The Social Justice Movement’s Modest Proposal

The Social Justice Movement’s Modest Proposal May 28, 2016

child-1154951_1920

Yesterday, I talked about the failure of the pro-life movement in upholding the sanctity of life after birth. Today, I want to talk about the other side of the problem: how the social justice movement betrays the poor. I’ll start with a story, set in a dystopian near-future world that is more or less exactly the same as the world is now.

It concerns a woman, we’ll call her Lisa. She has three children, and she’s desperately poor. She works, but she isn’t paid enough to make a basic living. People tell her that she needs a better education, but the fact is that she’s a victim of a tacit assumption: that everybody has the set of abilities required to make it in college. Lisa did, after several attempts, manage to scrape together an SAT score high enough to get into her local state school, and she still carries the student debt that she accumulated before she flunked out. People assume that she was lazy, that she didn’t try hard enough, and she is left with the crushing shame of knowing the truth: that she tried her best and it wasn’t good enough.

Maybe if she’d been black or had a diagnosed disability she’d have been given help. Someone would have cut her some slack. Someone would have advocated for her, or pointed out that it was racist to expect her to be a fluent in a Standard White English that Lisa and her folks have never spoken. Someone would have made allowances for the effects of intergenerational poverty and systemic discrimination. But she’s “white trash.” A demographic more or less universally reviled. She is reviled by the right because she is an unmarried mother with three children by two different fathers, and she relies on food stamps to feed her kids. She’s reviled by the left because she is a white Bible-believing Christian with a hillbilly accent. When she tries to tell her story on social media, instead of inviting her voice into the conversation, centering her narrative, respecting her culture, the defenders of social justice mock her for her religious beliefs and deride her for having bad grammar and being unable to spell.

Until recently, Lisa has been scraping by. Her current boyfriend is an alcoholic, he’s sometimes abusive and he’s in and out of her life but at least he has a job and pays child support for the two kids that are his. (The other baby daddy is long gone, she doesn’t even know how she would try to track him down.) One night, her boyfriend shows up and tells her to drive him to the liquor store. It’s late, she tells him it will be closed but he insists it will be open. They get there, and it looks closed to her. He’s gone for a while and then comes back with a crate that he stashes in the trunk. How could he afford that? Big win at the betting shop. Now shut up and drive.

The police show up the next morning. The DA is not completely convinced by her story, that she didn’t realize she was a getaway driver. But there’s a plea bargain and she ends up with a fine and some community service. Mercy, right? Except that now her boyfriend is in prison, she has no way to pay the fine and nobody that she can leave the kids with while she does her community service.

She’s desperate. So she goes to a local organization that’s been set up to help women in crisis, and she explains her situation. A very kindly, but wealthy looking woman smiles and nods and eventually says, “Well, it seems like you can’t really afford to support the children that you have.” She adds up the childcare costs, the rent, the cost of basic necessities. “But that’s okay,” she says with great compassion. “I see that one of your children is too young to talk. And a baby doesn’t really become a person in any meaningful moral sense until it acquires the capacity for language. So here’s a clinic that you can go to, and they’ll just put the baby to sleep. It’s very easy, and it’ll mean that you have the time and the resources to care properly for your other two children.”

Okay, so obviously this is not science fiction. It’s just reality. For millions of mothers, the reality is that the social justice movement has sold them out. Instead of offering them the support that they desperately need, it offers them the hideous opportunity to destroy their children so that they won’t have to suffer the economic burdens of motherhood.

For a lot of these women, this is not a liberating “choice.” It’s no choice at all. They endure the anguish of trying to come up with a way to make it work, of knowing that they are destroying a life, and then they try to convince themselves that what the nice, rich woman said is true. That their unborn child is not really a child. But they don’t really believe it and they carry the guilt for the rest of their life.

This is a shameful failure, not on the part of poor women, but on the part of the social justice movement. Abortion is not merely offered as an option for women who don’t want to be pregnant, it is offered – quite explicitly in many cases – as a final solution for the poor. Instead of alleviating the root causes of poverty, or providing immediate material aid, we address poverty by eliminating the poor before they are born. This is right there in the rhetoric: by reducing the number of hungry mouths, we make it possible to feed those who are already born. The fact that what we are actually doing is killing children in order to obviate our responsibility to feed them gets shuffled out of the picture by a shift of focus towards a woman’s right to autonomy over her own body. The fact that many women, given meaningful autonomy over their own bodies would choose not to have their wombs turned into killing fields is ignored. The fact that there is a massive conflict of interest between this idea of “safeguarding women’s autonomy” and this idea of “reducing excess population” is never acknowledged.

And the reality is, overwhelmingly, that the people who “choose” abortion are the desperate poor: women who functionally do not have a choice. The easy out of abortion allows the social justice movement to offer a “compassionate” solution that costs the wealthy and the complacent nothing. It enables our society to perpetuate systems of increasingly dire economic injustice by literally destroying the evidence in the form of invisible human lives.

What we need is an integrated pro-life/social justice movement. A movement that actually believes in the value, dignity, and worth of human life at all stages, in all conditions. Popes have observed the intimate connection between the right-to-life in the womb and the right to economic justice going back at least as far as Evangelium Vitae. Yet consistently Catholics have chosen to betray either one or the other of these essential tenets of Christian moral theology – either dismissing social justice concerns in a myopic war against abortion, or throwing unborn children under the bus in the name of social justice.

Image credit: pixabay
Stay in touch! Like Catholic Authenticity on Facebook:


Browse Our Archives