Freedom Is Rooted in Sanctity of Life
Star Parker
May 12, 2022
In 1955, an unmarried pregnant University of Wisconsin graduate student
left her home and travelled to San Francisco to a doctor who took in unwed
expectant mothers, delivered their babies and helped arrange adoptions.
The baby son she delivered and put up for adoption grew up to become the
legendary business and technology entrepreneur Steve Jobs.
Had it been 1975, rather than 1955, there is a reasonable chance there
would have never been a Steve Jobs. In 1975 America, after Roe v. Wade became
law and where values markedly changed such that a young Catholic woman felt
less shame to be unmarried and pregnant, Steve Jobs’ mother could well have
wound up in a Planned Parenthood clinic.
Looking around at the impact of laptop computers, iPhones, social media,
and remote work, it’s hard to imagine what our lives would be like today had
that one genius not been born.
But the preciousness of every human life depends not on whether that
life is a potential Steve Jobs. Each brings their own unique and invaluable gifts
to the world.
As the Left goes berserk over the leaked Samuel Alito opinion pointing
to the overturning of Roe v. Wade, we should consider that we’ll never know the
gifts of the 63 million children obliterated since the 1973 Roe v. Wade
decision.
The Kaiser Family Foundation reports in 2019 that 38 percent of
abortions were given to black women. Using this figure, 24 million black
babies—roughly half the current black population—were removed by abortion since
1973.
The United States in 1955 was a nation before the passage of the Civil
Rights Act. There was segregation; there was racism; and there was poverty.
But today, many years later, we still have poverty, and our public
discourse is still dominated by allegations of racism.
According to the rhetoric on the left, there was nothing good about the
America of 1955.
But this is not true.
The state of faith and, because of this, the state of marriage and
childbearing, was far healthier than today, both among whites and among blacks.
According to Gallup, as we show in the “State of Black America” recently
published by my organization, CUREPOLICY, in the early 1960s, 70 percent of
Americans said religion was “very important” in their own lives. By the late
1970s, this was down to 52 percent.
In 1955, the national fertility rate—the average number of children
birthed by women of child-bearing age—was 3.42. Today, this is down to 1.78.
The rate needed for a population to replace itself and not shrink is 2.2.
In 1960, 9 percent of black adults and 8 percent of white adults had
never been married. By 2012, this had increased to 36 percent among blacks and
16 percent among whites.
In 1960, less than 5 percent of white babies were born to unwed mothers.
By 2010, this was up to 29 percent. Among blacks, in 1960 a little over 20
percent of babies were born to unwed mothers. By 2010, this was up to 72
percent.
The secularization of the country in the 1960s did not produce more
freedom. It produced more dependence on government.
Blacks, in this regard, have been hurt the most.
In 1950, the federal government took 15.3 percent of the national
economy. By 2020, this was up to 32 percent.
President Joe Biden, now presiding over a nation drowning in debt,
inflation, and sclerotic growth, said the other day that “The MAGA crowd is the
most extreme political organization that has existed in American history.”
If an aging America without married fathers and mothers and without
children is where you think our future lies, so Biden is your man.
In 1956, 39 percent of blacks voted for the Republican presidential
candidate Dwight Eisenhower.
We’re going back to the future. More black Americans, and all Americans,
are seeing that rooted in the American ideal of freedom is sanctity of life and
family.
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