A third of all the young people in America are not in America today because of abortion, because one in three pregnancies end in abortion.And both major fact-checking sites call this one false. Both.
First factcheck.org:
Rick Santorum incorrectly stated that “one in three pregnancies end in abortion” in the United States. It’s actually fewer than one in four.If Rick's ever going to be take seriously (yea, I know - that's a giggle!) he's going to have to get the numbers right. And now I'd like to introduce Rick to something he may never have met. The facts:
Santorum appeared on a New Hampshire radio talk show, blaming abortions for “causing Social Security and Medicare to be underfunded.” But he not only misstated the abortion statistic, he also got it wrong when he said that "our birthrate is now below replacement rate for the first time in our history." The total fertility rate, not the birthrate, is used to determine the stability of a nation’s population, and the U.S. total fertility rate was below its replacement rate from 1972 to 2006. Finally, Santorum also misrepresented France as lagging far behind its replacement rate.
In a March 2011 report, the nonpartisan Guttmacher Institute reported that there were 22.4 abortions for every 100 pregnancies in 2008, excluding miscarriages. (The chart can be found in Table 1 on page 3.) The 2008 data is the most recent available, according to Guttmacher spokeswoman Rebecca Wind. The institute’s chart goes back to 1973, and the abortion ratio never reached 33 per 100 pregnancies. Its peak was 30.4 in 1983.So the highest rate was during Ronald Reagan's first administration?
I wonder how they're gonna blame that on Bill Clinton's penis.
But I digress.
Politifact, on the other hand, went straight to the CDC's numbers:
We chose 2003 as our representative year, since it was the most recent year for which we were able to obtain all of the relevant data.And Rick has another flaw in his "logic" (see what I mean about those irony quotes?). Politifact:
We set out to determine the number of known pregnancies in 2003. We say "known" because some pregnancies end due to natural causes at a very early stage, often before the woman even realizes she is pregnant. CDC only offers statistics for fetal deaths beginning at a fetal age of 20 weeks, so that’s the parameter we’ll use in our calculations.
To calculate the number of known pregnancies, we added together three figures: the number of live births, the number of fetal deaths (these include natural miscarriages and stillbirths), and the number of abortions. Here’s the data for 2003:
Live births: 4,090,007
Fetal deaths: 25,653
Abortions: 1,250,000
Total known pregnancies: 5,365,660
So abortions account for 23.2 percent of all known pregnancies. That’s less than a quarter of all pregnancies, rather than the one-third Santorum said.
A 2005 Guttmacher study of more than 1,200 women who had undergone an abortion found that a little under half cited the desire not to have additional children as a reason for having their abortion. This means that a substantial minority -- and possibly as many as 53 percent -- expected to have children after the abortion. This pattern was particularly strong among younger women in the study (less than a quarter of those 19 or younger said they were done with childbearing) and among those who had no children at the time of the abortion (only 3 percent said they were done with childbearing).From an email quoted by factcheck.org, Guttmacher spokesperson Rebecca Wind:
The group of women most likely to have an abortion are in their early 20s. They may already have one child and don’t want another at that time, or they may be childless but desire to have children in the future. Either way, the abortion postpones the birth of their child, it does not eliminate it — and there is no impact on the overall population. Some abortions actually terminate pregnancies that would have ended in miscarriage, so again you can’t assume that every abortion would have otherwise resulted in a live birth.But let's remember that Rick's a big fan of Intelligent Design - so science and logic are probably not among his intellectual strengths.
No comments:
Post a Comment