Radical christian agenda for America
The recent ruling by the Alabama Supreme Court that frozen embryos are “children” reveals the growing importance of state supreme courts in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, overruling Roe v. Wade.
So far this year, at least 14 states have introduced fetal personhood legislation — extending not only to fetuses, but also embryos and eggs. Two-thirds of pregnancy criminalization arrests are now coming from Alabama, Oklahoma, and South Carolina — whose highest courts have defined “children” to include fetuses, fertilized eggs, and embryos.
If you suffer a miscarriage, you could potentially be arrested for homicide or manslaughter. State courts have become the scenes of a growing number of reproduction criminalization trials.
Contraceptives and abortion pills may be the next
targets. This month, the two largest pharmacy chains in the United States will
start dispensing the abortion pill mifepristone.
The Alabama ruling also reveals the growing political
influence at the state level of Christian fundamentalists who believe that
human life, as Alabama Chief Justice Tom Parker wrote in a concurring opinion,
“cannot be wrongfully destroyed without incurring the wrath of a holy God, who
views the destruction of His image as an affront to Himself.”
And the ruling epitomizes the Christian right’s ever-more
vehement attacks on science.
We’ve been here before. In the early twentieth century,
some state legislatures relied on the Bible to dictate what their citizens
could and couldn’t do — resulting in notorious trials such as Tennessee
v. John Thomas Scopes, which began July 10, 1925 in Dayton, Tennessee.
John Scopes was a high school biology teacher. He was charged with violating Tennessee’s Butler Act — passed at the behest of Tennessee Representative John Washington Butler, head of the World Christian Fundamentalist Association — which made it illegal to teach human evolution in Tennessee schools.
William Jennings Bryan, the populist three-time
presidential candidate and former secretary of state, argued for the
prosecution; Clarence Darrow, for the defense.
The presiding Tennessee judge, John T. Raulston, quoted Genesis at the outset of the trial — just as did Alabama Chief Justice Tom Parker in the recent Alabama case.
Bryan opened for the prosecution by criticizing the
theory of evolution and the notion that human beings were descended "not
even from American monkeys, but from old world monkeys.”
Darrow argued that the Bible should be limited to the
realm of theology and morality and had no place in high school science courses.
After six days of trial, Judge Raulston declared that all
the defense testimony that Darrow had presented on the Bible, much of it from
Biblical scholars, was irrelevant and could not be presented to the jury (which
had been excluded from the courtroom during the defense).
Darrow then thought he might be able to use Bryan to make
his points in a way that could command the nation’s attention. Bryan was eager
to oblige.
In shirtsleeves and his trademark suspenders, Darrow
began his interrogation of Bryan with a quiet question: "You have given
considerable study to the Bible, haven't you, Mr. Bryan?"
Bryan replied, "Yes, I have. I have studied the
Bible for about fifty years.” Bryan then claimed "everything in the Bible
should be accepted as it is given there.”
Darrow asked Bryan whether he believed that a whale
swallowed Jonah, that Joshua made the sun stand still, that Noah survived the
great flood by putting the males and females of every species into his arc,
that Eve had been created from Adam's rib, that Eve had tempted Adam in the
garden of Eden, and the six days of creation according to Genesis.
Bryan finally conceded that the words of the Bible should
not always be taken literally, and explained that "I do not think about
things I don't think about.” Darrow then asked: "Do you think about the
things you do think about?" To the derisive laughter of
spectators, Bryan responded, "Well, sometimes.”
Bryan charged that the purpose of Darrow's questioning
was "to cast ridicule on everybody who believes in the Bible.” Darrow
responded that his purpose was to prevent “bigots and ignoramuses from
controlling the education of the United States.”
Bryan then accused Darrow of attempting to "slur at
the Bible,” and agreed to answer Darrow's further questions because "I
want the world to know that this man, who does not believe in God, is trying to
use a court in Tennessee …" Darrow interrupted, saying, "I object to
your statement" and to "your fool ideas that no intelligent Christian
on earth believes."
Raulston promptly ordered the court adjourned, and the
next day ruled that Darrow could not put Bryan back on the stand and that
Bryan’s testimony from the previous day must be stricken from the record.
Darrow did not summarize his defense. Bryan's summation,
which was distributed to reporters but not read in court, provides an insight
into the beliefs of the religious right even today:
Science is a magnificent force, but it is not a teacher of morals. It can perfect machinery, but it adds no moral restraints to protect society from the misuse of the machine. It can also build gigantic intellectual ships, but it constructs no moral rudders for the control of storm-tossed human vessel…. Science has made war so hellish that civilization was about to commit suicide; and now we are told that newly discovered instruments of destruction will make the cruelties of the late war seem trivial in comparison with the cruelties of wars that may come in the future. If civilization is to be saved from the wreckage threatened by intelligence not consecrated by love, it must be saved by the moral code of the meek and lowly Nazarene. His teachings, and His teachings alone, can solve the problems that vex the heart and perplex the world.
After eight days of trial, it took the jury nine minutes
to find Scopes guilty. He was ordered by Judge Raulston to pay a $100 fine (the
equivalent of about $1,900 today). The Tennessee Supreme invalidated the
decision on a technicality.
Bryan died suddenly five days after the trial's
conclusion.
In his autobiography, The Story of My Life,
published in 1932, Darrow predicted that “it will be only a few years before
the senseless [Butler] statute will be wiped from her books either by repeal or
the decision of a final court.” The Butler Act was not repealed in Tennessee
until 1967.
Darrow also wrote that “there is now reason for feeling
confident that no more states will permit their fanatics to place them in the
position of Tennessee.” Darrow’s biographer Irving Stone went so far as to
declare in Clarence Darrow for the Defense that Darrow had
“dealt a deathblow to fundamentalism.”
In 1968, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Epperson
v. Arkansas that bans on teaching evolution contravene the
Establishment Clause of the First Amendment because their primary purpose is
religious.
Those were the days when the U.S. Supreme Court was a
bulwark against the fundamentalist right and could be counted on to buttress
the wall between church and state.
But there seems little chance that the current Supreme
Court will deem unconstitutional the pregnancy criminalization prosecutions
coming from states whose highest courts have defined “children” to include
fetuses, fertilized eggs, and embryos.
Robert Reich is a professor at Berkeley and was secretary
of labor under Bill Clinton. You can find his writing at https://robertreich.substack.com/.