Life, it seems, will fade away; drifting further every day. Getting
lost within myself; nothing matters, no one else. I have lost the will
to live; simply nothing more to give. There is nothing more for me;
need the end to set me free.
Metallica, "Fade to Black."[1]
Anti-Life Philosophy.
Easily available contraception and abortion are just part of the
progressive and socially responsible philosophy of 'live and let live.'
With unlimited freedom to do anything they want to, and with unlimited
opportunities for self-actualization, our children and therefore society
will naturally be much happier when freed from artificial restraints and
the strictures imposed upon them by outmoded religious dogma.
Introduction.
There is no doubt that our children are much freer than at any other
time in history. However, the anti-life philosophy makes the unsupported
assumption that unlimited freedom is a societal good.
This chapter examines and challenges this very basic assumption.
The Causes of Teenage
Suicide.
What Have We Lost?
To begin with, we must look at the changing causes of teenage suicide
since 1960, which is the period during which society has experienced its
most rapid changes in history.
It is obvious that abortion-related effects are only part of the
overall problem, which is the total loss of objective standards and
values in our society. We have come to believe that anything new
is good, that anything old is bad, and that any
change at all is 'progress.' We have also accepted 'situational ethics,'
which holds that any behavior at all may be justified in certain
circumstances. The Ten Commandments have been thrown out or modified
beyond recognition into a set of idealistic guidelines that only the
'most perfect' human beings can aspire to.
The Effects of Too-Rapid Change.
Our teenagers are experiencing the ultimate in "anomic"
societies. The French sociologist Emile Durkheim described such a
society as one where the previous set of social institutions have broken
down or have changed so rapidly that people feel confused about the
direction society is taking, and are unsure about their own places in
such societies. A more classical definition would be a society in which
concrete standards of conduct and belief are weak or lacking; in other
words, the situational ethicist's dream, where freedom is complete and
everyone can decide for himself what is right or wrong.
Simply stated, society's rate of change has exceeded the human
species' ability to keep up.
Durkheim, in his studies at the turn of the century, found suicide
rates in anomic societies to be much higher than those in stable
societies.
In a single generation, our country has experienced;
a relentless campaign to discredit and erode the 'traditional'
values of responsibility and respect for parental authority;
a tremendous decline in church attendance (about 40%), and the
resulting loss of these values and direction. Furthermore, no
institution has arisen to replace the Church in its capacity as moral
guide, although the government is making a pretty vigorous attempt to
do so;
a huge increase in divorce and broken families, leading to a
fivefold increase in one-parent families;
a tenfold increase in child abuse, including cases involving
sexual molestation;
an unprecedented era of teenage affluence and mobility;
an unprecedented level of pressure on teens to perform and
produce at a higher level than ever before i.e., they are driven to
earlier adulthood with its accompanying pressures;
redefinition of the traditional concept of happiness to mean a
freedom from responsibility and problems and "happiness is what
you have, not what you are;"
virtually unlimited sexual freedom;
teenagers have unlimited access to contraception and abortion
without parental knowledge or consent in many areas; and
a vast increase in drug availability.
The Teenage Suicide Rate.
The annual number of suicides among teenagers (ages 15 to 19) and
young adults (ages 20 to 24) are shown in Figures 88-1 and 88-2. These
show that the United States population has increased by 48 percent from
1960 to 1990, and the age group 15-24 suicide rate has increased an
astronomical 407 percent. This means that the suicide rate for young
people has increased at a rate of more than EIGHT TIMES THE
POPULATION GROWTH!
The actual rate of increase of teenaged suicide per 100,000
population is shown in Figure 88-3.
FIGURE 88-1
ANNUAL SUICIDES AMONG TEENAGERS AND YOUNG ADULTS IN THE UNITED STATES,
1960-1990
GRAPH NOT AVAILABLE
References. (1) United States Department of
Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Reference Data Book and Guide to
Sources, Statistical Abstract of the United States. 1990 (110th
Edition). Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office.
Table 13, "Total Population, By Age and Sex: 1960 to 1988."
Table 125, "Suicide Rates, By Sex, Race, and Age Group: 1970 to
1986." (2) Office of Educational Research and Improvement, United
States Department of Education. Youth Indicators: Trends in the
Well-Being of American Youth (published every two years). Indicator
45, "Causes of Death."
FIGURE 88-2
COMPARISON OF ANNUAL RATES OF INCREASE, UNITED STATES POPULATION AND AGE
GROUP 15 TO 24 SUICIDES
[A medium text size on your computer's 'view'
setting is recommended, otherwise, the tables may be discombobulated.]
United States
Population, Annual
Rate Annual
Suicides, Annual Rate
Year Ages
15-24 of
Increase Age Group
15-24 of Increase
1960
24,576,000
1,139
4.0%
11.0%
1970
36,535,000
3,240
1.6%
5.0%
1980
42,743,000
5,274
-4.0%
0.9%
1990
36,441,000
5,773
Increase,
1960-1990:
48% Increase,
1960-1990:
407%
Suicides in Age Groups
Year
15-19
20-24
Total
1960
475
664
1,139
1965
670
1,041
1,711
1970
1,141
2,099
3,240
1975
1,433
2,701
4,134
1980
1,799
3,475
5,274
1985
2,234
3,228
5,462
1990
2,775
2,998
5,773
Reference: United States Department of
Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Reference Data Book and Guide to
Sources, Statistical Abstract of the United States. 1990 (110th
Edition). Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office.
Table 13, "Total Population, By Age and Sex: 1960 to 1988."
Table 125, "Suicide Rates, By Sex, Race, and Age Group: 1970 to
1986."
FIGURE 88-2
COMPARISON OF ANNUAL RATES OF INCREASE, UNITED STATES POPULATION AND AGE
GROUP 15 TO 24 SUICIDES
United States
Population, Annual
Rate Annual
Suicides, Annual Rate
Year Ages
15-24 of
Increase Age Group
15-24 of Increase
1960
24,576,000
1,139
4.0%
11.0%
1970
36,535,000
3,240
1.6%
5.0%
1980
42,743,000
5,274
-4.0%
0.9%
1990
36,441,000
5,773
Increase,
1960-1990:
48% Increase,
1960-1990: 407%
Suicides in Age Groups
Year
15-19
20-24
Total
1960
475
664
1,139
1965
670
1,041
1,711
1970
1,141
2,099
3,240
1975
1,433
2,701
4,134
1980
1,799
3,475
5,274
1985
2,234
3,228
5,462
1990
2,775
2,998
5,773
Reference: United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of the
Census. Reference Data Book and Guide to Sources, Statistical
Abstract of the United States. 1990 (110th Edition). Washington, DC:
United States Government Printing Office. Table 13, "Total
Population, By Age and Sex: 1960 to 1988." Table 125, "Suicide
Rates, By Sex, Race, and Age Group: 1970 to 1986."
FIGURE 88-3
RATES OF SUICIDE BY RACE AND GENDER, 1960 TO 1990
Rates of Suicide for Ages 15-19
Rates of Suicide for Ages 20-24
Per 100,000 Population
Per 100,000 Population
White White
Minority Minority White
White Minority Minority
Year Males Females Males Females All Males
Females Males Females All
1960 5.9 1.6
3.4 1.5
3.6 11.9
3.1 7.8
1.6 7.1
1965 6.3 1.8
5.2 2.4
4.0 13.9
4.3 13.1
4.0 8.9
1970 9.4
2.9
5.4
2.9 5.9
19.3
5.7
19.4
5.5 12.2
1975 13.0 3.1
7.0 2.1
7.6 26.8
6.9 23.6
6.0 16.5
1980 15.0 3.3
7.5 1.8
8.5 27.8
5.9 20.9
3.6 16.1
1985 17.3 4.1
10.0 2.2
10.0 27.4
5.2 20.2
3.5 15.6
1990 19.2 4.2
12.2 2.3
11.2 27.8
5.5 20.5
3.8 16.0
SUICIDE RATES FOR TEENAGERS, 1960-1990
GRAPH NOT AVAILABLE
References: (1) Office of Educational Research and Improvement,
United States Department of Education. Youth Indicators: Trends in
the Well-Being of American Youth (published every two years).
Indicator 45, "Causes of Death." (2) United States Department
of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Reference Data Book and Guide to
Sources, Statistical Abstract of the United States. 1990 (110th
Edition). Washington, DC: United States Government Printing Office.
Table 13, "Total Population, By Age and Sex: 1960 to 1988."
Table 125, "Suicide Rates, By Sex, Race, and Age Group: 1970 to
1986."
It is interesting to note that the suicide rate for persons older
than 24 has remained virtually static since 1960, lending credence to
the theory that these persons have become adjusted to rapid social
change after witnessing it for about a quarter of a century.
The Specific Role of Abortion in Teen Suicide.
Introduction.
Abortion takes its rightful place as only one of the
virtually unlimited range of freedoms that have been bestowed upon
teenagers in American society.
With too great a degree of freedom comes a shedding of responsibility
however, no matter how free, a person can never shed the personal
consequences for his or her actions. We as a species still have the old
traditional values rooted in our psyches, perhaps as an integral part of
a group survival instinct. Our inner selves, our instincts, tell us that
any species or society that tries to avoid responsibility for its
actions, either collectively or individually, will eventually descend
into anarchy and destruction. And, if we violate these inner principles,
we set up an insoluble and inescapable tension that can drive us to even
worse excesses in our desire to forget even to suicide.
Relationships.
Common sense should tell us that abortion increases
rather than decreases the teen suicide rate, and various studies prove
this relationship.
For example, a University of Minnesota research group surveyed 3,500
high-school teenagers to determine what factors in their lives
contributed to depression, stress, and thoughts of suicide. Dr. Barry
Garfinkel, head of the University's child and adolescent psychiatry
department, found that girls who had had abortions were four times
as likely to attempt suicide as girls who had not aborted.[2]
Another study, performed by Dr. Carl L. Tishler, found that teenaged
girls who have had abortions are more likely to commit suicide on or
near the anniversary of their abortions than at any other time.[3]
Meta Uchtman, Regional Director of Cincinnati Suiciders Anonymous,
testified that, of the 4,000 women seen by her organization, 40 percent
had had abortions, far more than the 22 percent of 'eligible' women at
large. Of this 40 percent, 78 percent were between the ages of 15 and
24.[4]
Personal Situations.
It is not difficult to imagine the thoughts of a
young girl who has been lied to by Planned Parenthood, her school sex
clinic counselors, and others as they tell her that her baby is really
not alive, and is just a glob of tissue. They tell her that abortion is
harmless, that she will experience very little or no psychological or
physiological trauma.
Imagine her shock and sorrow when she finds out in biology class, or
from a book or a knowledgeable friend or parent, that she has been lied
to and that she, at fourteen or fifteen years of age, has already
murdered her own child! Imagine her thoughts as she realizes that, at
the beginning of her life, she has already ended another life the
life of her very own child! Then imagine how escape through suicide may
sound so very easy to some of these teenage girls.
There are other, more indirect, reasons why abortion may contribute
to our country's exploding rate of teen suicide.
Teenagers especially those who know their parents are pro-abortion
know that they could have been aborted for mere convenience if they had
not come along at the right time. For some teens, whose self-image is
critical more than any other time of their lives, this knowledge is
truly devastating.
Additionally, abortion helps confuse teenagers as to the worth of
human life in general, especially now that abortion's loathsome progeny,
infanticide and euthanasia, are becoming more popular. These killings of
'defective' born human beings leads some teens to conclude that
they are worth less if they believe that there is something wrong with
them.
Suicide for Sexual Gratification.
Under the current mass drive to be free of all restraints, it is
absolutely inevitable that newer and ever more bizarre sexual practices
will advance to the forefront in our culture.
Perhaps the ultimate expression of personal degradation in our
sex-mad society carries the impressive label of "autoerotic
asphyxiation," which accounts for ten to fifteen percent of all
suicides among young males in this country.
The "victim" knots a suspended rope around his neck and
masturbates in an effort to climax just as he is on the threshold of
passing out due to lack of oxygen. This supposedly produces a very
intense simultaneous 'high' and orgasm. Predictably, this dangerous
stunt often goes awry, with the victim choking the life out of himself
after a few moments of pleasure followed by sheer terror as he realizes
that he cannot escape the trap he has set for himself. It is not hard to
imagine the shock of parents who find a dead teenage son in this
situation. It is also understandable that not many of these sexual
suicides are publicized.
This type of act is the ultimate in capitulation to the god of sex
that we worship in the United States.
References: Teenage Suicide.
[1] Tipper Gore. "Merchants of Death: Touting Teen
Suicide." National Federation for Decency Journal, September
1987, page 11.
[2] Frontline Updates. "Suicide More Likely Among Aborted
Teens." National Right to Life News, April 2, 1987, page 4.
[3] Carl L. Tishler, Ph.D. "Adolescent Suicide Attempts
Following Elective Abortion: A Special Case of Anniversary
Reaction." Pediatrics, November 1981, pages 670 and 671.
[4] Meta Uchtman, Regional Director of Cincinnati Suiciders
Anonymous, in September 1981 testimony considering parental notification
before a minor's abortion. "Suicide, Abortion and Parents."
South Dakota Right to Life Newsletter, November 1981, page 3.
Further Reading: Teenage Suicide.
Greenhaven Press. Teenage Sexuality: Opposing Viewpoints.
Greenhaven Press Opposing Viewpoints Series, Post Office Box 289009, San
Diego, California 92128-9009. 1988, 215 pages. Each section includes
several essays by leading authorities on both sides of each issue. The
questions asked are: "What Affects Teenagers' Attitudes Towards
Sex?;" "What Kind of Sex Education Is Appropriate for
Teenagers?;" "Are School-Based Health Clinics
Beneficial?;" "How Can the Teenage Pregnancy Problem Be
Solved?;" and "Should Teenagers Make Their Own Sexual
Decisions?" Authors include Charles Krauthammer, Allan C. Carlson,
and Sol Gordon. A catalog is available from the above address and can be
obtained by calling 1-(800) 231-5163.
Francine Klagsburn. Too Young to Die Youth and Suicide.
New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1981. A detailed analysis of the reasons
behind the 'epidemic' of teen suicide that is sweeping our nation.
Unfortunately, the author seems to be almost oblivious to the baleful
Neoliberal influence and the effects of a mass turning away from God.
Eike-Henner W. Kluge. The Practice of Death.
London: Yale
University Press. 1975, 250 pages. The author ties together in a general
manner the philosophy and tactics of all of the pro-death movements:
Abortion, infanticide, suicide, euthanasia, and 'senicide.' Although the
book is nearly twenty years old, it is still relevant today.
United States Department of Health & Human Services, Public
Health Service, Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration,
Rockville, Maryland 20857. Report of the Secretary's Task Force on
Youth Suicide. Volume 1: Overview and Recommendations. Volume
2: Risk Factors for Youth Suicide. Volume 3: Prevention and
Interventions in Youth Suicide. August 1989. United States
Government Printing Office, 910 pages.
© American Life League BBS 1-703-659-7111
This is a chapter of the Pro-Life Activists Encyclopedia published
by American Life League.
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