I vaguely remember the time — I believe it was called the “1980s and ’90s” — when Republicans railed against the idea of social engineering. In 1993, Henry Hyde wrote an op-ed for the Washington Post in which he lambasted the Clinton White House for its alleged belief that government could use its power to interfere with family structures. Hyde called the very idea “exotic social engineering.”
Since then, Republicans have embraced social engineering with both hands, using government authority to at least try to alter how people can and will behave. The latest, and perhaps most offensive, example comes by way of Indiana.
An interim legislative committee is considering a bill that would prohibit gays, lesbians and single people in Indiana from using medical science to assist them in having a child.
Sen. Patricia Miller (R-Indianapolis) said state law does not have regulations on assisted reproduction and should have similar requirements to adoption in Indiana. […]
“Our statutes are nearly silent on all this. You can think of guidelines, but when you put it on paper it becomes different,” she told The Journal Gazette of Fort Wayne for a story Tuesday.
Miller is chairwoman of the Health Finance Commission, a panel of lawmakers that will vote Oct. 20 on whether to recommend the legislation to the full General Assembly.
Yes, at least some in the party of limited government want to use the power of the state to regulate who can get pregnant and how.
The bill defines assisted reproduction as causing pregnancy by means other than sexual intercourse, including intrauterine insemination, donation of an egg, donation of an embryo, in vitro fertilization and transfer of an embryo, and sperm injection.
It then requires “intended parents” to be married to each other and says an unmarried person may not be an intended parent.
A doctor cannot begin an assisted reproduction technology procedure that may result in a child being born until the intended parents have received a certificate of satisfactory completion of an assessment required under the bill.
It’s not entirely clear whether this lunacy might actually become law in Indiana, but I almost hope it does. The Indiana Civil Liberties Union would sue, the law would inevitably be struck down, and the trial would be terribly entertaining.