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Back to To the Point

To the Point

The Politics of Abortion

Still a polarizing issue, abortion may longer be the pro-life or pro-choice absolute it once was. As politics try to keep pace with technology, the geography of the debate moves from law to medicine and education. We examine the politics of abortion as well as reproductive issues, eugenics, and fetal rights, and consider whether tomorrow's argument will move away from abortion entirely, to designing our descendents. We get input from a legal professor, a bioethicist, a family planner, and a scholar of the abortion rights movement. Newsmaker: Funeral in the Congo and Kabila's Successor - Slain Congolese President Laurent Kabila was buried today. Journalist Danna Harman joins us from the capital, Kinshasa, after attending the state funeral. She talks about the challenges facing the resource-rich country and Kabila's son, Joseph, who succeeds him. Reporter's Notebook: Tension in the Supreme Court - A code of silence has been broken as news of trouble among Supreme Court justices surfaces. Joan Biskupic, who writes on the Supreme Court for USA Today, blames a month in the spotlight and attacks over last year's decision that gave Bush Florida's electoral votes.

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By Warren Olney • Jan 23, 2001 • 1 min read

Still a polarizing issue, abortion may longer be the pro-life or pro-choice absolute it once was. As politics try to keep pace with technology, the geography of the debate moves from law to medicine and education. We examine the politics of abortion as well as reproductive issues, eugenics, and fetal rights, and consider whether tomorrow's argument will move away from abortion entirely, to designing our descendents. We get input from a legal professor, a bioethicist, a family planner, and a scholar of the abortion rights movement.

  • Newsmaker:

    Funeral in the Congo and Kabila's Successor - Slain Congolese President Laurent Kabila was buried today. Journalist Danna Harman joins us from the capital, Kinshasa, after attending the state funeral. She talks about the challenges facing the resource-rich country and Kabila's son, Joseph, who succeeds him.

  • Reporter's Notebook:

    Tension in the Supreme Court - A code of silence has been broken as news of trouble among Supreme Court justices surfaces. Joan Biskupic, who writes on the Supreme Court for

    USA Today, blames a month in the spotlight and attacks over last year's decision that gave Bush Florida's electoral votes.

Harman's Christian Science Monitor article

American Center for Law and Justice

Center for Bioethics

Catholics for Free Choice

Biskupic's USA Today article

  • https://images.ctfassets.net/2658fe8gbo8o/AvYox6VuEgcxpd20Xo9d3/769bca4fbf97bf022190f4813812c1e2/new-default.jpg?h=250

    Warren Olney

    former KCRW broadcaster

    NewsNationalPolitics
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