Source: National Review; January 31,
2003
Black Americans and
Abortion : The Real Racial Disparity
By
Anne Hendershott, professor of Sociology at the University of San Diego and
author of the recently published, "The Politics of
Deviance."
Undeterred by data demonstrating otherwise, Democratic
leaders like Reps. Charles Rangel (N.Y.) and John Conyers (Mich.) continue to
complain that the black community will suffer disproportionate casualties in a
war with Iraq. Their erroneous claims that blacks are more likely than whites to
come home from war in body bags have led them, and others, to support the return
of the draft for reasons of "racial equality."
The truth is, although
blacks enlist in the armed forces at slightly higher rates than whites, and stay
longer (bringing their overall participation in the military to 21%), they have
historically suffered casualty rates far below their participation rates.
Contrary to the claims of Conyers and Rangel, 12% of Americans killed in Vietnam
were black -- a figure that is proportionate to their numbers in the overall
U.S. population.
Sadly, however, Conyers, Rangel, Sharpton, et
al. continue to miss the real story of racial disparity in casualty rates: the
disproportionate numbers of black casualties in the war on the unborn. While
Sharpton and the other Democratic presidential hopefuls celebrated the 30th
Anniversary of Roe v. Wade at NARAL's gala, the black community continued to be
decimated by abortion rates that are nearly three times the rate of
whites.
The most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control
indicate that while 56% of all women who obtained legal abortions were
white, the abortion rate (the number of abortions per 1,000 women aged 15-44 per
year) for black women was 2.9 times that of white women. For every thousand
black women, 32 have abortions, as compared with 11 for every thousand white
women. Likewise with numbers of abortions per 1,000 births: The abortions/births
ratio for white women was 184 abortions per 1,000 live births; for black women,
it was 543 abortions per 1,000 births. This means that abortion ratios for black
women were 2.8 times greater than those for white women. Sadly, black women were
also more likely to obtain riskier abortions late in their pregnancies, while
white women were significantly more likely than black women to obtain abortions
before 16 weeks.
While these data most likely reflect inequality in
access to health care, data also indicate that the racial disparities in
abortion rates have increased steadily since 1989. In some localities, including
Mississippi, Louisiana, Maryland, and Georgia, more than half of all abortions
are performed on black women. Black women in New York City and in the entire
state of New Jersey receive more than 47% of all abortions performed
there.
Comparisons by race cannot be made in California, because the
state -- unlike any other state -- refuses to comply with requirements to report
statistics on abortion. California's reporting requirement was enacted in 1967
as part of a larger abortion law called the Therapeutic Abortion Act. Yet even
with the threat of losing federal funds, California has consistently refused to
report its abortion data. Michael Quinn, the chief of California's office for
health information, was recently quoted in a Catholic newspaper account as
saying that "California does not actively collect abortion statistics because
they are highly sensitive and highly political."
Abortion data -- like
all casualty data -- are indeed sensitive. They reveal life-or-death decisions
for women and unborn children and for this very reason should be disseminated
widely. California needs to be encouraged to provide data on abortion.
For policymakers to address the real casualties among blacks would take
courage -- far beyond the grandstanding on the military draft by Sharpton,
Conyers, and Rangel. They might begin by listening to the poignant lyrics of
hip-hop artist Nas in his recent mega-hit, "One Mic." Nas knows that his
community has been devastated by abortion and in a courageous plea, the rapper
simply asks women to stop abortion because "we need more warriors
here."