Teenagers are Becoming More Pro-Life Than Their Parents

For her high school class in persuasive speech, Afton Dahl, 16, chose to present an argument that abortion should be illegal. She described the details of various abortion techniques, including facts about fetal heart development.

Where Do These Kids Come From?

“The baby’s heartbeat starts at around 12 to 18 days, so it’s murder to kill someone with a heartbeat,” Miss Dahl said recently, recalling the argument she used in class in January. “I don’t believe in abortion under any circumstances, including rape. I think it would be better to overturn Roe v. Wade.”

Dahl, a sophomore, attends Red Wing High School in Red Wing, Minn., a small city that is the home of Red Wing shoes and a town where a majority voted for Al Gore for president. Dahl’s abortion views are not something she learned from her parents: her mother, Fran Dahl, 47, maintains that abortion should be “a woman’s choice.”

“Nowadays kids don’t grow up knowing or being aware of what was going on when abortion was illegal,” said Ms. Dahl, a former nurse. “It’s not a choice that I would have taken personally, but for the future of women I want to see the right to an abortion maintained.”

This contrast between mother and teenage daughter illustrates a trend noted in polls: that teenagers and college-age Americans are more pro-life about abortion than their counterparts were a generation ago. Many people old enough to have teenage children and who equate youth with liberal social opinions on topics like gay rights and the use of marijuana for medical purposes have been surprised at this discovery. Miss Dahl was one of numerous students in her class who chose to make speeches about abortion, and most took the pro-life side.

“I was shocked that there were that many students who felt strong enough and confident enough to speak about being pro-life,” said Nina Verin, a parent of another student in the class (whose oral argument was about war in Iraq). “The people I associate with in town are pro-choice, so I’m troubled — where do these kids come from?”

It's About the Baby, Duh

A study of American college freshmen shows that support for abortion has been dropping since the early 1990’s: 54 percent of 282,549 students polled at 437 schools last fall by the University of California at Los Angeles agreed that abortion should be legal. The figure was down from 67 percent a decade earlier. A New York Times/CBS News poll in January found that among people 18 to 29, the share who agree that abortion should be generally available to those who want it was 39 percent, down from 48 percent in 1993.

Experts offer a number of reasons why young people today seem to favor stricter abortion laws than their parents did at the same age. They include the decline in teenage pregnancy over the last 10 years, which has reduced the demand for abortion. They also cite society’s greater acceptance of single parenthood; the spread of ultrasound technology, which has displayed the humanity of the unborn child; and the easing of the stigma once attached to giving up a child for adoption.

“Young people think sacrifice is a good thing, particularly conservative Christian kids. One of the main sacrifices you can give is the gift of a child to a deserving couple,” said Frances Kissling, president of “Catholics” for a Free Choice, a pro-abortion group.

The most commonly cited reason for the increasingly pro-life views of young people is their receptiveness to the way pro-life advocates have reframed the national debate on the contentious topic, shifting the emphasis from a woman’s rights to the rights of the unborn child.

Abortion opponents celebrated on March 13 when the Senate passed a ban on partial-birth abortion; the bill is expected to pass the House quickly and be signed by President Bush, and to immediately face a court challenge. Even though the procedure is used in only a tiny fraction of cases, graphic descriptions of it since the mid-90’s, and even the name its foes have given it (doctors call it dilation and extraction), have had an impact on young people.

“There’s been so much media attention over the last seven to eight years on partial-birth abortion, we shouldn’t be surprised that some of it has had an effect on 12-to-14-year-olds, and it is a public relations coup for the National Right to Life Committee,” said David J. Garrow, a legal historian at Emory University who has focused on reproductive rights.

Britni Hoffbeck, another speech student at Red Wing High who opposes abortion, and who says her views are more pro-life than those of her parents, put her argument succinctly: “It’s more about the baby’s rights than the woman’s rights.”

Tom Cosgrove, a communications consultant in Cambridge, Mass., who has researched the views of young people for national pro-abortion groups, said: “All the restrictions that the right-to-life movement has imposed young people look at and say, ‘They’re a good thing, because it’s meant to protect a young woman’s health.’ They don’t want the label of pro-choice. The pro-life side figured out a long time ago that this is about children, whereas the pro-choice movement is focused on women and choice.”

Some young people who oppose abortion, and who were born after the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973 declared that were is a constitutional right to abortion, have adopted a new rhetoric.

It Could Have Been Me

One of them is Kelly Kroll, a junior at Boston College and president of American Collegians for Life, who says she is a “survivor of the abortion holocaust” because she was adopted. “Myself and my classmates have never known a world in which abortion wasn’t legalized,” she said. “We’ve realized that any one of us could have been aborted. When I talk about being a survivor of abortion, I am talking about it from a personal place.”

Some parents trace their teenagers’ pro-life views to sexuality education programs that stress abstinence as the only way to prevent pregnancy and disease. Since 1996 the federal government has budgeted $50 million annually to “abstinence only till marriage” programs, which are taught in 35 percent of public schools in the country, according to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, affiliated with Planned Parenthood.

Renee Walker gave permission for her seventh-grade son to participate in such a program last fall in his public school in Concord, Calif. But she said she became alarmed when, reviewing his class notes, she found a list of the disadvantages of abortion, including the circled words “killing a baby.” He said he had been told abortion “tears the arms and legs off.”

Walker sent a letter of complaint to officials of the school district, Mount Diablo Unified School District, expressing her surprise that the abstinence curriculum had been created by First Resort, a crisis pregnancy center. “Most parents are busy, doing laundry, running around like me, and we’re trusting the schools to reflect public policy,” she said.

The district agreed with Walker about the First Resort program and it asked for, and got, modifications, she said.

If today’s teenagers and young adults maintain their views on abortion into older adulthood, and if succeeding waves of students are also pro-life, the balance could tip somewhat in the America’s long-running abortion war, some experts speculate.

It’s unclear whether the shift will ever be substantial enough to change the centrist position of many Americans of all ages: that abortion should be legal, but with restrictions. In Red Wing, the certainty of the youthful opinions of the students reminded their speech-class teacher, Jillynne Raymond, of an earlier generation’s certainty — her own.

“Teenagers have strong opinions,” Ms. Raymond, 41, said. “It’s no different than the 70’s when I was a teenager, but the difference is that the majority of speeches then were pro-choice. I wanted the right to an abortion as a woman.”

“Today,” she said of her students, “the majority is pro-life.”

(This article courtesy of the Pro-Life Infonet email newsletter. For more information or to subscribe go to www.prolifeinfo.org or email infonet@prolifeinfo.org.)

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