Pro-life libertarians have a vital task to perform: to persuade the many
abortion-supporting libertarians of the contradiction between abortion and individual
liberty; and, to sever the mistaken connection in many minds between individual freedom
and the "right" to extinguish individual life. Libertarians have a moral
vision of a society that is just, because individuals are free. This vision is the only
reason for libertarianism to exist. It offers an alternative to the forms of political
thought that uphold the power of the State, or of persons within a society, to violate the
freedom of others. If it loses that vision, then libertarianism becomes merely another
ideology whose policies are oppressive, rather than liberating.
We expect most people to be inconsistent, because their beliefs are founded on false
principles or on principles that are not clearly stated and understood. They cannot apply
their beliefs consistently without contradictions becoming glaringly apparent. Thus, there
are both liberals and conservatives who support conscription of young people, the
redistribution of wealth, and the power of the majority to impose its will on the
individual.
A libertarian's support for abortion is not merely a minor misapplication of principle,
as if one held an incorrect belief about the Austrian theory of the business cycle. The
issue of abortion is fundamental, and therefore an incorrect view of the issue strikes at
the very foundations of all beliefs.
Libertarians believe, along with the Founding Fathers, that every individual has
inalienable rights, among which are the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness. Neither the State, nor any other person, can violate those rights without
committing an injustice. But, just as important as the power claimed by the State to
decide what rights we have, is the power to decide which of us has rights.
Today, we are seeing a piecemeal destruction of individual freedom. And in abortion,
the statists have found a most effective method of obliterating freedom: obliterating the
individual. Abortion on demand is the ultimate State tyranny; the State simply declares
that certain classes of human beings are not persons, and therefore not entitled to the
protection of the law. The State protects the "right" of some people to kill
others, just as the courts protected the "property rights" of slave masters in
their slaves. Moreover, by this method the State achieves a goal common to all
totalitarian regimes: it sets us against each other, so that our energies are spent in the
struggle between State-created classes, rather than in freeing all individuals from the
State. Unlike Nazi Germany, which forcibly sent millions to the gas chambers (as well as
forcing abortion and sterilization upon many more), the new regime has enlisted the
assistance of millions of people to act as its agents in carrying out a program of mass
murder.
The more one strives for the consistent application of an incorrect principle, the more
horrendous the results. Thus, a wrong-headed libertarian is potentially very dangerous.
Libertarians who act on a wrong premise seem to be too often willing to accept the inhuman
conclusions of an argument, rather than question their premises.
A case in point is a young libertarian leader I have heard about. He supports the
"right" of a woman to remove an unwanted child from her body (i.e., her
property) by killing and then expelling him or her. Therefore, he has consistently
concluded, any property owner has the right to kill anyone on his property, for any
reason.
Such conclusions should make libertarians question the premises from which they are
drawn.
We must promote a consistent vision of liberty because freedom is whole and cannot be
alienated, although it can be abridged by the unjust action of the State or those who are
powerful enough to obtain their own demands. Our lives, also, are a whole from the
beginning at fertilization until death. To deny any part of liberty, or to deny liberty to
any particular class of individuals, diminishes the freedom of all. For libertarians to
support such an abridgement of the right to live free is unconscionable.
I encourage all pro-life libertarians to become involved in debating the issues and
educating the public; whether or not freedom is defended across the board, or is allowed
to be further eroded without consistent defenders, may depend on them.
Originally published as a 1981 article in LFL Reports: #1.
Ron Paul, M.D., was born in 1935. He is a graduate of Gettysburg
College and Duke University, and served as a flight surgeon in the U.S. Air Force and the
Air National Guard.
Congressman Paul (R-TX) and his wife Carol have five children. They
make their home in Lake Jackson, Texas, where the Congressman practiced obstetrics and
gynecology.
Convinced that the size, power, and cost of the Federal government had
to be cut for our free society to survive, Dr. Paul ran for Congress and won a special
election in April 1976. He was sworn in for his first full term in January 1979,
representing the 22nd District until 1984. He was the 1988 Libertarian Party candidate for
President. In 1996, he returned to the Republican Party and again won election to
Congress. In 2008, he ran for the nomination for President of the United States, in the
Republican Party.