How the Pro-Life Generation Is Redefining ‘Unthinkable’
From college campuses to the March for Life, young people
(and young families) are giving new life to the pro-life cause.
A participant in the
Jan. 18, 2019, March for Life displays a sign of hope in front of the U.S.
Supreme Court Building in Washington, D.C. (photo: Rena Schild / Shutterstock)
John
Grondelski BlogsJanuary
24, 2025
I’ve gone to many Marches for Life since my first in 1975.
Two things that have struck me positively: it’s more ecumenical and it’s
growing younger.
That it’s growing younger is not just a reverse mirror of me
getting older. There are more young people there. Nor is it “compulsory
attendance on a field trip” from Catholic schools. Those young people are from
colleges and universities: fresh voters. They’re also not just from the old
Catholic colleges and universities that are March for Life standbys — schools
like Franciscan University, Belmont Abbey and Christendom. A few years back I
remember getting attached to a large group from Louisiana State University. A state
university!
Georgetown hosts a student pro-life conference every year on
the day after the March. I’ve attended it for the last few years, and it’s
refreshing to see so many young collegians and grad students, serious about
their subjects and serious about the issues, attending serious presentations
about protecting and defending life.
Somebody today posted a picture online of
JD Vance holding the young peoples’ trademark sign: “I am the pro-life
generation.” I don’t know if the picture was real or a photoshop, but I do know
that picture is worth a thousand words.
That picture will strike terror in the hearts of
abortionists because Vance may be the future. Here is a 40-year-old man who, at
his inauguration, had fidgety little kids in tow. Kids. Plural. Acting like
kids. Americans don’t see that much. Marriage scholar and researcher Brad
Wilcox has documented that the number of Americans living with a minor in their
household and the amount of time they live together have both declined. That’s
troublesome.
But Vance is not a lecture. He is a living person showing
that it is neither “weird” nor even just a “choice” to have children. He
reminds us of what Americans once took for granted: that normal human
development generally meant there was a stage in adult life when one moved out
of a parent’s basement, got married and had kids. Or, as a more authoritative
source put it, “A man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his
wife, and the two shall become one flesh” (Matthew 19:5).
That terrifies the abortionists. That terrifies the
septuagenarians and octogenarians like Joe Biden, Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer,
Hillary and Bill Clinton, Jerry Nadler and others who are still living in and
fighting for the 1960s and Woodstock. It frightens them because it sends
perhaps the visceral awareness that they are the past — and they are
passé.
It doesn’t mean they’ll go gently into that good night
(where they want to send everybody else). Diogenes needs to prowl the north
wing of the Capitol because the fact that 60 Senators would not vote “yes” to
pass a law on Jan. 22 banning medical abandonment and infanticide of
post-abortion newborns is a national disgrace. The bill failed 52-47, because
it needed a three-fifths (60) vote.
few years ago, Jeanne Mancini told the March for Life
that it was not just enough to make abortion illegal. We had to make it
“unthinkable.” And I’ve been thinking about that.
“Unthinkable” is a big reach. It’s daunting, even
intimidating. It demands cultural shifts and cultures don’t just change.
But we have to think about making abortion “unthinkable.” In
the 1800s, it was “unthinkable” that slavery would disappear or that the South
could survive without chattel servitude. The “unthinkable” happened: nobody
today would entertain the idea slavery might have pros as well as cons.
Eighty years ago, America resolved that Nazism would be
“unthinkable” and that postwar Germany had to be rehabilitated first by
intellectual fumigation. No normal person today suggests we consider Nazism’s
“good” side.
I’d argue the mistake we made after 1989 was in refusing the
intellectual work of stigmatizing socialism and communism. Those systems killed
on a magnitude that made Hitler look like an amateur. But we pretended that
“history was over” and didn’t need to lustrate the post-communist world, which
is why an ex-KGB colonel calls himself a democratically-elected president, the
world’s most populous country remains under communist dictatorship, and some
people still have heart flutters for Havana and Hanoi.
Yes, we can make abortion “unthinkable” and the people who
are going to do that are “the pro-life generation.” Some will do it through
their research, their scholarship, and their political activism. But many will
do it by doing what our vice president showed by example: by marrying, by
having babies, and by being (and looking) happy about it.
https://www.ncregister.com/blog/grondelski-redefining-unthinkable
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