The
pro-aborts are indeed sickos and psychos.
They indeed are serial killers, the
worst ever, deliberately and systematically
killing off millions of unborn babies.
The abortion movement is much worse
that the Nazis and Hitler, for the pro-aborts
have murdered much more innocent people,
and are headed by no less than Satan
himself.
The
pro-abortion movement and the psychopathic
mentality
Matthew Hoffman|Fri
Nov 26 12:06 EST|Opinion
November
24, 2010 ()
- When I read the
words of pro-abortion leaders
like Colombian psychologist Florence
Thomas, who calls unborn babies “tumors”
and says that they are only human
if their mother wants them, a disturbing
question comes to mind: what
is, fundamentally, the difference
between this type of perspective,
so often expressed by abortionists,
and the clinical definition of a “psychopath”?
Although
the stereotypical
image of a psychopath is that of a serial
killer, or a dangerous madman
locked in an asylum, psychologists tell
us that such people only represent a
small minority of those who fall under
the category of a “psychopath.”
In fact, we are told, our society contains
a larger number of psychopaths than
we may suspect, and psychopaths may
even disproportionately occupy positions
of importance in business, government,
and other important fields.
While
psychopaths are theoretically capable
of committing murder and other acts
of cruelty without remorse, the definition
of a psychopath is much broader than
the image evoked by popular culture.
According to mental
health professionals, a psychopath is
someone who is fundamentally lacking
in human empathy, who sees other human
beings as mere objects of manipulation.
The relationships of a psychopath are
typically superficial and fluid, and
are often sexually promiscuous. The
psychopath has a fundamentally egoistic,
selfish personality, unable to transcend
his own personal sense of self to recognize
the dignity of others.
Psychologists
estimate that up to four percent of
the population falls under the definition
of a “psychopath,” ranging
from the more tame manifestations, which
are included in the broad category of
sociopathy or anti-social personality
disorders, to the more extreme cases
of serial killers. They are often able
to deceive others with a veneer of sanity
and reasonableness that hides their
fundamentally predatory nature.
“Psychopathic”
movements
The
four percent figure, if accurate, implies
that the United States includes a population
of more than twelve million psychopaths
or sociopaths, and globally the figure
would theoretically reach into the hundreds
of millions. This startling statistic
inevitably raises the question:
is it possible for psychopaths to group
themselves into movements based on their
common inclinations? History suggests
that this can, and indeed does happen.
The
classic candidate for a “psychopathic
movement” is that of the National
Socialist or Nazi Party, which came
to power in Germany in the 1930s through
a series of economic catastrophes and
inept decisions by the German political
establishment. Adolf Hitler himself
has been diagnosed posthumously with
psychopathic tendencies, and many Nazis
exhibited symptoms of the same. Moreover,
although the majority of Nazis and the
Germans who cooperated with them were
probably not clinically psychopathic,
the movement as a whole seemed to be
predicated on a fundamentally psychopathic
mentality, one that disposed of human
beings as mere fodder for the racial
aspirations of the German state.
The
same tendencies have been found in other
mass movements arising in the last century,
especially Marxism, which left an unprecedented
toll of tens of millions of deaths by
execution and induced starvation in
order to achieve its political ends.
Again, although it is unlikely that
most Marxists are clinical psychopaths,
their movement has repeatedly spawned
regimes that behave precisely the way
one would expect of the most extreme
sufferers of the disorder.
The
troubled mentality of the pro-abortion
movement
In
light of the clinical definition of
a psychopath, and the historic manifestations
of “psychopathic” movements,
it is difficult to avoid the comparison
between psychopathy and the perspective
that is openly expressed by many leaders
in the global pro-abortion movement.
Florence
Thomas is only one example of the troubled
thinking that seems to characterize
pro-abortion leaders. Her comparison
of her own unborn child to a “tumor,”
that is, a diseased piece of tissue,
is not only unscientific; it suggests
a mind that is unwilling, or perhaps
unable, to transcend itself and empathize
with the humanity of another. Her claim
that a fetus is only human if it is
desired by its parents is almost a caricature
of ego-centrism, implying that one’s
personal wishes confer dignity and rights
on other people. The conclusion of Thomas
flows inevitably from her premises;
she believes that women should be free
to kill their unborn children for any
reason, in order to preserve their “freedom.”
Thomas’
thinking is echoed throughout the anti-life
and anti-family movements of our age.
Margaret Sanger, the founder of the
modern birth control movement, spoke
with the chilling rhetoric of eugenics
when she dismissed children who are
“unwanted” by their parents,
referring to them as “human waste”
in her 1920 work, “Women and the
New Race.”
“Each
and every unwanted child is likely to
be in some way a social liability. It
is only the wanted child who is likely
to be a social asset,” wrote Sanger,
who also asked, “Can the children
of these unfortunate mothers be other
than a burden to society—a burden
which reflects itself in innumerable
phases of cost, crime and general social
detriment?” In another chapter
she infamously states that “the
most merciful thing that the large family
does to one of its infant members is
to kill it.”
The
famous Princeton “bioethicist”
Peter Singer applies the same fundamental
principle embraced by Thomas, Sanger,
and others, but takes it to a more explicit
conclusion. Singer acknowledges that
unborn children are human beings, but
openly denies that they have a right
to life, unless their parents want them.
Moreover, Singer extends this reasoning
to infants after birth as well, offering
a moral endorsement of infanticide.
“The
difference between killing disabled
and normal infants lies not in any supposed
right to life that the latter has and
the former lacks, but in other considerations
about killing,” writes Singer
in the second edition of his book, “Practical
Ethics.” “Most obviously
there is the difference that often exists
in the attitudes of the parents. The
birth of a child is usually a happy
event for the parents ... So one important
reason why it is normally a terrible
thing to kill an infant is the effect
the killing will have on its parents.”
“It
is different when the infant is born
with a serious disability,” Singer
continues. “Birth abnormalities
vary, of course. Some are trivial and
have little effect on the child or its
parents; but others turn the normally
joyful event of birth into a threat
to the happiness of the parents, and
any other children they may have. Parents
may, with good reason, regret that a
disabled child was ever born. In that
event the effect that the death of the
child will have on its parents can be
a reason for, rather than against killing
it.”
Singer’s
explicit endorsement of infanticide
should be unsurprising to pro-life activists,
who are aware that children who survive
abortions are often left to die without
medical help. A fundamental indifference
to human life and the personhood of
others is endemic among pro-abortion
thinkers, which should bring pro-lifers
to ask ourselves if we are really understanding
our opponents in this debate.
In
reading Florence Thomas’ recent
account of her abortion, a tragically
flawed personality comes to the surface.
A brilliant woman with much to offer
the world, Thomas faced a profound moral
dilemma at the age of 22, and was hardly
able to recognize it as such. She blithely
refers to sexual intercourse with her
boyfriend as “love,” as
if she has no inkling of the concept
beyond a physical act of pleasure, without
any commitment or spiritual dimension.
She dismisses her unborn child as a
“tumor,” and says that she
has never felt the slightest remorse
for her decision to kill it.
As
a human life and family news reporter,
I have become all too accustomed to
this mentality, and my response has
changed over the years from feelings
of outrage to a calm, resolute commitment
to fight the culture of death and its
perverse mentality by systematically
exposing it. However, I increasingly
find myself experiencing another response
when I report such stories: a great
sadness in the face of people who seem
to be missing something fundamental
in the deepest levels of their psyche,
something that they may never have known
by experience.
Are
they suffering in silent desperation
or are they utterly oblivious to their
loss? Did they freely choose this path,
or are they victims of something beyond
their control? Ultimately, is there
anything that can be done for them,
or are they doomed to play their grim
role in the global empire of death?
I do not know, and cannot know. I can
only pray for them, and leave it in
the hands of a merciful God.
Related
links:
Famous
pro-abortion feminist calls unborn child
a ‘tumor’
Women
and the New Race, by Margaret Sanger
(full text)
Excerpts
from Practical Ethics, by Peter Singer,
2nd edition, Cambridge, 1993, pp. 175-217
"For
to me to live is Christ, and to die
is gain." (Phil 1:21)