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Theodore Roosevelt Considered Abortion ‘Pre-Natal Infanticide’
National Review ^ | 7-11-19 | Jack H. Burke

Posted on 07/15/2019 9:04:12 PM PDT by ReformationFan

Have the present-day progressives who say they admire him ever read him?

The American Left has an abiding attachment to Theodore Roosevelt. Everyone from MSNBC anchor Chris Matthews to former Harvard University Press editor-in-chief Aida D. Donald keeps Roosevelt on hand as a stand-in example of a “good Republican” — invoked, perhaps, when the name of Abraham Lincoln has been outworn, and a new exemplar of “acceptable” Republicanism is needed. A “trans-partisan” figure and an original “progressive,” Roosevelt represents what the GOP could have been.

But on the social issues that loom so large in the liberal Democratic mind, just how much do Theodore Roosevelt and these modern progressives have in common? As it turns out, not all that much.

Throughout his life, President Roosevelt had a particular hatred for the crime of abortion, without distinction as to the stage of gestation. He fiercely declaimed against what he termed “pre-natal infanticide” and refused pardon to criminals guilty of being an accessory to abortion, as he explained in his own autobiography.

In his writings, Roosevelt connected abortion to “family planning” and birth control, arguing that it was the very mindset of artificial birth control itself that led to abortion in the first place. (That is an argument that mainstream American conservatives have, for several reasons, often been too timid to advance during the past several decades.) One does not require a doctorate in history to recognize that abortion was drastically less accepted among Americans when, before the Second World War, contraceptives were often illegal and viewed by many as an insult to public decency — a view that TR vociferously shared.

Given this history, is Roosevelt really a man with whom the pro-choice movement could make common cause? His antipathy to all that the socially liberal Left holds dear, his aggressive, forthright, supremely politically incorrect defense of Christian civilization and condemnation of moral relativism, so profusely drips from the pages of nearly all his written work and speeches that one is inclined to ask if Roosevelt’s liberal admirers have even glanced at his writings or statements.

In a widely known letter of January 24, 1906, to the Reverend Franklin C. Smith, a minister from Nebraska, Roosevelt laid bare his view on abortion in the clearest possible terms, connecting it to a mindset of population control, self-indulgent moral dereliction, and a weakening of character. He declared:

Men may differ about the tariff, or about currency, or about expansion; but the man who questions the attitude I take in this matter is, I firmly believe, either lacking in intelligence or else lacking in character. . . . To advocate artificially keeping families small, with its inevitable attendants of pre-natal infanticide, of abortion, with its pandering to self-indulgence, its shirking of duties, and its enervation of character, is quite as immoral as to advocate theft or prostitution, and is even more hurtful in its folly.

Roosevelt further accused the Reverend Smith, who supported the contemporary family-planning beliefs of “certain French thinkers,” of “adopting a position both vicious and foolish,” which made him “baleful to the state, and a deep discredit to the church.” Roosevelt even went so far as to declare that any country that adopted such an immoral code of social conduct ought to “make way for some other nation,” one that would possess “the elementary decencies and manly virtues.”

As Roosevelt saw it, abortion and the destruction of family life were ultimately the result of a spiritual and moral cancer that shied away from bearing the hardships of life and selfishly eschewed love for one’s country and fellow citizens — a malaise that increased access to contraceptives could only exacerbate, not solve. A rejection of the cross of duty — of one’s own part in the project of human history — that it is the task of every upstanding citizen and Christian to bear, and in the carrying of which one may find the ultimate meaning of life.

What, then, would Roosevelt say of America today, where much of the population has come to view the extermination of human infants as itself a method of “birth control”? Has the situation deteriorated to such an extent that it now would be time for America, in Roosevelt’s words, to “make way” for some other country? For those of an historical mindset, the infant skeletons that archaeologists have found piled up outside ancient Roman brothels might come to mind. It seems safe to assume that TR had a similar image of human despoliation and disgrace in mind when he penned those words to Smith.

In his autobiography, published in 1913, about four years after he left the White House, Roosevelt again addressed the issue of abortion. In chapter 8, “The New York Governorship,” he described his approach to criminal cases in which pardon was requested for “the action of some man in getting a girl whom he seduced to commit abortion.” He wrote that “requests for leniency merely made me angry,” and of a particular case, “in which a physician of wealth and high standing had seduced a girl and then induced her to commit abortion,” he said, “I rather lost my temper, and wrote to the individuals who had asked for the pardon, saying that I extremely regretted that it was not in my power to increase the sentence.”

Roosevelt so reviled abortion that he refused to commute the criminal sentences of men who were accessories to the act, even after requests from multiple petitioners. As he relates in the autobiography, he even went so far as to publicly expose the identities of the petitioners in the aforementioned case, because he thought that they “deserved public censure.” “Whether they received this public censure or not I did not know,” he said, “but that my action made them very angry I do know, and their anger gave me real satisfaction.”

Indeed, abortion was a crime in every state in America in 1900, with laws just as exacting as the abortion legislation recently passed in Alabama, and there is no record of Roosevelt arguing in any capacity for the relaxation of abortion law in the United States. For that matter, there is little evidence that any leading politician at the turn of the century, of any party, believed those laws to be somehow “unconstitutional.”

7 Those in the ranks of the pro-life movement today should take inspiration from Roosevelt’s staunch defense of the most vulnerable among us. That same fighting spirit that led him to walk three miles to church from his home at Sagamore Hill, even after a serious operation had made walking difficult for him, should guide our own protection of innocent life. As Roosevelt said in his address at the Minnesota State Fair on September 2, 1901, the “last important public utterance” he made before ascending to the presidency:

No prosperity and no glory can save a nation that is rotten at heart. We must ever keep the core of our national being sound, and see to it that not only our citizens in private life, but, above all, our statesmen in public life, practice the old commonplace virtues which from time immemorial have lain at the root of all true national wellbeing.

Roosevelt recognized that public and private good behavior alike were necessary, for both America’s “national wellbeing” and the wellbeing of its citizens. The grotesque spectacle of the recent Democratic debate — in particular, the segment that saw the various candidates jump over one other to defend the “right” to annihilate the next generation — placed on full display an ideology that puts personal lust over the well-being of innocent life and corrupts liberty into license and a shameful selfishness. “Life is a great adventure,” Roosevelt said in chapter 11 of his autobiography, “and the worst of all fears is the fear of living” — and what could be a greater testament to the fear of living than to crush the life from one’s own son or daughter when even the lowest of animals will die to protect their young?

“We shall not go down in ruin unless we deserve and earn our end,” the erstwhile president said in his speech at the University of Berlin on May 12, 1910. “There is no necessity for us to fall; we can hew out our destiny for ourselves, if only we have the wit and the courage and the honesty.”

JACK H. BURKE is a former White House intern and served as a U.S. congressional staff member.


TOPICS: Education; Health/Medicine; History; Society
KEYWORDS: abortion; burke; infanticide; jackhburke; naturallaw; prolife; republican; roosevelt; teddyroosevelt; theodoreroosevelt; tr; troosevelt
Historical proof that pro-life Republican views started long before Ronald Reagan.
1 posted on 07/15/2019 9:04:12 PM PDT by ReformationFan
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To: ReformationFan

I loved Teddy!


2 posted on 07/15/2019 9:06:05 PM PDT by Morgana ( Always a bit of truth in dark humor.)
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To: ReformationFan

I didn’t know this. Thanks for posting.


3 posted on 07/15/2019 9:20:07 PM PDT by Southside_Chicago_Republican (The more I learn about people, the more I like my dog.)
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To: ReformationFan

“To advocate artificially keeping families small, with its inevitable attendants of pre-natal infanticide, of abortion, with its pandering to self-indulgence, its shirking of duties, and its enervation of character, is quite as immoral as to advocate theft or prostitution, and is even more hurtful in its folly.”

TR completely nails it. Brilliant, insightful man.


4 posted on 07/15/2019 9:38:47 PM PDT by irishjuggler
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To: ReformationFan

TR saw things as clearly as President Trump does.


5 posted on 07/15/2019 9:50:16 PM PDT by bigbob (Trust Trump. Trust the Plan.)
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To: Southside_Chicago_Republican
Your love this:

Born / Died (October 27, 1858 – January 6, 1919) See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt

{With the assassination of President William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, not quite 43, became the 26th and youngest President in the Nation's history}

("A hyphenated American is not an American at all." Teddy Roosevelt, 26th President of the United States, ) See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyphenated_American

2nd (Second) Paragraph, 3rd (Third) sentence.

The term "hyphenated American" was published by 1889,[2] and was common as a derogatory term by 1904. During World War I the issue arose of the primary political loyalty of ethnic groups with close ties to Europe, especially German Americans and also Irish Americans. Former President Theodore Roosevelt in speaking to the largely Irish Catholic Knights of Columbus at Carnegie Hall on Columbus Day 1915, asserted that,[3]

There is no room in this country for hyphenated Americanism. When I refer to hyphenated Americans, I do not refer to naturalized Americans. Some of the very best Americans I have ever known were naturalized Americans, Americans born abroad. But a hyphenated American is not an American at all … The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its continuing to be a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities, an intricate knot of German-Americans, Irish-Americans, English-Americans, French-Americans, Scandinavian-Americans or Italian-Americans, each preserving its separate nationality, each at heart feeling more sympathy with Europeans of that nationality, than with the other citizens of the American Republic … There is no such thing as a hyphenated American who is a good American. The only man who is a good American is the man who is an American and nothing else.

Victor Davis Hanson nailed it some time ago: “Hyphenated-Americans have hyphenated-loyalties.”

6 posted on 07/15/2019 9:53:17 PM PDT by Stanwood_Dave ("Testilying." Cop's lie, only while testifying, as taught in their respected Police Academy(s).)
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To: ReformationFan

Great post


7 posted on 07/15/2019 11:08:24 PM PDT by Pontiac (The welfare state must fail because it is contrary to human nature and diminishes the human spirit)
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To: ReformationFan

That is a rational view. Good for Roosevelt.


8 posted on 07/15/2019 11:12:02 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: ReformationFan

bookmark for later.


9 posted on 07/16/2019 12:52:38 AM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: ReformationFan

Theodore Roosevelt Considered Abortion ‘Pre-Natal Infanticide’

Perhaps he believed that because abortion is pre-natal infanticide.


10 posted on 07/16/2019 1:02:47 AM PDT by jospehm20
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To: ReformationFan

“Have the present-day progressives who say they admire him ever read him?”

They only pick the parts of historical figures that fits their agenda. No different than only talking about the unifying words of the great speeches of Dr. Martin Luther King (Jr.)...rather than his personal life. Or the fervent Jew-Hatred of FDR. Things like that.


11 posted on 07/16/2019 3:42:15 AM PDT by BobL (I eat at McDonald's and shop at Walmart - I just don't tell anyone.)
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To: ReformationFan

If not for TR, we wouldn’t have been involved in World wars 1 or 2. He’s the modern day founder of the Nature Nazi movement. All the while HE could kill all the game he wanted.


12 posted on 07/16/2019 4:03:37 AM PDT by MuttTheHoople
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To: BobL

We all have ‘feet of clay’. Absorb the good and brilliant, reject the wrong and abhorrent.


13 posted on 07/16/2019 4:09:42 AM PDT by If You Want It Fixed - Fix It
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To: Stanwood_Dave

I have seen that speech, and it’s a good one.


14 posted on 07/16/2019 6:26:52 AM PDT by Southside_Chicago_Republican (The more I learn about people, the more I like my dog.)
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To: ReformationFan

I will be using the term “Pre-natal Infanticide” more often now.


15 posted on 07/16/2019 6:44:47 AM PDT by drwoof
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