Washington Examiner  home delivery | classifieds | autos | jobs | real estate | home listings | advertise
   
Arts on Foot
View today's E-Dition

Thursday, September 9, 2010 | Last Update 7:47 EDT
click for forecast
Untitled Document
Home News Politics Local Opinion Economy Sports Lifestyle Classified Cars Homes Rentals Remodel
Nation World Beltway Confidential Yeas & Nays Opinion Zone Capital Land Mobile Site Contact
Nation World Science Education Video Technology
Beltway Confidential Yeas & Nays White House Congress Michael Barone Byron York Timothy P. Carney
Capital Land DC Virginia Maryland Local Opinion Zone Crime Transportation People Education Real Estate
Editorials Beltway Confidential OpinionZone Nate Beeler Columnists Mark Tapscott Dave Freddoso Mark Hemingway
Your Money Real Estate Technology K-Street
Cheers & Jeers Redskins/NFL Wizards/NBA Caps/NHL Nationals/MLB United/MLS Colleges Golf
Yeas & Nays Art Movies Television Health Food Music Scoop Theater Wheels Video Events Calendar
Jobs Buy Stuff Post Free Ad Personals Events
Automotive News New Used Certified Pre-Owned
Real Estate News Rent a Home Buy a Home Home Makeover

Columns and OpEds
[Print]  [Email]         Share    

Cal Thomas: Super commercial

By: Cal Thomas
Examiner Columnist
February 4, 2010

In the midst of the usual glut of Super Bowl commercials with messages about beer, cars and women with impossible bosoms, on Sunday there will be one 30-second message that has some people upset, even angry.

It is a message by 2007 Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow and his mother, Pam, who, after a difficult pregnancy, decided to give Tim a chance to live, though she was advised to have an abortion.

Self-styled "pro-choice" groups initially tried to get CBS to pull the ad, but when the network demonstrated a characteristic not often seen in the face of such lobbying -- courage -- the pro-choicers apparently realized their attempt at censorship wasn't going anywhere, and so they are trying a different tactic.

In an opinion column for last Sunday's Washington Post, Frances Kissling, former president of Catholics for Choice, and Kate Michelman, former president of Naral Pro-Choice America, portrayed Pam Tebow's choice to give birth to Tim as having no greater moral significance than if she had chosen to abort him.

About the uplifting message in the scheduled Super Bowl commercial, they wrote: "People want to be inspired, and abortion is as tough and courageous a decision as is the decision to continue a pregnancy."

No it isn't. Toughness and courage produce a decision like the one made by Pam Tebow. She didn't know whether her son would turn out to be "normal," much less a football champion honored by college football's highest award.

The "easier" course would have been to accept the doctor's advice and rid herself of a potential "problem" and the "burden" a less-than-perfect child might have brought to the family.

The word "choice" presumes more than one option. In an age when government requires increasing amounts of information about food additives, automobile mileage, carbon emissions and children's toys, too many women are still in the dark when it comes to information about the superior value of making a choice other than abortion.

Even Kissling and Michelman acknowledge that public opinion is shifting on abortion, from a decidedly pro-choice to a pro-life majority. Increasing the amount of information available, including sophisticated sonograms, which allow pregnant women to see what is growing within them as human and not impersonal tissue, is mostly responsible for this shift.

So, too, is the realization that the disposal of more than 50 million Americans who might have been somebody has corroded us as a nation and diminished our collective humanity.

For 30 years I have spoken at pregnancy center fundraising events and other pro-life organizations. I have listened to the stories of women who have felt pressured by parents, boyfriends or husbands to have an abortion. Many did not want to have one but believed there was no other option.

There are and always have been other options, but only in recent years has the pro-life message been able to circumvent the media wall that has largely kept it from those who need and want to hear it.

Somewhere in the massive TV audience on Sunday will be a man, or a pregnant woman, who will hear Pam and Tim Tebow's message about the good that can happen if individuals don't try to play God.

If that message causes just one woman who thought she needed an abortion to change her mind, or one man who has been pressuring his girlfriend, wife or daughter to get one to change his mind, it will have been worth the $2.5 million the ad is costing Focus on the Family.

Why? Because -- to paraphrase a credit card commercial -- human life is priceless.

Examiner Columnist Cal Thomas is syndicated by Tribune Media.


More from Cal Thomas

  • White House getting more radical
  • Here's what real revival looks like
  • Obama can't turn the page on Iraq
  • Has Obama lost even the liberals?
  • Politicians can't get us out of this

Topics

Washington Examiner , Column

beltway confidential
Obama embraces his inner cliche

He finished speaking in Cleveland by urging his audience to “choose the future over the past.” A good thing — we should move on to 2011 instead of repeating...

—David Freddoso

The other (alleged) top candidate for Rahm’s job was also a Fannie Mae lobbyist

When I blogged this morning about Tom Donilon, possibly the next White House chief of staff, I didn’t mean to imply that his resume as Goldman consultant and Fannie Mae...

—Timothy P. Carney

Virginia congressman admits: ‘If you don’t tie our hands, we will keep stealing.’

Here’s what a major mid-term correction looks like: On March 16, when confronted by members of the Jefferson Area Tea Party, Rep. Tom Perriello, D-Va., made a startling...

—Barbara Hollingsworth

Wall Street campaign cash flowing to GOP again. Or is it?

Wall Street campaign cash is flowing heavily back to the Republicans as the 2010 mid-term congressional election campaign gets into its post-Labor Day swing, according to the...

—Mark Tapscott

More Beltway Confidential posts...




Today’s Featured Writers
Cal Thomas
White House getting more radical
Mark Tapscott
Wall Street campaign cash flowing to GOP again. Or is it?
David Freddoso
Wall Street campaign cash flowing to GOP again. Or is it?
Gregory Kane
Good reason for English to be the official language
Meghan Cox Gurdon
In a carpool, a cheese sandwich means a bus — and a whole lot more


Examiner Opinion Zone
Note to Republicans: Don’t blow your chances in November

We don’t need a Washington Post-ABC News poll to tell us that Democrats are lining up like sheep to the slaughter in November’s midterm elections. It is telling,...

—Scott Payne

Trapped in the Medicaid Ghetto

During the legislative battle over President Barack Obama’s health care law, there were many stories left untold about the true ramifications of the measure. We...

—Ben Domenech

None were more worthy?

Ethics scandals have plagued the Democrats for the past few months – but the latest is a real doozy. Recently, the Dallas Morning News broke the story...

—Nicki Kurokawa

More Examiner Opinion Zone posts...

To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines
  1. Sinking with Obama, Democrats plan political triage
  2. Va. appeals court upholds tracking suspects with GPS
  3. Noemie Emery: If this is success, what is failure?
  4. Illegal immigrant indicted for murder in nun's death
  5. Obama: Forget the economy — let’s talk about me!
  6. Morning Examiner: White House tells Dems in Congress to drop dead
  7. New evidence undermines feds' case against Arizona
  8. Democrats better think twice about lame ducking the rest of the Obama agenda
  9. Obama declares war on Boehner
  10. Credit card regulation: Big government vs. small business





 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 200 words. Comments that advocate violence, racism, or libel as well as comments written in ALL CAPS are not permitted.


blog comments powered by Disqus

RSS | Twitter | Facebook | Intern | Video | Maps | Mobile | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Rack Locations | Advertise