gust of air? And Adam probably didn‘t
move before God breathed into him, but
the fetus moves and acts as a baby even
with facial expressions, long before he takes
his first breath. It‘s a nice idea but it just
doesn‘t cut it.
Up to birth
Not many people like the idea of abortion
up to birth. It‘s so easy to see abortion as
infanticide at that age. We‘ve all seen
premature babies on the news and we
know that the process of being born doesn‘t
instantaneously turn a blob of mom‘s tissue
into a cute baby. We‘ve seen the
ultrasounds of them smiling or sucking
their thumb in the womb. We know it‘s a
baby.
It is true that we celebrate birthdays not
conception days, yet that may be because
a)
we do not know the exact day of
conception;
b)
b) birthdays are the day we get to
finally
meet
our baby.
When the baby comes home from the
hospital
Please, you tax my brain. Only sensible
reasons will be debated here.
Conclusion
t doesn‘t make sense to say that
abortions should be allowed when a
baby is implanted, intelligent, born or
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any other point we‘ve discussed. These vary
for each baby. Besides, they‘re random
development points we have picked! One
pro-choice source compares various time
limits for abortion, but admits that such
figures are based not on ―logic‖ but are
―arbitrary‖ and simply an offerings to the
―savage dogs of conscience.‖
176
Strong
imagery. Another pro-choice source admits:
Most
physicians
considered
abortion a crime because of the inherent
difficulties of determining any point at
which a steadily developing embryo
became somehow more alive than it had
been the moment before.
177
As we just saw, pro-choice sources admit
there is no one moment when a fetus turns
into a baby. However, there
is
one point
where it all starts — conception.
Reason #13
―There is no moment when a
fetus suddenly turns into a baby‖
Reason #14
So what if the baby
isn‘t viable yet?
An introduction
eing viable means a fetus can
potentially live outside the womb,
with technology if needed.
178
Before we start debating viability, I
want to share a picture of a non-viable
fetus.
It‘s October 31, 2006 and an 18-year-old
is having an abortion performed at A Gyn
Diagnostics Center located in Florida. The
abortion goes smoothly until staff members
begin screaming that the baby is still alive.
According to an insider who tipped off
police, the owner of the clinic promptly cut
the umbilical cord and dumped the 22 week
old baby into a biohazard bag, along with
some used surgical gauze. After the tip-off,
police searched the building but did not
initially find the bag, due to it being stashed
on the roof of the facility. The Medical
Examiner found that the fetus died of
prematurity, but Operation Rescue notes
that, even if there is zero chance of
survival, that child deserves all the help and
respect it can get.
The abortion clinic‘s comment was that
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a normal abortion had been performed and
that there had been no complications.
179
In
that sense they‘re right. Abortion always
kills children — we just don‘t always think
of non-viable fetuses as babies. The only
failure on the part of the clinic was to not
thoroughly kill the fetus
before
it was
outside of the mother‘s body.
I think the real reason viability is so
popular as a moral cut-off point for
abortion is that we like to see things before
we believe them, and this marks the time
when a fetus can be born. Once we can see
him, we have no doubt as to who and what
he is.
What in the world is so
significant about lung
development?
A fetus has no rights, as it does not need
freedom to take any actions, but survives on
the sustenance of its host.
180
—FAQ, Abortion is prolife.com
any people, perhaps yourself,
believe that until a fetus is viable
he can be aborted because he has
no rights. Yet what we are judging is the
development of the fetus‘ lungs!
181
We
aren‘t judging whether or not this is a
human being, a child of God; we aren‘t
judging whether or not she is alive or
moving — hey, we‘re not even judging
brain development! It used to be
quickening, now it‘s viability. But why pick
the organ for respiration as the new moral
guide stick for abortion? How more or less
human — or a child of God — is a fetus
before and after her lungs are fully
matured?
Now, if you‘re thinking, this is nothing
to do with the fetus; it‘s all about a
woman's body, turn to
Reason #25
where we take up that topic right away.
Being viable = meaningful
life?
f you believe viability is the point
where abortion becomes immoral, you
are not alone. The Supreme Court also
believes this, but they don‘t make much
sense.
In
decriminalizing
abortion
the
Supreme Court said, and I paraphrase:
We can‘t resolve the ‗difficult‘ question
of when life begins.
Since we don‘t know when life begins,
the 14
th
Amendment which would
protect a fetus must not apply because it
mentions ‗persons‘.
Meaningful life (whatever that is) is
possible at viability.
Therefore at viability the State may
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have an interest in protecting the fetus
(i.e., limiting abortion).
Having decided that unborn children
were not protected and that we didn‘t
know when ‗life begins,‘ the Supreme Court
said viability would be a time when the
Court
could
interfere
with
the
‗fundamental right‘ of abortion and set
limits. Why did they choose that time? The
answer is clear as mud — and I quote the
Honorable Justice, ―This is so because the
fetus then presumably has the capability of
meaningful life outside the mother‘s
womb.‖
182
The Court failed utterly to make clear
what developed lungs have to do with
―meaningful life‖ or the morality of
abortion. They did not explain:
If ―meaningful life‖ meant meaningful to
the fetus, the mother or adopting
parents?
How
someone‘s
opinion
on
meaningfulness can determine the
worth of someone else‘s life?
How we can prove that a fetus‘ life is
not meaningful to him?
Who is the judge of ‗meaningfulness‘ or
why a potentially un-meaningful life
should not deserve protection?
Why a fetus today could not find as
much ‗meaning‘ in their life tomorrow
as the same Honorable Justices find in
their lives today?
Why viability is the age at which a fetus
becomes a rights-bearing human?
What exactly, is meaningful about
viability?
Why ‗meaningful life‘ should be any
more meaningful than simply ―life‖?
Is your argument any clearer than the
Supreme Court‘s?
Viability is based on a
doctor‘s opinion and changing
technology
Here‘s the proof:
―We are able to perform elective
abortions to the time in the pregnancy
when the fetus is viable. Viability is not
a set point in time. Viability is
determined
by
the
attending
physician… Please call so that we can
discuss admission criteria with you.‖
183
—Women‘s Health Care Services
―There is no uniform agreement as to
the point in pregnancy at which a fetus
ought to be considered viable or capable
of living outside the uterus.‖
184
—Benjamin Surgical Services International
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iability is legally decided by the
doctor. Consider the neutrality of
that. The abortionist, who will get
paid for his services, can determine
whether or not he will take on the job (i.e.,
If the baby is viable) — and no one else will
ever question his opinion…after all, he‘s
the doctor.
185
It used to be that a baby would not
survive at 30 weeks in 1950.
186
In 1973 the
Supreme Court decreed that 28 (or possible
24) weeks was the legal point. Now the
recommendation to hospitals is that babies
as young as 23 weeks can be resuscitated.
187
Just recently two babies have survived at 21
and 22 weeks. That‘s incredible — almost
halfway through pregnancy!
Here are their stories:
On October 24, 2006 at the Baptist
Children's Hospital in Miami, Florida a
little girl named Amillia Sonia Taylor was
born. What was remarkable was that she
was just 21 weeks 6 days old. That‘s just
half-way through a normal full term
pregnancy! She holds the record for being
the youngest known baby to survive. At 9.5
inches long, Amillia was also half the
length she should have been. It‘s hard to
imagine how much like a doll she must
have looked, compared to the babies born
at regular 37-42 weeks. After spending 4
months in the hospital, Amillia has now
gone home healthy and thriving, thanks to
her strong constitution and the good
hospital care she received.
188
A day later, at St. Mary's Hospital in
Manchester, Britain another baby was born
exactly a week older. Millie McDonagh was
born at 22 weeks and six days. At 11 inches
and fitting in the palm of her father‘s hand,
she was incredibly small. Millie has been
allowed to go home after 4 months in
hospital. Although she still needed oxygen
the when she went home, doctors expect
that she will have no lasting side effects
from her premature birth.
189
Yet at the same time as these 21 and 22
week babies are surviving, we are aborting
babies older than that – after all, the
Supreme Court said it could be 28 weeks.
Take these recent abortion clinic quotes, for
example:
The Washington Surgi-Clinic provides
legal, safe surgical and non-surgical
abortions from the very earliest pregnancies
up to 26 weeks…
190
—Washington Surgi-Clinic
You will find a team of professionals
who have specialized in middle and late
second trimester pregnancy terminations
(16 to 25 weeks) both elective and fetal
anomaly…
191
—Texas Abortion Information
In the last few years medical technology
has advanced to the point where babies
born at 24 weeks of gestation are being
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saved, while on the other hand, unwanted
babies are being terminated at 24 weeks.
Surely even ardent pro-choicers can see a
contradiction in that!
One of the flaws with viability is that it
is
not fixed.
It‘s changeable.
It‘s variable.
With the latest medical technology we are
supporting babies at earlier and earlier
stages of prematurity. The line is
continually being pushed back. Does ―right
and wrong‖ or ―meaningful life‖ get
restructured, along with our modern
technology?
What about if you were born in a poor
country? Your age of ‗survivability‘ and
therefore ‗abortability‘ is going to be
different if you have limited or no medical
services. But that does mean the rightness
of killing a fetus depends on the medical
services at their hospital!
Neither the fetus nor we are
truly independent
he pro-choice argument says that
being able to live independently of a
woman‘s body means gaining the
right to live, yet we ourselves aren‘t totally
independent.
The difference is, today we rely on
many people instead of just one person.
Indeed, as a fetus we‘ve already been there,
done that. Our needs today are different
from when we were unborn, but they are
still needs. For example, we rely on some
people
financially
(parents
maybe),
intellectually (work colleagues), socially
(friends perhaps), spiritually (possibly a
pastor) and so on. On a more physical level,
although many of us could make do, others
could not survive, for example, without the
workers at the electrical power stations, the
farmer who grows the food we put on the
table, the workforce who keeps clean water
flowing to our tap, or our poor Chinese
sisters who make virtually all the clothing
and shoes we wear.
Consider, also, that others beside the
fetus need us as well. Our grandparents, our
children, our friends, our colleagues, our
customers also need us to be there in
different ways. The older, younger and
sicker members of our community need
extra human assistance. We were once that
young baby and will one day become that
old person in need of help also.
Theoretically, even if we ourselves
were never dependent on others in any
way, shape or form, how does that make it
right to cancel out a fetus‘ right to life? Isn‘t
that what protecting the weak and
vulnerable is all about?
The strong have a duty to
defend the weak
f abortion is okay up until the time a
baby is viable, which as we‘ve seen, is a
changing point, what precedent does
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this set? In other words, if we say we can
abort until the baby can live independently
outside the mother, what does that tell you
about our duty to the helpless? It says we
don‘t have any duty or responsibility to
help our brother or sister in need. It says
that it‘s about our body and our choice and
me, me, me. It says that a life that is
dependent on someone elses is under their
thumb. If we follow this logic we must also
agree with infanticide, because newborns
are totally helpless without their mothers
to feed and change them, and see that they
are kept warm and keep them from danger.
There is no coherent reason as to why a
child who is dependent on you is less alive
or less worthy of life. Author Randy Alcorn
summarizes my thoughts here:
A helpless person deserves help precisely
because she is helpless. It is a sad
commentary on society when a child‘s
helplessness and dependence on another is
used as an argument against her right to
live.
192
Reason #14
―Becoming viable does nothing
to change the baby‘s identity‖
Reason #15
Abortion is not an
act of love
One of the questions the November Gang
clinics sometimes ask patients is, Can you
see your abortion as a ―loving act‖ toward
your children and yourself?
193
—Allegheny Reproductive Health Center
ome women say they abort out of love
for their child. Many want to be a
good parent, and they plan to get
married and have children one day, but
right now is just not a good time.
Is that you? You‘ve just started a new
job and you‘re dead broke. Or perhaps you
haven‘t got a job. Maybe the relationship
with the baby‘s father isn‘t going so hot —
or perhaps there was never a relationship at
all. Whatever the situation, there is a loving
solution.
I‘m sure many sincere people fall into
the trap of thinking that it would be the
most loving thing not to become a parent
right now. Like this one girl quoted in a
pro-choice newsletter:
My primary reason for aborting the
fetus was that one has to be selfless in order
to be a parent. Having a child at such a
young age would have robbed me of my
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freedom as a young adult. I knew I would
resent having to be responsible for another
person‘s life and also resent or even hate
the child. I did and do not want that kind
of responsibility.
194
This girl realizes that it takes a lot of
work to be a parent and doesn‘t want
children now. At the same time she fails to
recognize that being pregnant means you
are already carrying life within you. In
other words, an abortion doesn‘t make you
―unpregnant‖; it just makes you the mother
of a dead baby. If she would truly resent the
responsibility of raising a child, she could
spare his life for another family who would
truly cherish and care for him.
If she was just considering having a
child and had not conceived him or her,
her argument would make sense…maybe
it‘s not the best time. However, when you
become pregnant, your unborn child is
ALREADY
in the forming stage. He or she is
already existent. That means un-inviting
him, which equals killing him.
Abortion does not save a child from a
bad life — it kills him in order to prevent
him from having
any
life. Loving your child
enough to choose the ‗right‘ time later
means ending his
life now. How can that be
loving?
Still believe abortion only removes
‗a potential person‘? Turn to
Reason #10:
Your baby exists now, not in the future
.
Abortion a loving choice for
―fetal malformations‖?
A Choice for Women
abortion clinic
brazenly suggests that disabled children
should be aborted for their own good —
and for that of ―her family‖: ―Many
patients are referred to our office
because there is something wrong with
the fetus and terminating is in the best
interest for her and her family.‖
195
Yet as former Surgeon General Everett
Koop wrote, ―I have a sense of
satisfaction in my career, best indicated
perhaps by the fact that no family has
ever come to me and said: ―Why did you
work so hard to save the life of my
child?‖ And no grown child has ever
come back to ask me why, either.‖
196
The Hope Clinic for Women describes
the ―comforting features‖ they offer for
women who abort because of an
imperfection with their child:
―help
with contacting clergy‖ (so you can
arrange baptism or a funeral service for
your baby‘s unfortunate death);
―an
ultrasound picture‖ (so you can
remember
forever
the
life
you
shortened) and ―an imprint of the baby‘s
foot‖ (after they‘ve killed him). Dostları ilə paylaş: |