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As
pointed out in a previous writing,
advancements in medical science continue to demonstrate the utter
brutality of abortion. Today, the common belief among pro-abortion
researchers is that the unborn babies most likely feel pain while in the
womb certainly at age twenty weeks, and possibly even younger.
The most amazing aspect of this
revelation by the abortion community is not one of disdain for
the slaughter of the young lives, but rather one of "compassion" for the
pain being felt by the baby. What's the solution to their anxiety?
It is to anesthetize the poor child prior to the abortion. I ask,
have abortionists ever appeared more like executioners than now?
Centuries ago, murderers were gruesomely executed for their heinous
crimes, but our now-advanced societies choose to make the executions
painless. Now abortionists take this same tack; the only difference?
They're executing the innocent, not the guilty!
Fetal Study
Adds Fuel to Late-Term Abortion Debate
FOX News
By Kelley O. Beaucar
Friday, August 31, 2001
A study released this week in
the United Kingdom suggests that a fetus might feel pain as early as
20 weeks, sparking concerns over medical procedures on premature
infants and emboldening the opponents of late-term abortion.
"This study underscores the
gruesome nature of abortion," charges Kristi Hamrick of The Center
for Reclaiming America, which is joining with other pro-life groups
next week to launch a campaign to bring a ban on late-term abortions
back in front of Congress this session.
According to reports, the
head the government-appointed Medical Research Council at Edinburgh
University in the United Kingdom said a fetus was absolutely aware of
pain by 24 weeks and perhaps as early as 20 weeks --earlier than the
previously accepted 26 weeks.
The findings indicate a need
for more research on ways to treat neonatal pre-term infants, who may
experience pain from a number of medical procedures that could affect
them in long-term development. And the study raises questions over
whether and which pre-term babies ought to be given anesthetics in the
womb during birth.
But the study also provides
new fuel for the debate over abortion rights, in particular late-term
abortions.
Hamrick says she believes
life occurs at conception and must be protected thereafter, but claims
that the Edinburgh study can only help her cause.
"It does not change the fact
that (anywhere) along the pendulum swing (from conception to birth)
this is still a human being," she said. "But this information is
helpful to bringing our country to a consensus on where we should draw
some lines."
Abortion during any trimester
is legal in the United States under federal law. Several states have
attempted to ban so-called partial birth abortions -a procedure where
the baby is partially delivered down the birth canal before the
abortion is performed. Those bans have been successfully challenged in
the Supreme Court.
A federal ban on partial
birth abortions has passed the House and Senate twice, but was short
the votes to override a presidential veto. President Clinton vetoed
the measure both times.
Confident that President
Bush, who said he would sign the ban on late-term abortions during the
2000 campaign, would sign the bill if it gets to his desk, pro-life
activists are gearing up for their latest fight.
Abortion rights groups,
including the National Organization for Women, the National Abortion
and Reproductive Rights Action League and Planned Parenthood, say that
any move to advance a ban on late-term abortions is one step closer to
reversing the landmark Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision which
restricted individual states' abilities to regulate or ban abortions.
Dr. Susan Dudley, deputy
director of the National Abortion Federation, a network for physicians
who perform abortions, said fetal pain is a complex issue that is far
from fully understood.
But whether or not the fetus
can feel pain -- at 26 weeks, 20 weeks or earlier -- the vast majority
of abortions today are conducted in the first trimester and groups
like NAF will continue to support that right, she said.
"The obvious and most
important thing to say is most abortions take place before 20 weeks,"
Dudley said. Even if the Edinburgh study is accurate, she said, "it
would have very little impact on people who are contemplating an
abortion."
According to the latest
numbers from the National Center for Health Statistics, 1.3 million
abortions took place in the U.S. during 1997.
So, the good Dr. Dudley points
out that this latest discovery of pain felt by the 20-week-old unborn
is of "little impact." Tell that to the souls of the vast quantities
of children murdered after that supposedly-magical age. According to
the
abortion advocates themselves, at least 13,000 children feel the
pain of being aborted every year in the U.S. alone. 13,000
children! Compare these death statistics to the attention
dedicated to any number of precautions that our society devotes to
everyday programs in the U.S. to lower the following incidents of
death:
7,000 drowning
deaths per year (all ages)
500 bicycle
deaths are prevented each year by helmets usage
2,000
children (12 years old and younger) are killed yearly in motor vehicle
crashes
7,000
children and young adults are victims of homicide each year
3,000 infants deaths yearly are categorized as Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome
5,000 teens and young adults commit suicide annually
1,300 annual
deaths (all ages) from fire-arm related accidents
20 children
die annually from playground-related injuries
Let us not forget why all of
these unborn children are aborted: According to the
abortionists themselves, nearly all of these children are
murdered for the mere convenience of the mother.
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