers view abortion, as I do not, as a morally neutral act. But this is supposed to be about women doing what is right for them. What is right for you includes your moral beliefs about when a fetus becomes a full human life. There are a whole bunch of really bad beliefs bundled here: that you KNOW when life begins, and Bristol Palin does not; that you know that motherhood is wrong for her; that the most important thing in the entire world is having the same four years of carefree quasi-adulthood at a good college that I (and presumably you) did; that you, in short, are far better positioned to know what is right for Bristol Palin, whom you have never met and who lives several thousand miles from you, than do Bristol Palin and her family.

Excellent writing, as always."

Fine. So here's the McArdle post in full:

"Pro-choice?

03 Sep 2008 12:20 pm

Last post on Bristol Palin, I promise, but . . .

There's a subtext to the criticism here that I find very uncomfortable. Any number of commenters seem to be implying that what a GOOD parent would have done is encouraged her daughter to get an abortion.

I call myself pro-choice. Not pro-abortion. Pro-choice. A choice that I think should be made as rarely as possible. I applaud girls and women who are willing to do the difficult thing and carry the child to term at considerable personal cost.

I realize that many pro-choicers view abortion, as I do not, as a morally neutral act. But this is supposed to be about women doing what is right for them. What is right for you includes your moral beliefs about when a fetus becomes a full human life. There are a whole bunch of really bad beliefs bundled here: that you KNOW when life begins, and Bristol Palin does not; that you know that motherhood is wrong for her; that the most important thing in the entire world is having the same four years of carefree quasi-adulthood at a good college that I (and presumably you) did; that you, in short, are far better positioned to know what is right for Bristol Palin, whom you have never met and who lives several thousand miles from you, than do Bristol Palin and her family.

This is everything the pro-lifers tar us with: arrogant, elitist, anti-motherhood, pro-abortion rather than pro-choice. Liberal values are supposed to be about giving people space to make their own moral decisions, not forcing your own on them. I thought that's what we were supposed to hate about conservatives . . ."

Now, here's an excellent comment from her blog:

"Why is Megan having an argument with herself again?

And again, where are all these supposed anti-Bristol Palin comments?

Blogging against imaginary comments just seems silly.

Where is the evidence of this "subtext"? Where are these "commenters"?

I am a Democrat; pro-choice, but anti-abortion personally. I think that every Democrat I personally know agrees with this position. This habit writers have of constructing straw men to argue and rail against is amazing. Especially where a writer is uncovering a sub-text or claims that a view is implied, not stated, the writer should give us evidence of the subtext and implication. Without that evidence, all I can say is that I have not personally come across them, but would denounce them if I did. But where are they?

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