Jane Fonda, Stalin, Hitler, and Ceausescu
by Gary  DeMar
Nov 16,  2009
Jane Fonda has had a varied and somewhat controversial career. She  was photographed seated on an anti-aircraft battery in North Vietnam in 1972.  Since then she has been known as “Hanoi Jane.” She’s had a successful  acting career (two Academy Awards), turned out a series of fitness videos from  1982 through 1995, married media mogul Ted Turner, is working on her fourth  marriage to a younger man (he’s 67, she’s 71), and continues to say and do  stupid things. Although claiming to be a Christian,  Fonda is an outspoken advocate of abortion rights. On March 29, 2005, Planned  Parenthood honored Fonda  with the Margaret Sanger Award, named for the organization’s pro-abortion and  eugenicist founder.
In a recent blog post,  Fonda stated that a “power struggle . . . has existed from the very beginning of  the 120-year fight over reproductive rights. Every dictator—Stalin, Ceaucescu  [sic], Hilter [sic]—has made anti-choice a central component of  their agenda.” The important words here are “their agenda.” Stalin’s support for  abortion had nothing to do with religion. He was an atheist. It had everything  to do with building up the military. In a 2003 New York Times article  titled “Birth Control in Russia,” we find this utilitarian tidbit: “In 1936, Stalin banned  abortion to stimulate the birth rate. In a widely resented decree that was  dropped after his death, Stalin made it clear that the nation’s couples should  produce workers and soldiers as vigorously as new Soviet industries were turning  out trucks and steel beams.” By the way, Russia is losing population at a rapid  rate—“almost 700,000 annually.”
In 1966 there were four abortions for every live birth in Romania.  Women were aborting their children because they did not want to bring them into  the dark world of Communism. In that same year, Nicolae Ceauşescu (1918–1989)  issued Decree No. 770 prohibiting abortion and artificial contraception. Like  Stalin, Ceauşescu was an atheist. He was not motivated by religion or concern  for families or unborn children. His anti-abortion policies were strictly  utilitarian, “an attempt to build his country into a colossus through population  growth.”[1] In an ironic twist, Ceauşescu’s anti-abortion policies led to  his downfall since it was the children born after the Decree went into effect  who took part in the revolution of 1989 that led to the tyrant’s  execution.
Fonda’s third anti-abortion example is Adolf Hitler. Once again,  certain facts are ignored in her claim that tyrants are against abortion in the  same way that those who “grant . . . personhood to the fetus” are against  abortion. Curiously, Fonda doesn’t say anything about the one-child policy and  forced abortions of the Communist Chinese. In Broken Earth, Steven Mosher  writes that “[Chinese] vigilantes abduct pregnant women on the streets and haul  them off, sometimes handcuffed or trussed, to abortion clinics. [Some] aborted  babies cry when they are born.” You can read about some of the shocking details  of China’s one-child policy here. But back to Hitler. Richard Weikiart puts Hitler’s anti-abortion  policies in proper historical and ideological perspective:
Hitler’s opposition to abortion is sometimes portrayed as evidence  of his traditional Christian moral values. However, Hitler never appealed to  religion, God, or divine revelation to ground his opposition to abortion. Rather  he insisted on vigorous enforcement of extant antiabortion laws because he  considered German population expansion vital to the improvement of the Aryan  race. Also, Hitler did not oppose abortion per se, but only abortion of healthy,  Aryan babies. Abortion was permitted—even encouraged or required—for those who  might produce “inferior” offspring or for Jews. The ultimate authority was not  God, the Bible, religious tradition, or any fixed moral code containing the  command, “thou shalt not kill.” Rather, for Hitler the highest arbiter of  morality and political policies was the evolutionary advancement of the human  species. In the final analysis, Hitler based his morality on a racist form of  evolutionary ethics. Claudia Koonz[2] is right when she argues that the  Nazi ethic was a secular replacement and repudiation of traditional Christian  ethics.[3]
Fonda and her pro-abortion allies have more in common with the  tyrants of history than they realize. More than 100 million preborn babies have  been aborted since Roe v. Wade, about the same number who had been  murdered by the tyrants of the 20th century.
Endnotes:
[1] Jane  Perlez, “Romania's Communist Legacy: ‘Abortion  Culture,’” The New York Times (November  21, 1996).
[2] Claudia Koonz, The Nazi  Conscience (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001), 1–2, 254–255.  Also see Jonathan Glover, Humanity: A Moral History of the Twentieth  Century (New Haven, CT: Yale Nota Bene, 2001), 317,  355.
[3] Richard Weikiart,  Hitler’s Ethic: The Nazi Pursuit of Evolutionary Progress (New York:  Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), 8.
Gill  Rapoza
Veritas  Vos Liberabit

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