organizations, to hopefully have some
supportive friends or family and last but not
least, God.
There are more resources at the end of
this book, but two very useful organizations
that you might like to get in contact with
are:
www.BeNotAfraid.net
An online organization that offers
information and stories to support parents
who have received a difficult diagnosis for
their pregnancy:
www.PrenatalPartnersForLife.org
A group that offers support and
friendship to parents with a diagnosis of a
negative condition
If you are just thinking, ―there is just no
way I can do this,‖ there is also the option
of adoption. I know, I know, you hate the
idea. But think about it: adoption provides a
way out. For the child to live. For you not
to have to bear that cross. For the adopting
family to adopt another child, and yes,
there are agencies that specialize in special
needs children and yes, families do want
them. For example, did you know,
according to a 2008 article in the
Washington Post
, that ―almost 200 families
are on a waiting list to adopt a child with
Down syndrome in the United States‖?
1161
That‘s quite staggering. In some cases
parents seek adoption as a way to have
siblings; in other cases it‘s more of a
religious charity-type attitude.
Here are two quotes by different women
who have adopted
special needs
children:
Many don‘t want a baby that isn‘t
perfect. However, if they will only give
birth to these children, they will find
others, like me, who do want them. I am
grateful to the natural mothers of my
M
372
children. They gave them life and now I
give them love.
1162
Over the years I have had many people
make comments as to Nikki‘s condition,
some as meaningless as ―why would you
want a child like her?‖ …I always answer
those type of comments with ―Doesn‘t
every child deserve someone to love
them?‖
1163
Can my child be happy?
eople may say it is cruel, but how do
they know? I would challenge the
myth that special needs children
can‘t be as happy as other children. Since
those children have never known what it is
to live another way, it‘s likely they may not
miss it nearly as much as we think they
would. In some ways I think it‘s possible
they are actually
happier
when you
consider the childlike attitude they often
have.
As far as quality of life, I think Everett
Koop — who had extensive experience
with disabled children — put it best when
he said:
―It has been my constant experience that
disability
and
unhappiness
do
not
necessarily go together. Some of the most
unhappy children whom I have known
have all of the physical and mental
faculties; and on the other hand, some of
the happiest youngsters have borne burdens
which I myself would find very difficult to
bear.‖
1164
In the words of Lawrence Brodeur,
assistant prosecutor for life in the Doe vs.
Bolton case:
―
Who can make a decision as to what is
minimal quality of life? Very simply, no
one can. Nobody is qualified to do that.
Maybe the child will be happy. Maybe it
won‘t. How can you know?‖
1165
Perfect or not
erfect or not, children who are
challenged by a disability are
nonetheless a human being. They
still feel pain. Their heart still beats. Their
brain still sends brain waves. They are still
a child of God. They still possess a right to
live.
Reason #85
―A diagnosis of disability doesn‘t
have to be fatal — for you or the
child‖
P
P
373
Reason #86
Aborted fetuses are
often used in research
Women usually aren‘t
informed about this
There is some evidence that, in earlier
studies, the woman‘s consent was not
always sought.
1166
—National Institutes of Health papers,1994
lthough
informed
consent
is
usually given for research, many do
not realize:
1.
What they are signing at the abortion
clinic. It‘s all in the fine print. Do you
always read the whole thing? I know I
don‘t. As one pro-choice author admits,
―Rarely are pregnant women asked to
give specific consent on the use of fetal
tissue.
Women
choosing
abortion
customarily sign a blanket consent form
that is similar, if not identical, to general
surgery consents. These forms often
contain one phrase among the main
disclaimers,
such
as
‗I
further
understand that in accordance with
applicable law, any tissue removed may
be disposed of in accordance with the
custom practiced.‘‖
1167
2.
The abortion clinic may be profiting
from this ‗tissue donation.‘
1168
3.
On occasion aborted babies are born
alive in late pregnancy and parents are
not informed what happens to them
afterwards.
Aborted tissue is frequently
used for ‗research‘
Specimens
sectioned,
snap
freezing and overnight shipping
―Human embryonic and fetal tissues are
available…The laboratory, which is
supported by the National Institutes of
Health, can supply tissue from normal…
[or] abnormal embryos and fetuses of
desired gestational ages between 40 days
and term. Specimens are obtained
within minutes of passage…. processing
methods include immediate fixation,
snap fixation, snap freezing in liquid
nitrogen, and placement in balanced salt
solutions… Specimens are shipped by
overnight express… also supply serial
sections of human embryos that have
been preserved in methyl Carnoy's
fixative, embedded in paraffin and
sectioned at 5 microns.‖
1169
—National Institutes of Health Guide,
―Availability of human fetal tissue‖ —
a
government organization!
A
374
he government‘s National Institutes
of Health notes that ―Federal
funding of basic research involving
human fetal tissue has been ongoing for
decades.‖
1170
I know, gross, isn‘t it?
Where does this tissue come from?
Where else but abortion clinics! Have a
read of these quotes from a pro-choice
source:
Because of the frequency of abortion,
fetal tissue is abundant. Most abortions now
occur in hospitals or clinics where tissue
can be properly recovered and stored.
1171
In contrast to miscarriages, elective
abortion allows physicians to plan to
receive and preserve the fetal tissue. Even
though most abortions stop fetal life signs
and dismember the fetus, abortion produces
fresher and more intact tissue than do
miscarriages.
1172
—
The Dilemma of the Fetus
What actually happens after an
abortion? Well, the first job is to
‗reassemble‘ the suction or D&C abortion to
ensure no fetal parts (e.g., head, arms, etc.)
were left inside the woman. Then the tissue
is stored before it is picked up. Norma
McCorvey described the storage room at
the clinic she worked at: (yuck warning):
―The ―Part‘s Room,‖ where we kept the
aborted babies, was particularly heinous…
You‘re hard core, I told myself. You‘re Jane
Roe. You can handle a couple of plastic bags
full of tissue…Arnie lifted up a large plastic
freezer bag. The contents looked similar to
a cut-up chicken, with all the parts
swimming in blood, and I felt myself
growing nauseous. Then I saw the back of a
head float by and I immediately vomited all
over Arnie, the sink and the counter.‖
1173
What happened to the tissue next? In
Norma‘s clinic the tissue was picked up
once a week and taken to a lab. Probably
for research.
What about the case of a live
birth?
There have been cases of later abortions
such as inductions and hysterotomies
that result in a live birth.
1174
The baby is
either left to die, given encouragement
to die or in rare cases had pity on and
rushed to intensive care.
1175
Researchers
actually prefer these types of ‗tissue
donation‘ because the tissues are whole
and fresh.
1176
Indeed, even a 1994 NIH
government report mentions allegations
that ―some abortionists performed
abortion procedures that were more
potentially harmful to the pregnant
woman in order to obtain a live fetus for
research purposes.‖
1177
T
375
How are these tissues used?
ere are some examples I‘ve come
across:
In one case eyes from aborted fetuses in
the U.S. were shipped to a New Zealand
University for research, reminiscent of
Auschwitz.
1178
In
one
experiment
researchers
transplanted fetal cells into the brains of
elderly Alzheimer‘s patients — only to
have them writhe and convulse — and
now they can‘t turn it off.
1179
Many vaccines today contain tissue
culture originally grown from an
aborted fetus.
1180
Then there‘s Samsum, a research clinic
which is importing aborted fetal tissue
to transplant their insulin cells.
1181
Finally, tissue has been used from an
aborted 14-week-old baby for the
purpose of trying to grow new skin on
burns victims.
1182
Let us do evil that good may come of it,
they say. One pro-choice book proclaims
that a woman‘s abortion can now be
―transformed into one of the most life-
affirming acts a woman could offer the
world.‖
1183
Wishful thinking. In other
examples of vanity:
Russian beauty salons advertise anti-
aging treatments that involve injections
containing stem cells obtained from
locally aborted fetuses.
1184
Some of these
fetuses come from poor women who
have been paid U.S. $200 to carry a baby
to 8-12 weeks then abort.
1185
In the Ukraine there are allegations of
women being paid to have late
abortions, and unscrupulous doctors
advising women there is something
wrong
with
the
fetus
late
in
pregnancy…all for beauty treatments, as
the tissue is ‗donated‘ to universities
then sold to private clinics.
1186
Another
report
showed
women
travelling for beauty treatments in
Barbados, Ecuador, Russia and the
Ukraine that use the stem cells obtained
from aborted fetuses age 6-12 weeks
old.
1187
A skin cream called ―NeoCutis‖ and
available in the U.S. is made out of cell
lines originally grown from the foreskin
of an aborted male fetus. It is advertised
to ―reduce the appearance of facial
wrinkles.‖
1188
These are just some examples I have
come across in my research.
H
376
Clinics may be making a
―killing‖ off the body of your
dead baby
sually it happens indirectly. Tissue
is ‗donated‘ to researchers who
then, in return, might rent a room
at the clinic or perhaps pay abortion
employees to retrieve the ‗tissue‘.
1189
According to the law, costs can be
reimbursed as long as they are reasonable.
Yet even with ‗reasonable reimbursement,‘
it seems like a fine deal for abortion clinics.
Instead of having to pay someone to get rid
of the fetus, they can make money off him
a second time! Even pro-choicers admit the
abortion industry is highly unregulated:
The line between making profit and
repaying costs is often hard to draw,
however… within limits — limits that have
not yet been firmly set by regulation —
tissue providers, most often abortion
clinics, are allowed to include some of the
costs of equipment and administrative
overhead in the tissue costs.
1190
The nature of the relationship between
the researcher and the tissue provider is not
well known and varies markedly from place
to place. There is little standardization in
the collection and distribution of fetal
tissue; the procurement of human fetal
tissue, is, perhaps, the ―least structured and
organized‖ of all the forms of tissue and
organ donation.
1191
As an example of prices for fetal tissue,
Life Dynamics was quoted by CNS news as
having
the
documentation
for
the
following:
$999 brain (22-23 wks)
$550 reproductive organs
$325 for a spinal cord
$150 for skin
$75 each eye
1192
CNS says, referring to the man who
authored this price list, ―Jones told 20/20
producers, during an episode that aired on
March 8, 2000, that he was able to make
$50,000 a week from the sale of fetal body
parts,‖ which he did from a Kansas abortion
clinic.
1193
However,
according
to
a
government investigation, Miles Jones did
not break any federal laws so presumably
he is free to continue.
Another
source,
the
Republican
Christopher H. Smith from the U.S. House
of Representatives, provided these prices in
a news release:
$500 trunk
$150 liver
$100 pancreas
$75 ears (under 8 weeks)
1194
U
377
If it‘s not a baby, how can
researchers profit from fetal
parts?
―It is routine for pregnant women who
are planning to abort their babies to be
told that their children are nothing
more than collections of cells, blobs of
tissues… Babies younger than 8 weeks
have identifiable brains, livers, spleens,
eyes and ears, and they — as well as
older babies — are being taken apart,
piece by piece, limb by limb — even
skinned. Worst of all, there are
profiteers waiting in the wings to make
money from this tragedy by collecting
and selling their pieces.‖
1195
—Republican Christopher H. Smith, U.S.
House of Representatives, Press Release
November 8, 1999
Reason #86
―Clinics may be profiting from
the sale of your baby‘s body‖
Reason #87
Your unborn baby is
intelligent
Our preconceptions
I think generally we have this closed-in
perception
that
because
we
can‘t
communicate verbally with our babies and
have them respond in kind, and because
they are so helpless and needy and
mysterious, it seems impossible to our
educated mind that they could have an
intelligence beyond our imagination.
1196
—David Chamberlain
, The Mind of Your Newborn
Baby
f we say that a fetus does not have
consciousness, how do we know? How
do we know what is going in inside
that little head? Just because he cannot
communicate literally does not mean he is
not conscious, aware or even capable of
thought. Even brain scans of people in
comas show they can think.
1197
Why not
the fetus? After all, language is not
necessary for thought — it is simply a tool
for our communication.
I
378
Some brainy facts
y better understanding the brain we
can see how your unborn baby can
indeed be intelligent.
Here are some fetal brainy facts for you
to enjoy!
From week 3-13 the fetus‘ brain
becomes transformed from a tiny, bent
tube into a distinguishable brain
shape.
1198
From 4 weeks onward textbooks
illustrate the fetus‘ forebrain, midbrain
and hindbrain.
1199
At 4 weeks the fetus brain is about as
small as a grain of salt, then at 7 weeks
the brain is the size of a small pea.
1200
The brain of the fetus is perfectly
smooth at 13 weeks and doesn‘t develop
the familiar ‗walnut look‘ until the last
month of pregnancy.
1201
At 18 weeks your unborn child has
roughly 100,000,000,000 simple brain
cells — the total he or she will have for
life.
1202
(This does not include brain cell
connections.)
The brain of a 12-week fetus weighs
roughly 10 grams — about the weight of
2 sheets of paper.
1203
At birth, 1/7
th
of your baby‘s total body
weight is made up of his brain — the
real reason behind your baby‘s big,
adorable baby face.
1204
Simple brain waves have been measured
6-12 weeks after conception. This is
obviously not logical thought, but
having brain waves is a human
quality.
1205
From 32 weeks gestation Dream or REM
brain waves can be picked up and seen
on ultrasound.
1206
Here‘s your deep
thought for the day: If a fetus can dream,
what is he dreaming about?
Your baby is growing a brain that is just
as unique from yours as your
fingerprints.
1207
But what about…?
. How can a fetus be aware when we
know his brain isn‘t finished
developing?
A. Remember, the brain is the first
organ to begin developing and the last to
finish!
1208
Just because certain parts of the
cerebral cortex are not completed doesn‘t
prove that the brain can‘t work in any way
or without any complexity. Some areas,
such as the survival instinct, emotions and
memory mature earlier than others. Before
the fetus can analyze his experiences he is
already absorbing them into his memory,
body and experiencing emotion.
Q. I‘ve heard that before birth the
nerves which carry brain messages aren‘t
fully insulated by myelin, so how, then, can
B
Q
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