It Is Wrong to Make People Worse Off: Bodily Autonomy, Abortion, and Forced Organ Donation

It’s a dark and stormy night when your plane touches down in Analogyland. You, a pro-life apologist, have been invited to give a speech about bodily autonomy and abortion at a local convention center. You get into your rental car and begin to drive to your hotel. The storm worsens. A local violinist named Hector clutches his bright yellow raincoat tightly around him while he takes his dog out for a bathroom break. Out of nowhere, a drunk driver speeds towards you, out of control. He first careens into Hector and then veers into you, sending your car flying into a telephone pole.

You wake up in a hospital bed with minor damage. The doctor informs you that the drunk driver died on impact, and both of Hector’s kidneys were destroyed in the car accident. Fortunately, you and Hector just happen to have the same rare blood type such that you can save Hector’s life. So, the doctor plans to remove one of your kidneys and give it to Hector, restoring him to health.

You begin to protest: Hector has no right to one of your kidneys! You weren’t even the one who hit him! The doctor informs you that, here in Analogyland, the law guarantees the right to life. But, they can keep Hector alive on dialysis temporarily to let you appeal your case to the high court. You think about your anti-abortion speech and arguments about bodily autonomy, aware that your conviction that a right to bodily autonomy cannot ground a right to an abortion and your assertion that Hector has no right to your kidney seem inconsistent. When your day in court comes, what will you say to convince the judge that you should not have to give Hector one of your kidneys but also doesn’t even seem to imply that abortion is permissible because you have a right to refuse to use your body to help another person?

Estimated reading time: 14 minutes

Emily Albrecht will be speaking at South Carolina Association of Pregnancy Care Centers Annual Retreat.

Date: April 27, 2003
Time: 8-1
Event: South Carolina Association of Pregnancy Care Centers Annual Retreat
Topic: TBD
Sponsor: South Carolina Association of Pregnancy Care Centers
Venue: South Carolina Association of Pregnancy Care Centers
Location: 130 East Pine Log Rd
Aiken, SC 29803
Public: Private

Emily Albrecht will be speaking at St. Catherine’s School in Oyens, IA.

Date: February 17, 2023
Time: TBD
Event: St. Catherine's School
Venue: St. Catherine's School
Location: 205 Catholic St.
Oyens, Iowa 51050

Emily Albrecht will be speaking at University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, Oshkosh, WI.

Date: February 7, 2023—February 8, 2023
Time: Various
Event: University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Topic: The Most Persuasive Pro-Life Argument (Interactive Seminar) and A Woman's View on Bodily Autonomy & Abortion
Sponsor: UW Oshkosh Campus Ministry/Titan Catholic
Venue: University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
Location: Oshkosh, WI

“Reproductive Freedom”: Another Pro-Choice Non-Argument

Recently, some pro-choice people and organizations have moved away from focusing on bodily autonomy as grounding a right to an abortion and instead frame the issue as one of “reproductive freedom.” This might sound like a rhetorically powerful move—who could be against freedom? However, it is a self-defeating strategy that comes at the cost of the pro-choice movement’s best slogan: “my body, my choice.” 

Estimated reading time: 10 minutes