Will America's next generation support women's choice?

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A lack of pro-choice voter intensity among America's millennials has abortion rights supporters concerned. Will our nation's youth come to accept the Roe v. Wade decision during the years ahead?

FLORIDA, May 16, 2012 — For the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League, also referred to as NARAL Pro-Choice America, this is the end of an era.

The nation’s oldest pro-choice advocacy organization is losing its longtime president, Nancy Keenan, later this year. Ranked by Washingtonian Magazine as one of the most powerful women in the District, her absence will go anything but unnoticed on Capitol Hill.

Being a former statewide elected official in her native Montana — where she also served as a prominent legislator — before heading NARAL, Keenan is opting to retire for a very perplexing reason. According to her, there is a marked “intensity gap” between young supporters of women’s choice and their counterparts in the antiabortion movement.

Research data collected by NARAL as of late has shown that millennial voters who oppose abortion rights consider their views to be highly important come election day. Pro-choice millenials, meanwhile, generally do not share this pronounced level of zeal. By opening the door for someone younger to succeed her, Keenan hopes that the abortion rights message will resonate with a greater share of today’s youth.

“People give a lot of lip service to how we’re going to engage the next generation,” she stated, “but we can’t just assume it will happen on its own.”

The existence of an intensity gap is not agreed upon by all feminists, though. Chloe Angyal, an editor at the popular blog Feministing, not only denied it outright, but said that the “pro-choice movement….would fail without the intensity – the enthusiasm, the passion, the commitment, and the unpaid or underpaid labour - of young people.”. 

I believe that there most definitely is an intensity gap, though for a reason that usually goes unmentioned. Since the Supreme Court made its landmark Roe v. Wade decision almost forty years ago, those strongly opposed to abortion procedures have had a remarkable amount of children; no doubt due to the doctrines of rigid religious beliefs. Their children, in turn, were raised to be reflexively antiabortion and by now probably have, or are preparing to have, offspring of their own. 

Such a cycle results in antiabortion memes being passed down in a purely generational fashion. Of course, not all of the kids in question will adopt these beliefs, and as they go through life, many stand a reasonably good chance of moderating their respective opinions due to, quite simply put, the real world’s habit of not operating within the convenient extremes of black and white. 

This being said, it is undeniable that there are many morally sound reasons for standing against abortion on a personal basis. However, in a free society such as the United States, respect for the viewpoints of others is mandatory; so long as these do not entail breaking the law, of course. 

Perhaps if the hardline partisans on either side of the abortion rights debate could recognize a decidedly simple fact like this, there would be no need for a pro- or anti-choice movement of any kind. Rather, people would mind their own business and not attempt to manipulate the political process for their own ends.

While this might be a tad too idealistic for contemporary American society, coming to terms with a Supreme Court decision the better part of half a century old would be a very good start.


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Joseph Cotto

Joseph F. Cotto is a social journalist and student of history from central Florida. He writes about everything from political trends to men's fashion, but finds nothing to be more interesting than a good interview. In the past, he was a contributor to Blogcritics Magazine, among other publications. He is currently at work on a book about American society. 

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