This is in the new issue of First Things. The 30th anniversary of Roe v. Wade 
is coming up this January 22. 

Speaking of anniversaries, this list is now two years old. Time for some 
thanksgivings. Thanks go out to Norman Joseph who offered to set it up (till 
then, I was entering all names by hand--whew). Two years ago we had 350 
members, and now it's almost 950. Also to my webmaster Mitch Bright who keeps 
things hospitable at www.frederica.com. Everything that looks good there is 
thanks to him, and everything stale is because I am so slow at giving him 
material to update with. 

I'll be on the Dick Staub show tomorrow at about 5:30 EST, if you're able to 
tune in, talking about my  new book, "Gender." Autographed books make a 
*great* Christmas present, and you can now order them from the "Books" button 
on my website, which will take you to the Holy Cross Bookstore. More thanks 
due to Roxann Ashworth, who runs the Bookstore and now has the added work of 
shipping books, and to Holy Cross' webmaster Ben Anderson who figured out how 
to set the webstore up. Everybody have a good Thanksgiving. 

***
Movies and Tidal Pools

Where did the pro-life movement go? A half-dozen years ago movement activists 
were everywhere, drafting statements, holding press conferences, staring 
fixedly into the blind lens of a remote-studio TV camera. But a tide of 
silence has gradually come in. Abortion, which had defined "hot issue" for 
our time, mysteriously cooled off. Magazine cover stories have moved on to 
other topics; college students no longer crowd into abortion debates. 

What happened? Did we all just decide to forget our differences and get 
along? 

No, it's more like we got bored. Not pro-life activists, who are as 
hardworking as ever. The general public got bored. It seemed to them like 
everything possible to say about abortion had already been said. In a 
sound-bite age, neither side was allowed to say very much; the pro-life 
message was condensed to "It's a baby!" while pro-choicers insisted "It's a 
woman's choice!"  These two arguments do not engage each other, but are 
locked in a futile clutch, punching ineffectively. After a couple of dozen 
years, no wonder the public's attention drifted. Ever-sensitive media forces 
politely took the cue, and ceased giving space to the abortion issue. The 
debate was over. 

The debate is over, but not the cause. Abortion remains as much a travesty as 
ever, but pro-life activists now face the frustrating task of trying to 
rekindle heat in a fire that has gone cold. An October 2000 issue of Newsweek 
demonstrated the problem bluntly. A six-page spread compared the stands of 
candidates Bush and Gore on a series of important issues: the environment, 
education, foreign relations, and taxes. There was no mention of abortion. 

Pro-lifers may well resent this treatment, and suspect that the all-powerful 
media has deliberately squelched their voices. But the development is less an 
initiative of the media than a response. Public interest simply does shift 
with time. Seasons change, opinions change, interests wane, and issues which 
seemed urgent retreat to the background. The tide goes in and out, and the 
pattern of shells in the tidal pools changes twice a day. Each change is 
subtle, but by the end of the week it may be absolute. Media professionals 
are as influenced by these changes as we are, and exquisitely sensitive to 
losing the public ear. If all the abortion-debate shells have been washed out 
of the tidal pool, we're not going to hear about them any more. 

This kind of change is subtle, and hard to detect while it's in process. The 
themes of an age are always invisible to its inhabitants, and become obvious 
only in retrospect. But we can get an idea of how the process works by 
time-traveling to observe a similar change in a previous generation. If we 
look at old movies, for example, we can see attitudes that filmmakers and 
audiences once shared which are foreign to us now. Some assumptions present 
in a classic 1930's film would never play today. 

Readers might presume I'm talking about positive family values that are 
currently passé. No, I mean the reverse: our great-grandparents embraced some 
values that today we readily recognize as negative and damaging. These 
attitudes were broadly accepted and celebrated in popular entertainment, much 
as reckless sexual ideas are today, yet over time they were gradually 
exposed, discredited, and discarded. 

This is a story of hope. What pro-lifers have not been able to accomplish 
through a head-on attack may eventually take place anyway, thanks to 
humanity's self-protecting tilt toward health. Sometimes positive change 
occurs due to an intentional campaign for moral reform, but more often it's 
due to a gradual realization that certain things that looked like fun 
actually hurt. Sexual promiscuity, abortion, divorce, disease, and shattered 
families hurt a great deal, as had been obvious to our ancestors for 
millennia. The idea that the current situation is a bizarre blip, that sanity 
could return as slowly and completely as the tide, is a fully reasonable 
hope. 

One of my favorite films is "It Happened One Night," a 1934 comedy that 
deservedly received five Oscars. It's a delightful story with quirky 
characters, and a cast expertly led by Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert. But 
when Gable first appears onscreen, roaring drunk and telling off his boss 
over a pay phone, we wince. Though this is clearly meant to introduce him as 
a fun-loving charmer, alcoholism just isn't funny to us. But to audiences of 
the thirties it was terrifically amusing to watch big stars act drunk-that 
is, not just sipping a little wine, but belting serious booze to the point of 
stumbling and bellowing. When Gable appears late in the film heartbroken and 
angry, his boss responds by sympathetically giving him funds to get plastered 
on and adds, "When you sober up, come in and talk to me." At the time, that 
was the appropriate thing to do.

"It Happened One Night" isn't unusual in this regard. In the "Thin Man" 
movies, in nearly any "sophisticated" comedy of the thirties, drunkenness is 
a mark of distinction. People who disapproved of drinking were prissy and 
stuck-up; drunks were cool. Chronic alcoholics with hidden flasks were funny. 
Hangovers were funny. The pretty leading lady moaning with an icepack on her 
forehead was funny. Even delirium tremens, the terrifying hallucinations of a 
toxic drunk, were funny. Adult pro-drunkenness culture was so entrenched that 
it seemed normal, appropriate, to show a baby elephant undergoing horrible 
d.t.'s in Disney's 1941 "Dumbo." Most children find the "Pink Elephants on 
Parade" sequence terrifying, but to adults of the time it was witty. 

Replace "drunkenness" with "sex" in those paragraphs and you see a similar 
pattern. Today it is sex that the general culture finds endlessly amusing. 
Sex is the emblem of coolness. Anyone who opposes open-season sexuality is 
prissy and stuck-up; aggressive sexual athletes are cool. We likewise get a 
kick out of including children in the joke, seeing kids on sitcoms ask 
sexually-loaded questions or deliver double-entendres. We act like we just 
discovered sex, and any resistance, even in the name of taste, is hooted 
down. This rebellious enthusiasm is extremely difficult to counter, as 
temperance advocates could have told us.

What thirties drunkenness and contemporary free sex have in common is 
backlash, rebellion against a prior standard. That's why both have such an 
immature or adolescent tone. The free sex movement of the late sixties 
thought it was overthrowing uptight, repressed fifties sexuality; adults who 
resented Prohibition in the twenties, and celebrated its 1933 repeal, had a 
similar liberationist mindset.  

There are ironies in the cultural parallels, though. In the previous cycle, 
the moralizing meddlers were progressives and feminists. Prohibition was 
championed by the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, an organization that 
also promoted women's suffrage and prison and workplace reform. These early 
feminists perceived that male drunkenness was a persistent hardship for 
women, accompanied as it often was by violence, job loss, and poverty. The 
18th Amendment, prohibiting the manufacture and sale of alcohol, was ratified 
in 1919; the 19th Amendment, giving women the right to vote, came a year 
later. But during the Roaring Twenties sneaking alcohol became glamorous and 
daring; my grandmother used to describe how a friend smuggled champagne to 
her 1924 wedding by sleeping on the bottles in his Pullman train berth. It 
was, we would say today, a transgressive act. It took another Amendment, the 
21st,  ratified in 1933, to restore the supposed right to drink, and by that 
time headlong defiance had canonized excess. 
 
"Drunks are cool" is one example of a bad value that was gradually replaced 
by something healthier. This process took a very long time. We could mark the 
beginning in the tipsy Roaring Twenties, and the end with the criticism 
"Arthur" received in 1981 for treating alcoholism as funny. That's nearly 
sixty years. Abortion has been legal for thirty years. It's not time to lose 
hope. 

But note that public attitude toward drunkenness was not changed by a revived 
anti-drinking moral crusade. The Woman's Christian Temperance Union did not 
finally develop the magic-bullet slogan that would "change hearts and minds." 
The WCTU in fact faded away, an organization that in the public mind was 
peopled by biddies and fools. Pro-life leaders likewise may never gain public 
admiration, never cook up that smash ad campaign that makes our cause 
fashionable at last. 

In the meantime, of course, we can't stop trying; we must continue to present 
the truth with the persistence of a tympanist in a symphony. We have to keep 
showing up, speaking, writing, doing the right thing, reaching at least 
"those who have ears to hear." But public approval or admiration may never be 
our reward. We may have to settle for being despised and rejected, just like 
Someone told us we would be-Someone who told us that persecution is, 
paradoxically, a blessing. Nothing is as spiritually transforming as being 
humbled, though it's certainly not the blessing we want to seek. 

The WCTU did not succeed; instead, the truth itself, which they had 
perceived, succeeded. Today partygoers are not embarrassed to request a glass 
of water, not wine. A guest who downed a quick series of Scotch doubles, in 
the old manner, would be the object of frowns and whispers. Excessive 
drinking is cool to nobody over the age of 18. What once was sophisticated 
now looks juvenile and self-destructive. And some day, God willing, 
irresponsible sex and its handmaiden, abortion, will look the same to our 
descendants. It may only take time for that truth to shine through. 

That future time will not be perfect. Our grandchildren will have different 
ills to combat, which we cannot now imagine. It's instructive to watch old 
movies with open eyes, and see the myth of a "pro-family" golden age crumble. 
Yes, characters waited till marriage to have sex, but women were routinely 
slapped and physically degraded; Jimmy Cagney started that fashion in "Public 
Enemy," 1931, when he shoved a half grapefruit into girlfriend Mae Clarke's 
face. In "It Happened One Night" Gable threatens to break Colbert's neck, and 
later tells her screen dad, "What she needs is a guy that would take a sock 
at her once a day, whether it's coming to her or not." We may be shaky in our 
notions of what constitutes a "lady," but we have much healthier ideas about 
how a lady should be treated. 

Likewise, you don't have to watch many films of the era to notice that male 
adultery is treated lightly, as a boys-will-be-boys inevitability that women 
should smilingly ignore. Wives who complain are charged with destroying their 
marriages for the sake of foolish pride, as in "The Women," 1939. (The very 
clever script is by a woman, Claire Boothe Luce, which modern-day feminists 
would no doubt term an instance of "internalized oppression"). In "The 
Philadelphia Story," 1940, it's Katherine Hepburn's fault that her dad is 
pursuing a flirtation with a dancer; she failed to give him all the 
admiration a dad needs from a daughter, and the poor man was compelled to 
seek it elsewhere. We may have elastic notions about pre-marital sex, but our 
view of extra-marital sex is comparatively judgmental.

Finally, old movies might not have used explicit sex to heat up a movie, but 
instead they used hot "love-hate" romances that can strike modern viewers as 
truly sick. See "Gilda," 1946, for emotional sadism (Rita Hayworth's true 
love torments her till she's cowering and weeping at his feet), and "The 
Outlaw," 1943, for the physical kind (Jane Russell bound and abandoned in the 
desert sun, apparently just a spicy bit of lover's play). Our generation may 
be desensitized to flesh, but we have a much more narrow idea of what 
constitutes a normal psyche or a healthy relationship. 

The "good old days" had plenty of flaws, and by the time all the 
sexual-morality shells are back in the tidal pool, something else important 
is bound to be missing. This will always be an imperfect world. Those of us 
who follow the One who says, "Be perfect, as your heavenly Father is 
perfect," must go on doing the best we can, being light in the darkness and 
salt in the Land of Tastelessness. And, though we may never get the credit, 
we may yet see our goal. 

The last time you saw abortion considered in a film or TV show, it was 
probably framed as the sad, noble decision of a suffering woman who was being 
unjustly persecuted by violent right-wing zealots. Lately, we're not hearing 
much about the issue at all. That's not necessarily a bad thing; silence is a 
good medium for reflection. When the topic re-emerges-and it is impossible 
for something so painful to remain hidden-the story may well have a different 
twist. For the time being we must persevere with patience, and wait for the 
tide to turn. 



********
Frederica Mathewes-Green
www.frederica.com

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