Morals: Abortion: Precept & Practice
As the sensibly-suited American woman disembarked at Tokyo's International Airport last week, she brushed off the hundred guides who scrambled to show her the sights. She had come to Japan not to wander the shrines and teahouses but, like the friend at home who had tipped her off (and that friend's friend, and so on and so on), for an abortion.
Of the more than 700,000 abortions reported annually in Japan, a small but increasing numberone Tokyo abortionist puts it at something less than 1,000are performed on American women. Though the trip itself is expensive ($783 for a round-trip tourist ticket from Los Angeles), the operation may cost no more than $15. Last week's traveler was only seeking the same solution that a couple of million American women a year stay home to find.
Laws & Mores. Despite strict anti-abortion legislation in the U.S. and the often exorbitant expense involved in getting to countries with more lenient laws, abortion statistics continue to rise yearly in a striking case of conflict between the mores of a people and their legal code. Of the estimated 1,000,000 abortions performed each year in the U.S.,* only a surprisingly small number fall into the classic category (the girl who has paid the penalty for promiscuity and wants to avoid the consequences before her parents find out).
Even in the case of single girls, many parents feel abortion is preferable to a marriage to the wrong mate. But it is the married women who, for any of a thousand reasonsmost often, they already have children and feel emotionally or financially unable to cope with one moremake up more than 50% of the annual abortion figure.
In the U.S., abortion is outlawed in any form except when it may serve to save the life of the woman; in six states it may also be performed "to save the life of the unborn child." All other abortions, no matter how or where performed, or by whom, are classified as "illegal operations." It is illegal to abort a woman suffering from an incurable disease if having the baby would not actually kill her; it is illegal to perform an abortion on a woman who in early pregnancy contracts German measles (in some 20% of such cases, the child will be born blind or mentally retarded). Even a victim of rape cannot be legally aborted.
The Headliners. Since many respectable doctors are terrified of having the label "abortionist" tied to their reputationsno matter what the legality of the caseand since red tape makes arranging for a legal abortion so complex (most large hospitals require consent from a board of staff doctors), it is difficult for a woman to have an abortion performed under operating-room conditions. For this reason, and for reasons of fear and ignorance, nearly 5,000 women die each year at the hands of the nonprofessionals to whom they have turned; these criminal abortionists often do their work on kitchen tables and the back seats of cars, are almost weekly headlined in the tabloids: ABORTIONIST SCARED, LEAVES GIRL TO DIE, Or BODY OF ABORTION VICTIM FOUND IN PARK.
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