The Party of Death: the Democrats, the media, the courts, and the disregard for human life.

AuthorFischer, Raymond L.
PositionWhat's New? - Critical essay

The Party of Death: The Democrats, the Media, the Courts, and the Disregard for Human Life

BY RAMESH PONNURU REGNERY PUBLISHING, INC, 248 PAGES, $27.95

Ramesh Ponnuru, senior editor at the National Review, has covered politics for the Wall Street Journal, Newsday, The Washington Times, Weekly Standard, and Financial Times; he has appeared frequently on TV and radio as a political expert. In The Party of Death, Ponnuru charges the Democrats, media, and courts with "disregard for human life." The author means the book title to be "descriptive" and not "pejorative," and he does not want the party of death to be confused with any conventional political party. However, Ponnuru obviously considers the Democratic Party the "chief political vehicle" for terming inviolability of human life an outdated or oppressive concept and for advocating "abortion-on-demand and embryo-killing research." Ponnuru predicts the Democrats eventually will become "the party of assisted suicide and euthanasia."

As the basis for most debate concerning induced, unnatural death, 1973's Roe v. Wade "has corrupted the courts, politics, and even professional historians"; the decision will continue to dominate Supreme Court confirmation hearings and state and national elections. The book opens with "What Roe Wrought": "Everything you think you know about Roe v. Wade is a lie." According to the outraged Ponnuru, when the Supreme Court struck down the abortion laws of every state and mandated abortion-on-demand throughout pregnancy, it made the U.S. the only country "offering no legal protection to the unborn at any stage of development" Although the Supreme Court's Roe decision purportedly is based on the Constitution, neither the Constitution nor its amendments specifically mention contraception--"nothing to create a right to abortion." Ponnuru considers Roe "an offense against the Constitution, justice, and democracy" However, in the final chapter, he acknowledges that overturning Roe would create a disastrous political backlash for pro-life Republicans.

Although expected to overrule Roe v. Wade in 1992 with the Planned Parenthood v. Casey case, the Supreme Court suggested that contending sides of the national controversy should accept a common mandate "rooted in the Constitution"--a point Ponnuru refutes. The Court had spoken, the issue was settled, which Ponnuru interpreted to mean "the pro-life movement should cease to exist." Ponnuru termed the Court "intolerant."

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