If a doctor will take money for killing the innocent in the womb,
he will kill you with a needle when paid by your children.
Dr. R.A. Gallop.[1]
Anti-Life Philosophy.
If the cripples are going to die, let them do so, to decrease the
surplus population.
Scrooge discussing Tiny Tim's frail health,
quoted in "A Christmas Carol."
Introduction.
The ease with which destruction of life is advocated for those
considered either socially useless or socially disturbing instead of
educational or ameliorative measures may be the first danger sign of
loss of creative liberty in thinking, which is the hallmark of a
democratic society.
Leo Alexander, M.D.[2]
Is there really any doubt any more? Is there the faintest shadow of
uncertainty that abortion is now leading to euthanasia as the day leads
to the night?
If there is, there certainly shouldn't be!
As Derek Humphry, our leading euthanasiast, says and as our own
courts are now holding we are killing born people on exactly
the same premises that we have been killing unborn people for
so long. B.D. Cohen, medical writer for Newsday Magazine, says
that "The decision to withhold or withdraw treatment from extremely
sick, premature, and/or deformed newborns is probably being made at
least once every day by anguished parents and doctors in one of the
nation's more than 500 intensive care nurseries."[3]
There are three critical characteristics that tie abortion and
euthanasia together so intimately that they really can never be
separated.
These features are;
(1) The identical utilitarian worldview of the perpetrators;
(2) The identical tactics used by both the pro-abortion and
pro-euthanasia movements (as described in Chapter 109), and;
(3) The intimate relationship of the "bridge" issue
infanticide to both abortion and euthanasia.
This chapter discusses these characteristics in detail and proves,
beyond a shadow of a doubt, that abortion has already inevitably
led to widespread euthanasia in the form of infanticide in the United
States.
Abortion As Legal
Foundation.
There must be a right to dispose of an infant survivor of abortion.
Abortionist Warren Hern.[4]
Roe v. Wade.
The (in)famous Roe v. Wade decision is now being used by our
court system to justify not only the killing of unborn people
under the mythical 'right to privacy,' but born people as well!
Take for example United States District Judge Thomas Jackson, who
ordered a respirator removed from 71 year old Martha A. Tune at Walter
Reed Army Hospital on February 28, 1985. Judge Jackson wrote that
"In the Roe case, the court proceeded upon the premise that a
competent adult has a paramount right to control the disposition to be
made of his or her own body. This [Roe v. Wade] abortion decision was
instructive for purposes of this case."[5]
Mrs. Tune died five hours after her respirator was removed.
The judge in a recent abortion clinic trespass case baldly
acknowledged that preborns are human beings, but went on to say that
their murder is sanctioned and protected by the state.
Judge Bruce Bach of Fairfax, Virginia stated in his opinion on The
State of Virginia v. Christyanne Collins and Harry F. Hand that
I will find as a matter of fact that unborn human lives were being
terminated in the clinic that morning because that's what the evidence
in this particular case is. And I am not a medical doctor. All of the
evidence is that first trimester fetuses are human beings ... I reject
the defense of necessity because we have in our society many instances
of, I'll call it, State-sanctioned killing of human beings. And while
the evidence is that human lives are being terminated, the Virginia
statutes clearly allow the termination of human lives in the first
trimester ... people at that clinic have a right under our law as it
is today to do what they were doing and to do it without interference
from people, well-meaning or otherwise ... So I do find them [the
defendants] guilty and those are my reasons.[6]
Getting Down to the Basics.
Pro-abortionists have, for the most part, jettisoned their premise
that the unborn are not human beings. Many people who have blockaded
abortion clinics watch abortion clinic staff simply shrug on the witness
stand and say words to the effect of "Yeah, it's a baby. But so
what? Abortion is perfectly legal!"
This hideous attitude is terrifyingly common among more and more
people as our society becomes progressively desensitized to killing. A
typical recent interview with an abortion clinic employee brought this
trend into clear focus;
Interviewer: "Oh, so as long as you make money, it
doesn't matter?"
Clinic Employee: "As long as it's food in my stomach,
no, it doesn't matter. It is legal ... It is legal ... It is
legal!"
Interviewer: "So if they legalized killing
four-year-old children, you would have no problem?"
Clinic Employee: "No, I would not have a problem ... My
conscience is very clear ..."[7]
A graphically sickening statement by Dr. Magda Denes illustrates this
growing genocidal mindset among pro-abortionists;
I do think abortion is murder of a very special and necessary sort.
What else would one call the deliberate stilling of a life? And no
physician involved with the procedure ever kids himself about that ...
legalistic distinctions among "homicide," "justified
homicide," "self-defense," and "murder"
appear to me a semantic game. What difference does it make what we
call it? Those who do it and those who witness its doing know that
abortion is the stilling of a life.[8]
Celebrities, always heavily Neoliberal in their outlook, are also
jumping onto the 'bandwagon of death' as they simply jettison all
pretense about the nature of abortion. One of these is Norman Mailer,
who is certainly honest in his attitude towards the preborn; "Let
me say something that's shocking. I am perfectly willing to grant that
life starts at conception. If a woman doesn't want to have a child, then
I think it's her right to say no. But let's not pretend that it isn't a
form of killing."[9]
This attitude is desperately dangerous, and voices from the past
fairly shout to us with warning! The anti-life people have taken the
final, critical step: they have stopped trying to kid themselves about
the humanity of those they are killing. They are admitting that they are
killing human beings, and they couldn't care less!
There is only one step remaining GENOCIDE!
The same blindness and duplicity inherent in the pro-abortion
movement is part of the warp and woof of the pro-euthanasia movement as
well. Those who advocate death by starvation for newborn babies quail at
the thought of capital punishment. At the very least, the probability of
executing an innocent man or woman is much more remote than the
probability of executing a perfectly healthy newborn baby.
In just one such execution of an innocent baby, reporter Mike Taibbi,
in part four of his series Death in the Nursery, describes a case
"... where a premature infant was allowed to die at the urging of a
neurosurgeon who mistakenly diagnosed anencephaly (the absence of a
brain). An autopsy showed there was a brain ... which had the
characteristics of prematurity, but which was perfectly formed."[3]
The same Neoliberals who shrilly condemn Jehovah's Witnesses who
refuse medical treatment for their children are curiously silent when a
perfectly healthy newborn baby like the one described above dies a
hideous and lingering death from starvation and thirst.
But That Isn't All ...
The other similarities between the pro-abortion and pro-euthanasia
strategies are not only striking they are urgent and compelling.
Chapter 109, "The History of Euthanasia," reveals the
similarities in strategy and tactics used by the pro-abortion and
pro-euthanasia movements, and shows that these anti-life movements have
proceeded along identical tracks over their entire development. The only
difference is that the pro-euthanasia movement trails the pro-abortion
movement by about two decades.
One of the most obvious tactics shared by the pro-abortionists and
the euthanasiasts is the identical slogans. They worked very well for
abortion, so why not dust 'em off and use them to obtain a
"right" to kill born human beings?
The pro-aborts said that they have a right to control their own
bodies. So do the pro-euthanasia people.
The pro-aborts claimed that they had a paramount 'right to privacy.'
So do the euthanasia pushers.
And the pro-aborts said that there were so many illegal abortions
happening that we might as well make the procedure legal. So are the
euthanasiasts, including Dr. Frank M. Guttman of Canada, who, at a
meeting of the Canadian Pediatric Society in June of 1978,
"suggested that legal mercy-killing and infanticide is necessary
because it is happening anyway and legalizing it would encourage more
respect for the law."[10]
Perhaps these tactical similarities are not too surprising when we
realize that virtually all pro-euthanasia leaders have been active in
the pro-abortion movement for years, and have found that the same
strategies that worked so brilliantly in their push for abortion are now
working just as well as they lobby vigorously for euthanasia. Nick
Thimmesch noticed that the same people who pushed so hard for abortion
are now lobbying for the destruction of adult human life when he wrote
in Newsweek Magazine that "It bothers me that eugenicists in
Germany organized the mass destruction of mental patients, and in the
United States pro-abortionists now also serve in pro-euthanasia
organizations. Sorry, but I see a pattern."[11]
Infanticide As the Bridge
Between Abortion and Euthanasia.
I am not afraid that genetic screening will lead to genocide, nor
that abortion will lead to infanticide, as many have warned. If we
need checks on our behavior, the law will provide them.
Margery W. Shaw, M.D.[12]
Introduction.
We had traveled a long way down the slippery slope by 1980. However,
at that time there still existed a vast chasm between abortion and
euthanasia that needed to be bridged by the euthanasiasts.
By 1990, the anti-life forces had succeeded admirably in spanning the
gap with the device of infanticide.
Infanticide is, of course, literally a form of euthanasia. Its great
importance lies in the fact that it is the "bridge" that spans
the gap between the killing of the unborn and the killing of adults.
Infanticide is now being practiced in this country on a larger and
larger scale. Everyone remembers "Baby Doe" and "Baby
Jane Doe." These handicapped babies, with the sanction of society,
were allowed to die lingering and agonizing deaths of starvation and
thirst.
Infanticide = Euthanasia.
To begin with, it must be made perfectly clear that infanticide IS
a form of euthanasia. Infanticide is very important, because it is the
"bridge" between abortion and adult euthanasia. Infanticide's
proponents argue, rightly so, that there is no real difference between a
third-trimester abortion and the killing of an infant soon after birth.
In fact, Joseph Fletcher, former President Emeritus of the Society for
the Right to Die (formerly the Euthanasia Society of America), and often
called "The Father of Situation Ethics," has referred to
infanticide as "post-natal abortion."[13]
Infanticide is clearly entrenched as standard and ethical practice in
the medical profession. To demonstrate this concept, three of the
critical "bridge cases" between late-term abortion and
outright infanticide are described in the following paragraphs: The
Edelin, Waddill, and Laufe incidents.
The Edelin Case.
Just months after the Roe v. Wade case was handed down by the
United States Supreme Court, an abortionist provided the country with a
perfect illustration of the connection between abortion and outright
infanticide.
On October 3, 1973, Kenneth Edelin of Boston performed an abortion on
a 17-year old girl who was 24 weeks pregnant. His saline abortion
attempt had failed, so he performed a hysterotomy (Cesarian) abortion
the next day.
He detached the placenta (cutting off blood oxygenation to the baby)
and held the child inside the mother's uterus for three minutes as he
watched the clock. Satisfied that the baby was finally dead, he removed
it and disposed of it. A pathologist testified that the baby had been
able to take at least one breath before Edelin suffocated it.[14]
Edelin was charged and convicted of manslaughter by a jury, but the
verdict was thrown out by an appeals court on a minor technicality. It
is significant that every major national pro-abortion group rallied to
Edelin's defense, and went so far as to pay for most of his court costs.
Additionally, the pro-abortionists bombarded the Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court with more than a dozen briefs, claiming that if Edelin
was convicted, it would "unduly chill" late-term abortion
practice.[15]
Longtime Zero Population Growth activist Anne Gaylor, in her
incredibly-named book Abortion is a Blessing, displayed her
transparent anti-Catholic bigotry as she simpered "That gentle Dr.
Edelin ever should have found himself a defendant against a charge of
manslaughter beggars belief ... That card-carrying, dues-paying
Catholics ever should have been allowed to serve on a jury deciding a
charge of abortion-related manslaughter is a travesty of
justice."[16]
It did not seem to occur to Gaylor that her statement was equivalent
to saying that no Jew should ever sit on a jury judging an American Nazi
accused of committing hate crimes.
It is also significant that, once again, the court system overrode
the verdict of a jury the recorded will of the people in favor of
expanding abortion "rights" to include infanticide.
The Waddill Infanticide.
Benjamin Waddill, an abortionist and member of the Association of
Planned Parenthood Physicians, performed a saline abortion on 19-year
old Mary Weaver on March 2, 1977 at California's Westminster Community
Hospital in.
Mary Weaver knew that she was at least 28 weeks pregnant, well into
the third trimester. Her baby was healthy, she was not a victim of rape
or incest or health problems, but she still wanted an abortion so she
would not embarrass her father, who was principal of the high school
that she had attended. This is a classic example of third-trimester
abortion for pure convenience, a phenomenon that pro-abortionists claim
simply does not exist.
After doing the saline infusion, Waddill left the scene. Later, he
phoned the hospital and talked to a nurse who informed him that a viable
baby had resulted from his abortion. Waddill instructed her "Don't
do a Goddamn thing for that baby." He then returned to the
hospital's newborn nursery, where the baby had been relocated, and
ordered the area cleared of all medical personnel. He then choked Baby
Girl Weaver four separate times, by pushing down on her windpipe with
his thumb. Dr. Ronald Cornelson, the attending pediatrician, witnessed
the entire sequence of events and subsequently brought charges against
Waddill. During the trial, the prosecutor presented a taped phone
conversation in which Waddill told Cornelson to "not get squirrely
and stick to the story as we discussed." He maintained that he had
merely put his hand on her throat to check her pulse.[17]
However, the prosecutor also showed that Waddill had explained to
several people that he choked the baby girl to death because he feared
that lawsuits would be filed against him if the baby survived.
The mother of the baby sued Waddill, claiming that she would never
have gone through with the abortion if he had informed her that she
might give birth to a live baby.
At Waddill's trial, Judge James K. Turner instructed the jury to
ignore the classical definition of death (cessation of all vital signs)
and instead adopt a new one the irreversible cessation of brain
function. The jury deadlocked after a week of deliberation, with seven
of the twelve jurors voting for acquittal.[17]
Waddill concluded his post-trial statements by saying "I'm
especially angry at the Catholic Church over this."
Despite the frustrating conduct and results of the trial, at least
some good came out of the Waddill infanticide case. Westminster
Community Hospital immediately restricted all abortions to 12 weeks, and
the Akron, Ohio city council voted strict limits on abortion, with much
of the pro-life testimony based on the Waddill case. These limits were
naturally challenged by the American Civil Liberties Union and
eventually led to a Supreme Court battle.
Waddill eventually stood trial a second time, and once again the jury
arrived at a deadlock. He stated during this second trial that "I
do not think that is human life if one must live a damaged vegetative
existence. It would have been horribly cruel to the abortus as well as
to the family if the abortus had been put on a respirator it would have
been a mockery of medicine ... Life on a respirator is not
life."[17]
We must ask this question: How much "dignity" did Baby Girl
Weaver have? Waddill herself decreased her "quality of life"
by scalding her tender skin off, and then pronounced her unworthy to
live and choked the little baby to death.
It is interesting to note that Waddill issued a "no-code"
for his own father in North Carolina in 1971. He is also an ardent
supporter of "death with dignity."
Laufe: Abortion = Dead Baby.
Dr. Leonard Laufe of West Penn Hospital in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
specializes in late-term abortions. In 1985, a woman falsely claimed
that she had been raped and Laufe aborted her 32-week baby. The
prostaglandin abortion resulted in the baby being born alive. The little
baby began to gasp and kick, and Nurse Monica Bright testified that
Laufe ordered that no help be given to the child. In fact, one of the
staff doctors ordered nurses to directly murder the child with a fatal
injection of morphine. At least three nurses refused to kill the child.
The entire episode, including closeups of the baby gasping and kicking,
was filmed for "educational purposes."
The original birth records indicated that the little girl weighed
more than three pounds and was 18 inches long. In order to cover up his
killing, Dr. Laufe altered hospital records to read a weight of two and
a half pounds and a length of only 11 inches.
Medical student John Kenny testified that Dr. Laufe's attorney
promised him that, if he testified in court, he would never be able to
get a medical license or practice in any hospital in Pennsylvania.
Dr. Laufe claimed that the baby was dead at birth. Despite the film
of the entire episode, he was acquitted of all charges.[18]
This episode decisively proved that the purpose of abortion is not
just to be rid of a child; the purpose is to kill the child.
The Mechanism: Quality of
Life Criteria.
If we really believe in love, and find that a baby will be born
having no arms, we would say, "Baby, we are going to love you. We
will make arms for you. We have many new skills now for doing this.
And, Baby, if these arms don't work, we will be your arms. We will
take care of you. You can be sure of that. You are one of us, a member
of our human family, and we will always love you.
Dr. Victor G. Rosenblum.[19]
What's A Human Life Worth?
Before any act of euthanasia, infanticide, or suicide may be
committed, the killer (and sometimes the victim) must make some kind of
assessment of the value of the life of the person who is being
considered for death.
To put it simply, the worth of the person's life is considered to be
the sum of his worth to himself and his worth to society. This is the
total benefit that the person can produce. On the other side of the
equation, the value of the services required to keep him alive are the costs
of the person's life.
Eugenicists believe that, if the costs of maintaining a life exceed
the benefits that the particular life can provide to society, the person
should die.
This utilitarian concept can only work in a God-free society, because
Christians know that every human life is infinitely precious in the eyes
of God. The only way a society can arrive at the point where it is
coldly applying benefit-cost analyses to individuals or even groups
of individuals is if God is first effectively excluded from the
equation.
The Feds Evaluate Life.
After 51 construction workers died in a 1978 power plant accident at
Willow Island, West Virginia, the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) proposed new safety rules that would cost industry
a total of $27.3 million per year. OSHA estimated that these new
guidelines would save 23 lives per year.
These regulations were considered economically feasible, because OSHA
valued a human life at $3.5 million, and the resulting cost-benefit
ratio was of the regulations was therefore (23 X 3.5)/27.3 = 2.95 (i.e.,
every one dollar invested would be projected to return $2.95 in
'lifesaving' benefits).
President Reagan's Executive Order 12291, of February 17, 1981,
mandated that each Federal government program formulate a cost-benefit
ratio before writing new regulations. Although the Executive Order was
not directly intended to include an assessment of the value of human
life, Federal agencies were nonetheless forced to produce the best
number they could in order to perform analyses involving the potential
loss or gain of human life.
It is interesting to see what average values various Federal agencies
placed on human life for research purposes, as shown below. It is only
fair to point out that each of these analyses was performed with the
utmost reluctance by government statisticians, not only for ethical
reasons but because of the extreme difficulties associated with such an
intangible calculation.
THE VALUE OF A HUMAN LIFE ACCORDING TO VARIOUS FEDERAL AGENCIES
Department of
Agriculture:
$1.10 million.
Department of
Transportation:
$1.25 million.
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB): $1.50 million.
Consumer Product Safety
Commission:
$1.75 million.
Occupational Safety and
Health
Administration:
$3.50 million.
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission
(NRC):
$5.00 million.
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA): $4.80
million.
Reference. Christopher Scanlan,
Knight-Ridder News Service. "Just What's Human Life Worth? Is That
Dollars or Sense?" The Oregonian, July 17, 1990, page A2.
The 'Doctors' Speak Again.
It seems that some groups of persons consider themselves exempt from
the rules that bind the rest of us mere mortals. In particular, certain
physicians assume that they are so intelligent and powerful that they
can ignore the lessons of history with impunity.
American doctors are following precisely the same road that the Nazi
physicians did, as described in Chapter 53 of Volume II, "The
Holocaust Analogy to Abortion." The first step the Nazi doctors
took was to assign a fixed monetary value to handicapped human life. And
now American doctors are doing exactly the same thing.
Two researchers recently estimated that about $2.6 billion is spent
annually in this country on neonatal intensive care. The tiniest
preemies average hospital stay of 137 days and a cost of $158,800 per
infant. According to the researchers,
It would be more cost-effective to address the root causes of
prematurity lack of prenatal care, poor nutrition in pregnant women,
homelessness, and drug or alcohol addiction than treating premature
babies in neonatal intensive care (NICU) units. Once physicians and
parents, together, have collaboratively agreed to a strategy for
treatment or non-treatment, this ought not to be subject to arbitrary
veto by interested third parties, whether pro-life lobbyists or
federal bureaucrats.[20]
Note that a little arithmetic shows that the authors are casually
condemning 16,400 newborn babies to death every year.
And Then They Act.
Hopefully, the authors of the above quote did not put themselves to
too much worry; their dream is coming true day by day in the Neonatal
ICUs in this great country of ours.
Infanticide is certainly nothing new. In 1963, Johns Hopkins
University Medical School doctors delivered a baby suffering from Down
Syndrome and a minor intestinal blockage, which would have been easily
correctable by surgery. With the full approval of the parents, the
'physicians' opted for "non-treatment" and let the helpless
little baby starve to death over a period of two weeks.[21]
The Nazi euthanasia program began with infanticide as well. Dr.
Hermann Pfannmuller adopted the "simple and natural" method of
cutting back rations a little more (to less than 100 calories per day)
until small handicapped children simply starved to death.[22]
Author Fredric Wertham describes Dr. Pfannmuller's methodology;
In the children's ward were some 25 half-starved children ranging
in age from one to five years. The director of the institution, Dr.
Pfannmuller, explained the routine. "We don't do it with poisons
or injections, our method is much simpler and more natural." With
these words, the fat and smiling doctor lifted an emaciated,
whimpering little child from his little bed, holding him like a dead
rabbit. He went on to explain that food is not withdrawn all at once,
but the rations are gradually decreased. "With this child,"
he added, "it will take another two or three days."[23]
Why Do Doctors Need "Quality" Criteria?
If we are going to efficiently exterminate a large class of people,
we must have an impeccably scientific justification for doing so. This
process includes assessing the worthiness of individual people to live.
The technique is slightly different when applied to
"candidates" for abortion and "candidates" for
euthanasia: For abortion, no particular criteria for "quality of
life" is necessary, other than some amorphous and ill-defined
feeling of the "mother."
Euthanasia-related "quality of life" calculations are also
entirely different from assigning a fixed value to human life as done by
Federal agencies, because their reason for assigning a value to life is
usually associated with trying to save or protect life.
"Quality of life" criteria are invariably involved in some
attempt to exterminate life.
For euthanasia, a mathematical formula or other pseudo-scientific
means must be applied in order to give the public the idea that some
serious thinking is going on behind the outright murder of human beings.
This process makes direct euthanasia palatable to the more unthinking
and pliable segments of the public, who know that killing people
is wrong. The formulas, however, give them an excuse for inaction and
helps soothe their consciences.
The most popular means of finding out if life is worth living is to
apply a mathematical procedure to the "candidate," such as
with the popular "quality of life" formula concocted by Dr.
Anthony Shaw, a pediatric surgeon;[24]
DR. ANTHONY SHAW'S QUALITY OF LIFE FORMULA
QL = NE X (H + S)
where;
QL = Quality of life
NE = Natural endowment of the candidate for life
H = Required contributions by home and family
S = Required contributions by society at large.
Note that the formula's parameters are conveniently rubbery and
expandable; they can be adjusted at any time to fit any situation.
In its truest form, this formula is nothing more or less than an
attempt to give a civilized and scientific veneer to the execution or
killing of anyone at all.
This particular formula has already been applied in real-life
(and real-death) situations, one of which is described below.
Other, more subjective-appearing criteria for 'quality of life' have
been proposed by various 'bioethicists.'
Deadly Math At Work.
Over a period of time, a team of four physicians and a social worker
at the Oklahoma Children's Memorial Hospital evaluated 69 babies born
with myelomeningocele (spina bifida) with the above formula. Of these,
36 were considered worthy of life and were given aggressive treatment,
and 33 were pronounced unworthy of further effort and were deemed unfit
to live.[25]
The parents of the unfortunate 33 were consulted regarding this
"non-treatment," and 24 concurred. All 24 little babies died
after spending an average of 37 days on this hostile earth.
Surely they are in better, more loving arms now than those of the
"parents" who willingly signed their death warrants. They were
warehoused at a children's "shelter," where they were refused
antibiotics and even sedation. This so-called "shelter" has
since been shut down by the Justice Department for medicaid fraud and
racketeering.
The Justice Department only acted after the American Civil Liberties
Union, the Association for Persons with Severe Handicaps, the American
Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities, and the National Legal Center
for the Medically Dependent and Disabled threatened legal action.
It is painfully significant that six of eight babies initially
condemned to die those babies who were fortunate enough to have parents
who cared lived! (one baby moved out of state and could not be
traced). If the same ratio applied to the other babies who were
condemned to death, at least 18 of the 24 would have lived.[26]
Other Examples. Sadly, this 'hospital' is not the only
"institution of healing" that now practices outright
infanticide. McGee Women's Hospital in Pittsburgh is just one of the
hospitals that has been allowing handicapped newborn babies to die for
at least fifteen years. National Right to Life Counsel James Bopp
estimates that about 5,000 handicapped newborns are "treated"
to death every year in the United States.
Many hospitals, as common practice, allow anencephalic and other
severely handicapped newborns to die without their parent's knowledge
or consent (i.e., enforced mandatory euthanasia). One such pitiful
case is described on pages 456 and 457 of The Farm's book Spiritual
Midwifery.
There is a concerted push in this country for nationalized medicine,
whose primary goal is not patient care, but cost containment. Britain's
National Health Service, for instance, routinely starves to death
all babies with spina bifida. If the parents of such a child
object and check him out of the hospital, they are cut off from all
medical care.
In other words, the State (with a capital "S") dictates the
parameters of medical care, who will be saved and who will not be.[27]
This is the root of the pro-life objection to nationalized medicine.
Such programs have as their highest goal not healing but the containment
of costs, and the only way that this objective can be met is for the
operators to create and then apply 'quality of life' formulas.
Joseph Fletcher's Criteria for Humanity.
The most extreme example of the "quality of life" mentality
has been promulgated by 'bioethicist' Joseph Fletcher. Fletcher has
drawn up a comprehensive list of 'positive' and 'negative' human
qualities that define exactly what a person is and is not, as
shown in Figure 110-1.
FIGURE 110-1
JOSEPH FLETCHER'S CRITERIA FOR HUMANITY
POSITIVE HUMAN CRITERIA
(1) Minimal intelligence: Anyone with an IQ under 40 is
questionably human. Anyone with an IQ less than 20 is definitely
non-human.
(2) Self-awareness: Newborn babies are not self-aware and therefore
not human. This quality develops at about one year of age.
(3) Self-control: If a person lacks self-control, he is on a low
level of life comparable to a paramecium.
(4) A sense of time: Anyone without a good sense of the passage of
time is not human.
(5) A sense of the future. How 'truly human' is any man who cannot
realize there is a time yet to come?
(6) A sense of the past: A focus on 'nowness' truncates the nature
of man.
(7) The capability to relate to others, particularly in
relationships of the sexual-romantic and friendship kind.
(8) Concern for others: Lack of this ambience indicates
psychopathology.
(9) Communication: Completely isolated individuals are sub-persons.
(10) Control of existence: Ignorance and total helplessness are the
antithesis of humanness.
(11) Curiosity: Without a certain amount of curiosity, individuals
are not persons deserving legal rights and protections.
(12) Change and changeability: If an individual is opposed to
change, he denies the creativity of personal beings.
(13) Balance of rationality and feeling: To be 'truly human,' one
cannot be either Apollonian [extremely rational and logical in
character] or Dionysian [of frenzied and emotional character].
(14) Idiosyncrasy: To be a person is to have an identity, to be
recognizable and callable by name.
(15) Neo-cortical function: Before cerebration [thinking] is in
play, the person is non-existent. Such individuals are objects, not
subjects.
NEGATIVE HUMAN CRITERIA
Man is not non-artificial or anti-artificial.
Man is not essentially parental.
Man is not essentially sexual.
Man is not a bundle of rights. All rights are imperfect and may be
set aside
if human need requires it.
Man is not a worshipper.
Reference: Joseph Fletcher. "Indicators
of Humanhood: A Tentative Profile of Man." Hastings Center
Report. Volume 2, Number 5, November, 1972.
If implemented, Fletcher's criteria would cause more than 100 large
groups of persons to automatically lose their humanity. These groups
would include the following, and would comprise approximately one-fifth
of the human population;
all infants under one year of age;
twins and triplets;
all celibate persons;
the profoundly retarded;
habitual drunkards and drug addicts;
prisoners;
all comatose persons;
pro-life activists;
emotional persons; and
all religious persons.
Fletcher would casually kill the 260,000 United States citizens with
IQs of less than 25, and the 630,000 with IQs of from 25 to 49.[28]
It seems that every advocate of euthanasia for the handicapped is
able-bodied and healthy. Why don't we take a page from the
pro-abortionists who say that men have no right to oppose abortion
because they can't get pregnant? We could say to these pro-eugenics and
pro-euthanasia people "You have no right to advocate euthanasia for
the handicapped unless you yourself are handicapped."
If everyone on Fletcher's list were eliminated, we would certainly
have a more perfect (and more soulless) world.
The Next Step.
Abortion and euthanasia are separate issues (though determining the
end of the human person is as difficult a question as determining the
start); we set speed limits at 60 MPH and do not necessarily move them
to 70 MPH (one step does not necessarily lead to another).
National Abortion Rights Action League.[29]
Going On Record.
Now that we have gone on record as approving the indirect euthanasia
of newborns by starvation and thirst, the glaringly obvious next step is
to condemn such a practice as "inhumane" but, instead of
stopping the deaths, the euthanasiasts will vocally call for direct
euthanasia to end the suffering that they themselves have inflicted.
This is precisely the same tactic used by pro-abortionists who set up
illegal abortion networks like "Jane," and then called for
abortion legalization because their own people were botching too
many abortions.
It all began in the early 1970s, when a mongoloid child with a small
section of atrophied duodenum (which could easily have been corrected by
a 20-minute surgery) was born at Johns Hopkins Hospital. The decision
was made not to "treat" this child (including the withholding
of food and water), and the baby lingered agonizingly for fifteen long
days before dying.
Speaking of this case, 'ethicist' Joseph Fletcher (the same person
who outlined the 'criteria for humanity' shown in Figure 110-1)
vigorously pushed for direct euthanasia and said that
Some form of direct termination would have been far more merciful
as far as the infant, nurses, parents, and some of the physicians were
concerned. In that case, indirect was morally worse than direct if, as
I and most of us would contend, the good and the right are determined
by human well-being. Indirect euthanasia did no good at all in that
case, but lots of evil.[30]
And, speaking of an adult euthanasia case, none other than Jack
"The Dripper" Kevorkian weighed in with this statement;
"Allowing someone to starve to death and to die of thirst, the way
we do now, is barbaric. Our Supreme Court has validated barbarism. The
Nazis did that in concentration camps ... It took her [Nancy Cruzan] a
week to die. Try it! You think that just because you're in a coma you
don't suffer?"[31]
With more and more pitiful little "unwanted" babies dying
agonizing deaths, the pro-euthanasia ghouls have seized on the public's
sympathy and are now pushing harder and harder for direct killing. Dr.
Christiaan Barnard, renowned for his transplant of a baboon heart into a
child, stated in the March 1986 issue of Omni Magazine that
"Legalizing euthanasia, with controls, would do more to improve the
overall quality of American medical care than any other single
act."[32]
This is the same Christiaan Barnard who stated in his autobiography One
Life that one of his greatest dreams was to "... take a baboon
and cool him down, wash out his blood with water, then fill him up with
human blood." Another dream of his was to graft a second head onto
a dog.[33]
He rather sounds like a small child who is delighted with a new set
of complex biological Tinker Toys.
'Bioethicist' Diana Crane jumped onto the deathwagon when she
asserted that "In this type of [Spina Bifida] case, also, specific
guidelines for the withdrawal of treatment and even for the termination
of life would appear to be highly desirable."[34]
We know who wants direct killing, and we know that they will not rest
until actual euthanasia mills are in place and making a tidy profit on
human misery just like the abortion clinics are doing right now.
25 years ago, Neoliberals laughed at pro-lifers who were fretting
over the gradual liberalization of abortion laws, and who predicted
chains of abortion clinics across the land. Now pro-euthanasiasts are
chuckling at the same people who are worried that euthanasia clinics
will soon sprout up all over the country.
This is despite the fact that several leading euthanasiasts have
advocated and even described such chains.
One of these is Jack Kevorkian, the retired pathologist who, as of
this writing, had racked up 15 assisted suicides. He has published a
serious proposal to establish a chain of euthanasia mills "obitoriums"
where trained staffs of suicide specialists ("obitiatrists")
would help people commit medically-assisted suicide, or "medicide."[35]
It is not surprising at all that the country's leading
pro-abortionists are also in the forefront of the push for killing
inconvenient born human beings.
The list of those who have gone on public record as supporting direct
infanticide is fascinating;
Dr. Alan Guttmacher, former President, Planned Parenthood
Federation of America (PPFA);
Betty Friedan, founder of the National Organization for Women
(NOW);
Larry Lader, co-founder, National Abortion Rights Action
League (NARAL);
Henry Morgentaler, notorious Canadian illegal abortionist and
past president of the Humanist Association of Canada;
Planned Parenthood 'sex guru' Sol Gordon;
Edd Doerr, spokesman of Americans United for Separation of
Church and State; and
Behaviorist Dr. B.F. Skinner, past vice president of the
pro-abortion Association for the Study of Abortion.
The Pitiful Case of
"Baby Doe."
To me it is [morally permissible to withhold treatment from
newborns with handicaps]. I don't see any reason to take $500,000 away
from, say, nutrition for other children just to provide life to an
organism that has hardly started yet.
Harvard University Professor Thomas Snelling.[36]
A (Defective) Child Is Born.
On April 9, 1982, a little boy with Down Syndrome was born in
Indiana's Bloomington Hospital. It was determined that he also had a
badly formed and blocked esophagus. However, this presented only a minor
danger to the child's life, because a simple surgery could be performed
to allow him to swallow again with no trouble. The baby's pediatrician
urged immediate surgery, but the parents were advised by their
obstetrician not to authorize the surgery.
Attorneys for the baby tried to compel physicians to perform the
lifesaving surgery. They also petitioned the Indiana Supreme Court,
which refused the lawyer's emergency petition.
On April 12, Judge John G. Baker of the Monroe County Circuit Court
held that the parents "... have the right to choose a medically
recommended course of treatment for their child in the present
circumstances."
Dr. Walter Owens, an obstetrician, testified during the trial that
I insisted upon telling the parents that this still would not be a
normal child ... that they did have another alternative, which was to
do nothing. In which case, the child [would] probably live only a
matter of several days ... some of these children [born with Down's
Syndrome] are mere blobs.[37]
The baby, meanwhile, lay in a corner, his terrible thirst unslaked by
even his saliva, which had dried up in his mouth days ago. According to
testimony, he cried for five days before he dehydrated to the point
where all he could do was lie in his bed and stare at the ceiling (his
tears having long since dried up so he could not even blink).
A team of pediatricians finally could stand the horror no longer and
went to his side to administer treatment. But, as one of the physicians
later wrote, "Baby Doe's shrunken, thin little body with dry
cyanotic skin, extremely dehydrated, breathing shallowly and
irregularly, lay passively on fresh hospital linens. Death by starvation
was near. Too late for fluids. Too late for surgery. Too late for
justice."[38]
Baby Doe died in agony after just twelve days on this hostile earth.
Although more than 300 couples had pleaded to adopt him, care for him,
love him, and pay for his surgery, the Indiana court system found that
the parent's right to privacy overrode any other consideration
and the ultimate price for this precious privacy was paid for in full by
twelve days of excruciating agony, suffered by a tiny, innocent newborn.
Was The 'Baby Doe' Case An Aberration?
This incident was so horrible that many pro-abortion and
pro-euthanasia activists insisted that it was unique.
However, as with almost everything else that issues from their lips,
this was an outright lie.
Baby Doe was only the first court-sanctioned case of infanticide. As
always in such matters, the second instance was not far behind.
In October 1983, Baby Jane Doe (Keri Lynn) was born in Smithtown, New
York. She suffered from spina bifida (nonclosure of the spinal cord),
water on the brain, and nerve problems. Without surgery, she would
certainly die by the age of two. The 'doctors' and 'parents' opted to
let the child starve to death, and their actions were once more upheld
by the courts.
But perhaps these poor babies didn't die in vain after all. Their
deaths, and the surrounding blazes of publicity, laid bare the hideous
machinations of the euthanasiasts for a brief moment in time, and a
large number of medical professionals came forward and told their
stories.
For example, Mary Arnold, an obstetrical nurse, gave a chilling
account of how involuntary euthanasia is widespread in the United
States today as she recounted that
The doctor would see the baby's head coming out through the birth
canal, realize it had Down's Syndrome, and signal us to let it die.
The mother's legs would be up so she couldn't see what was going on.
We would get a little wave of the doctor's hand a signal to us not to
use suction on the baby. Then they'd say to the mother, "we're
just going to give you something to relax you," and the next
minute, she'd be unconscious. When she came around, they'd say the
baby had died on delivery.[39]
According to experts in the field of euthanasia, between 2,000 and
20,000 such instances of euthanasia happen every year in this country
and a large percentage are being committed against newborn babies.[28]
The "Baby Doe" Regulations.
As a direct result of the original Baby Doe case, the Reagan
administration attempted to mandate legal protection for handicapped
newborns. The American Medical Association and the National Association
of Pediatrics fought these regulations tooth and nail in the courts
because, as they ironically asserted, any outside interference with
medical practice would "endanger the lives and safety of
patients."
Thus, infanticide in the United States has become a medically and
legally approved principle and practice. Doctors now kill in the name of
healing with complete protection from the courts.
The Ratchet Clicks Again.
So, as we travel the wide and easy road from contraception to
abortion to infanticide to euthanasia, we are experiencing once again
the bioethical "ratcheting effect." The ratchet only travels
in one direction. There may be short delays as the system adjusts itself
to the novelty of a new ethical practice, but, overall, the process is
irreversible in the absence of a major moral counterrevolution.
Once a new and immoral practice has been implemented, it quickly
develops an irresistible momentum. It creates a legal, medical,
economic, and, above all, psychological infrastructure that immediately
anchors itself to the previous strata of medical
"advancement," and it quickly becomes immovable. It cannot be
uprooted without tearing away a significant portion of what has come
before, and its supporters enthusiastically trumpet the shopworn but
effective specter of "turning the clock back on medicine."
Eventually, the new practice is immovable and the unthinkable has
become the commonplace. The immoral has become moral and accepted. At
this point, society is ready (eager)? to embark on the next step of
"progress."
And, of course, the more frequently such steps are taken, the easier
it is to make larger, more frequent, and less thought-out steps, all in
the name of medical progress.
The Push for Medical
Horrors.
The NICU [Neonatal Intensive Care Unit] is used right along with
liver transplants as examples of how resources are squandered in our
society.
'Bioethicist' Johnny Cox of the Sacred Heart
Medical Center in Spokane, Washington.[40]
The Dehumanization Process.
The abortion-euthanasia connection, embodied in the practice of
infanticide, is no paranoid pro-life fantasy.
Leading pro-abortion advocates in this country are trying their best
to convince the public that we should take "just one more harmless
little step" in the relentless march down the road to genocide.
After all, they say, what is the difference between "letting
go" a deformed third-trimester fetus and a defective newborn? The
latter, after all, is just "post-natal abortion."
The quotes in Figure 110-2 by those who are enthusiastically pushing
infanticide demonstrate vividly the link between abortion and
euthanasia, and how easily our society is "progressing" from
feticide to infanticide, and finally to adult euthanasia.
FIGURE 110-2
THE THREE-STEP ROAD TO INFANTICIDE AND EUTHANASIA
STEP ONE: Dehumanize the Handicapped Newborn
A newborn is merely an organism with a potential for human
qualities, no more significant than at second, fourth, or sixth months
of pregnancy.
Dr. Milton Heifitz, Chief of Neurosurgery,
LA Medical Center, testimony before Congress, March 23, 1976.
Infanticide has a logical continuity with abortion, and even with
contraception.
Edward Pohlman of Planned Parenthood. The
Psychology of Birth Planning. Schenkman Publishing Company,
Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1967. Page 221.
If a child were not declared alive until three days after birth,
then all parents could be allowed the choice that only a few are given
under the present system. The doctor could allow the child to die if
the parents so chose and save a lot of misery and suffering.
Nobel Prize winner Dr. James D. Watson. Time
Magazine, May 28, 1973, page 104. Also see "Children From the
Laboratory." Prism, May 1973, page 13.
No newborn infant should be declared human until it has passed
certain tests regarding its genetic endowment and that if it fails
these tests, it forfeits the right to live.
Nobel Prize winner Dr. Francis Crick. Pacific
News Service, January 1978.
The fetus has not been shown to be nearer to the human being than
is the unborn ape. Even the full-term infant must undergo many changes
before attaining full status of humanity. Only near the end of the
first year of age does a child demonstrate intellectual development,
speaking ability, and other attributes that differentiate him
significantly from other species.
Dr. Robert H. Williams, Washington State
Medical School. "Our Role in the Generation, Modification, and
Termination of Life." JAMA, August 11, 1969, pages 914 to 917.
If we compare a severely defective human infant with a dog or a pig
... we will often find the nonhuman to have superior capacities ...
Only the fact that the defective infant is a member of the species
Homo Sapiens leads it to be treated differently from the dog or pig.
But species membership alone is not relevant ... If we can put aside
the obsolete and erroneous notion of the sanctity of all human life,
we may start to look at human life as it really is: at the quality of
life that each human being has or can attain.
Peter Singer. "Sanctity of Life or
Quality of Life?" Pediatrics, July 1983.
There is little evidence that termination of an infant's life in
the first few months following extraction from the womb could be
looked upon as murder ... It would seem to be more 'inhumane' to kill
an adult chimpanzee than a newborn baby, since the chimpanzee has
greater mental awareness. Murder cannot logically apply to a life form
with less mental awareness than a primate.
Winston L. Duke. "The New
Biology." Reason, August 1972.
To me it is [morally permissible to withhold treatment from
newborns with handicaps]. I don't see any reason to take $500,000 away
from, say, nutrition for other children just to provide life to an
organism that has hardly started yet.
Harvard University Professor Thomas Snelling,
quoted in "Quote of the Month." National Right to Life News,
November 24, 1982, page 2.
The situation of a newborn baby is very different from that of the
same baby, even a few weeks later. At birth the baby is only a
potential human being and at that point it is surely the humane and
sensible thing that the life of any baby with obvious severe defects,
whether of body or brain, should be quietly snuffed out by the doctor
or midwife. This should not be a decision referred to the family who
are too emotionally involved; though in borderline cases the doctor's
knowledge of the family situation would be one of the factors taken
into account.
Barbara Smoker, President of the National
Secular Society, and Vice-Chairman of the British Humanist Association,
on January 22, 1973. Quoted in William Brennan. The Abortion
Holocaust, Today's Final Solution. Landmark Press, 1984. Page 113.
STEP TWO: Extend Abortion to Newborn Babies
It is reasonable to describe infanticide as post-natal abortion ...
Infanticide is actually a very humane thing when you are dealing with
misbegotten infants. We might have to encourage it under certain
conditionalities of excess population, especially when you're dealing
with defective children.
Joseph Fletcher. "Infanticide and the
Ethics of Loving Concern." Infanticide and the Value of Life.
Prometheus Books, 1978. Quoted by C. Everett Koop, M.D. "The Slide
to Auschwitz." Human Life Review, Summer 1982, page 36.
We must evaluate what can really be termed the 'salvage value.'
This factor is vital in our decisionmaking. What kind of child will
result? ... Will life be meaningful to any degree? What is meaningful
and to whom? The newborn is an organism with a potential for human
qualities, qualities which are as yet nonexistent ... Is life at birth
more significant than at the second, fourth, or sixth month of
pregnancy? It is not. True, it is closer to gaining the attributes of
man, but, as yet, it has only the potential for those qualities. If
this difference is true for the normal newborn, how much less
significant is it for the newborn who doesn't even have this
potential?
Milton Heifetz, M.D. The Right to Die.
New York, G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1975. Page 51. Quoted by C. Everett Koop,
M.D. "The Slide to Auschwitz." Human Life Review,
Summer 1982, page 36.
Parents are, after all, legally permitted a choice of abortion if
the fetus is shown to be severely malformed [with spina bifida, for
example]. It is paradoxical that this same choice should be denied
them in the case of a premature baby with similar or worse handicaps.
'Bioethicist' Mary Warnock, quoted in Nat
Hentoff. "Strange Priesthood of Bioethics." National Right
to Life News, March 27, 1986, page 15.
Most people would prefer to raise children who do not suffer from
gross deformities or from several physical, emotional or intellectual
handicaps. If it could be shown that there is no moral objection to
infanticide, the happiness of society could be significantly and
justifiably increased ... A newborn infant does not possess the
concept of a conscious self any more than a newborn kitten possesses
such a concept ... infanticide during a time interval shortly after
birth must be morally acceptable.
Michael Tooley. "Abortion and
Infanticide." Philosophy and Public Affairs, January 1972.
We now "let go" of some babies, notwithstanding the rules
against euthanasia. But we do not announce this to the world. Such
practice allows the actors to hide from themselves the fact that they
have changed or departed from the rule while announcing their strict
adherence to the absolute rule of sanctity of life in all cases.
Attorney F. Raymond Marks, euthanasia
conference participant, quoted in National Right to Life News,
April 11, 1985, page 11.
Infanticide is not a great wrong. I do not want to be construed as
condemning women who, under certain circumstances, quietly put their
infants to death.
'Bioethicist' Beverly Wildung Harrison,
quoted in David H. Andrusko. "Abortion and Infanticide: Is There a
Difference?" National Right to Life News, May 2, 1985, page
2.
American opinion is rapidly moving toward the position where
parents who have an abnormal child may be considered socially
irresponsible.
Dr. James Sorenson, Professor of
Socio-Medical Sciences, Boston University, at a symposium entitled
"Prenatal Diagnosis and its Impact on Society." Quoted by C.
Everett Koop, M.D. "The Slide to Auschwitz." Human Life
Review, Summer 1982, page 22.
No child [should] be admitted into the society of the living who
would be certain to suffer any social handicap for example, any
physical or mental defect that would prevent marriage or would make
others tolerate his company only from the sense of mercy.
Millard Everett, Ideals of Life.
Quoted by C. Everett Koop, M.D. "The Slide to Auschwitz." Human
Life Review, Summer 1982.
The NICU [Neonatal Intensive Care Unit] is used right along with
liver transplants as examples of how resources are squandered in our
society.
Johnny Cox, an 'ethicist' at the Sacred
Heart Medical Center in Spokane, Washington. Quoted in The [Spokane] Spokesman-Review
and the Spokane Chronicle, August 15, 1987. Also described in
Anti-Life Report. "Born as a Non-Person?" ALL About Issues,
November-December 1987, page 12.
Speaking at a recent conference of the Hemlock Society an
organization whose primary purpose is the legalization of death by
choice Dr. Joseph Fletcher, the 'father of situation ethics,'
reminisced about the days when both he and Margaret Sanger joined the
Euthanasia Society of America, 'thus linking the two [abortion and
euthanasia] causes so to speak the right to be selective about
parenthood and the right to be selective about living.' Fletcher
explained, 'We've added death control to birth control as a part of
the ethos of life style in our society.'
Joseph Fletcher, quoted in Rita Marker.
"School Based Clinics: A Movement to Create a New Society." Human
Life Center Report, 1988, page 25.
Dr. Bob Hall, chief neonatologist at Children's Mercy Hospital in
Kansas City, characterized the practice of permitting deformed or
defective newborns to die by withholding treatment and nourishment as
a 'commonplace' phenomenon. He estimated that it accounts for around
14 percent of all deaths occurring in special care nurseries
throughout the United States.
Claudia MacLachlan and Roger Signor.
"Baby Starvation Illegal Here, Rothman Says." St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, May 21, 1982, page 6A.
STEP THREE: Prepare Society for Future Involuntary Euthanasia
A death pill will be available and in all likelihood will be
obligatory by the end of this century. In the end, I can see the State
taking over and insisting on euthanasia.
Dr. John Goundry. The Philadelphia
Evening Bulletin, August 13, 1977.
How far should we defend the right of a parent to produce a child
that is painfully diseased, condemned to an early death, or mentally
retarded? In our society, a parent does not have the right to withhold
an education from his children. Does he then have a right to produce a
child that is uneducable?
J.F. Crow, "Conclusion, Advances in
Human Genetics and Their Impact on Society." Birth Defects,
September 1972, page 16.
One may anticipate further development of these roles as the
problems of birth control and birth selection (abortion) are extended
inevitably to death selection and death control, whether by the
individual or by society ...
California Medicine editorial, September
1970.
It used to be easy to know what we wanted for our children, and now
the best for our children might mean deciding which ones to kill.
We've always wanted the best for our grandparents, and now that might
mean killing them.
Dr. William Gaylin, professor of psychiatry
and law at Columbia University, addressing the American Association of
University Women, June 10, 1984.
We start off with dispatching the terminally ill and the hopelessly
comatose, and then perhaps our guidelines might be extended to the
severely senile, the very old and decrepit and maybe even young,
profoundly retarded children.
Dr. Mark Siegler, Director, Center of
Clinical Ethics, University of Chicago. Time Magazine, 3/31/1986.
Eventually, when public opinion is prepared for it, no child shall
be admitted into the society of the living who would be certain to
suffer any social handicap for example, any physical or mental defect
that would prevent marriage or would make others tolerate his company
only from a sense of mercy ... Life in early infancy is very close to
nonexistence, and admitting a child into our society is almost like
admitting one from potential to actual existence, and viewed in this
way, only normal life should be accepted.
George Will commentary entitled "Death
With Dignity." Cincinnati Post, May 20, 1974.
On December 4, 1971, Joseph Fletcher, at the Fourth Euthanasia
Conference, suggested that in the future defective children should be
killed by the State over their parent's objections "for the good of
society."
This process inevitably takes place in three steps;
(1) Dehumanize the handicapped newborn;
(2) Extend abortion to newborn babies; and
(3) Prepare society to accept the idea of future involuntary
euthanasia of
the adult handicapped.
'Little Monsters.'
As always, the pro-death ethic 'progresses' along its carcass-strewn
trail one inevitable step at a time. If we don't want to waste the
valuable tissue from dead aborted babies and from live aborted
babies, we certainly don't want to waste the tissue from newborns who
are going to die anyhow.
Take, for example, what the American Atheists heartlessly call
"little monsters," those babies born with no cerebral cortex.
This rare condition is known as anencephaly, and occurs in about one
out of 30,000 births. The baby is born without the main (upper) mass of
the brain, but does possess the brain stem, which controls basic body
functions. The baby can thus breathe, move, feel pain, and cry.
Anencephalic babies do not usually live more than three months.
Mortality is about 90 percent at one week, although some live several
years. One family in Connecticut has successfully raised two
anencephalic children past the age of five.
Tiny Organ Farms.
As these fatally-afflicted babies slowly die, so do all of their
organs. By the time they are declared 'brain dead,' these organs are not
suitable for transplantation.
California's Loma Linda Hospital sees these little ones as a
Heaven-sent opportunity for research and transplantation. This research
center was at one point actually keeping these babies alive so that
their organs would be fresh for removal when a suitable recipient was
found. They would then be killed (painlessly, of course), and the organs
would be removed from their sad little bodies.
Perhaps one reason these poor babies are such easy targets for
harvesting is their unattractive appearance. Many anencephalic newborns
have no skull above the eyebrows or have cranial extrusions of
admittedly rather strange appearance.
Just One Little Problem ...
Of course, there is one troublesome little detail (nothing really
major actually): These anencephalic babies are still alive.
Now what can we do to get around this irritating little obstacle?
Why, we could just redefine "death" and then classify
anencephalic newborns as "dead!" And why not? Unborn babies
are not alive, so now let's define others the same way!
At the 1990 annual meeting of the National Medical Association in Las
Vegas, Dr. Mark Evans seriously proposed that there was a distinct
favorable "... possibility of creating a new legal definition to
permit physicians to declare anencephalic neonates 'brain absent' and
therefore legally dead, so their organs might be harvested for
transplantation."[41]
Notice the use of dehumanizing words by Evans: he does not call the
babies "newborns;" they are "neonates."
Naturally, the lawyers are getting into this strange and terrible act
as well. The first attempt to declassify anencephalic babies out of
human existence occurred in February 1986, as California State Senator
Milton Marks introduced Senate Bill 2018, which stated simply: "An
individual born with the condition of anencephaly is dead."
We Have Traveled This Road Before.
The 'different' are always easy targets in a morally sick society:
Lepers, the handicapped, the retarded, Blacks, Jews, and now poor babies
who are born with an odd or alien appearance through no fault of their
own.
Nazi doctor Dr. Julius Hallervorden defended himself at the Nuremberg
War Criminal Trials by stating to the Court; "I heard that they
were going to do that and so I went up to them: "Look here now
boys, if you are going to kill all these people, at least take the
brains out, so that the material could be utilized.""
Essentially identical language was used by the United States National
Institutes for Health forty years later in their October 1988 Draft
Report of the Human Fetal Tissue Transplant Panel; "Inasmuch as
it is cadaver tissue [from abortions] we are concerned with, and
inasmuch as it would ordinarily be disposed of; and inasmuch as research
on this tissue holds the promise of saving countless lives and
alleviating the suffering of countless others, we find the use of such
tissues acceptable."
Senator Brock Adams [D.-Wa.] said "We can either use the tissue
in what we know to be lifesaving research, or we can bury it. That is
the choice." And syndicated columnist James J. Kilpatrick concluded
that "Out of the sadness of abortion, which takes one potential
life, at least we should salvage the saving of another."[42]
This language is frighteningly reminiscent of that used by Nazi
'doctors' in the concentration camp medical experimentation stations of
World War II. Perhaps our latter-day medical professionals and
politicians are so wrapped up in the glamorous propaganda of the
anti-life movement that they cannot properly see either forward or into
the past.
The Slippery Definition of
"Death."
With great advances in life-support technology and organ
transplantation, the dead today do indeed have much 'protein' to offer
us in the form of organs and body parts. We are the 'Neo-cannibals.'
Kathleen Stein, Omni Magazine.[43]
Introduction.
The depths of the uncharted waters into which we have ventured,
ill-prepared, are indicated by the fact that not even the words
"life" and "death" have solid meanings anymore.
The term "death" has traditionally and logically meant the
total and irreversible cessation of breathing and circulation. Loma
Linda Hospital and other medical groups would now like to create a new
definition of death purely for their own convenience, whereby human
beings who are breathing and have heartbeats may be sustained for the
sole purpose of ransacking their organs, yet still be classified as
'dead.'
This new definition, usually called 'brain death,' is the "...
irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including
the brain stem," used "when respirators and other treatments
render the traditional standard unreliable."
Just as pro-abortionists used the mighty weapon of 'mystagoguery' to
confuse people as to when life begins, pro-infanticide activists
are now muddying the water as to when life ends.
The "New Neomorts."
Loma Linda Hospital, other health care
institutions, and many leading 'bioethicists' can now justify
reclassifying anencephalic newborn babies and other infants who are
breathing and whose hearts are beating as "dead." Therefore,
there is absolutely no reason whatever why comatose adults
meeting the same description may not also be relegated to the fate of
the 'new unliving.'
The possibilities for Newspeak and misleading verbiage in this new
field are almost unlimited.
In an article comically entitled "Proposals to Enlist the Dead
in Research," Jim Detjen proposes the following 'daffynitions;'[44]
Neomort: A body sustained by artificial life support systems to
be used for drug research, development of new surgical techniques,
practice for new surgeons and as a storage place for blood and organs.
Neomortoriums: Places for the storage of brain-dead bodies because
such storage places would solve the dilemma of storing certain organs
outside of the bodies.
Willard Gaylin, former President of the Institute of Society, Ethics,
and the Life Sciences (the "Hastings Institute"), would also
like to see comatose adult persons ("neomorts") stockpiled in
special repositories ("bioemporiums") for the purposes of
organ harvesting and live experimentation.[45]
Another author describes Gaylin's objectives;
Various illnesses
could be induced in neomorts, and various treatments tried, thus
protecting live patients from being "guinea pigs" in
experimental procedures and therapies ... Neomorts would provide a
steady supply of blood, since they could be drained regularly ... Bone
marrow, cartilage, and skin could be harvested, and hormones,
antitoxins, and antibodies manufactured in neomorts ... To do this, [Gaylin]
notes, we would have to accept the concept of "personhood" as
separate from "aliveness" for adults, as we do now with
fetuses.[45]
Perhaps Dr. Robin Cook was influenced by the horrible nature of
Gaylin's views when he wrote his bestselling medical thriller Coma.
The Future of Infanticide Lies in the East.
Why should a woman who finds having a baby inconvenient be
allowed to abort her child, while the aged person whose every moment is
a nightmare is forbidden self-liberation?
Commentator Harry Schwartz, USA Today.[46]
We in the United States need only to look to India to see the future
of infanticide in this country.
Girls are considered to be a burden in many areas of India for
several reasons. They leave the home and their parents, when old,
therefore have nobody to care for them. Girls also require a substantial
dowry in order to be considered eligible for marriage.
For these reasons, female infanticide has become startlingly
widespread in India. Some estimates put the total number of cases of
girl-killing as high as 250,000 per year. The attitude of
families that kill their infant girls is identical to that of pro-aborts
in the United States. As one 26-year old woman told India Today,
"If I and my husband have the right to have a child, we also have
the right to kill it if it happens to be a daughter and we decide we
cannot afford it. Outsiders and the Government have no right to poke
their noses into this."[47]
Absolutely classic anti-life logic! The babies are usually killed by
forcing them to inhale coarse rice grains. In other cases, husbands
plant a poisonous madar plant upon learning that their wives are
pregnant. By the time the wife delivers, the plant will be ready to kill
the baby if it is a girl.
Our country's attitude towards children is almost as cavalier as that
shown by alleged 'parents' in India.
How long will it be before madar plants are a commonplace
sight in our nation's picture-perfect suburbs?
References: Infanticide.
They call them bad babies.
They didn't mean to be bad
but who does
Miller Williams poem entitled "The Ones That Are Thrown Out."[48]
[1] Dr. R.A. Gallop, quoted in the Pro-Life Resource Manual,
page 57.
[2] Leo Alexander, M.D. "Medical Science Under
Dictatorship." The New England Journal of Medicine, July 14,
1949.
[3] Nat Hentoff. Series on the 'Baby Doe' infanticide cases in the
December 6, 1983 to January 10, 1984 issues of The Village Voice.
This entire series is reprinted in the Spring 1984 issue of Human
Life Review, pages 73 to 104.
[4] Abortionist Warren Hern of Boulder, Colorado, quoted by the
Denver Post, February 27, 1977.
[5] Debra Braun. "Murder Charge Dropped Against
Abortionist." National Right to Life News, March 14, 1985,
page 1.
[6] Quoted in "Judge in Virginia Trespass Case Acknowledges
'State-Sanctioned Killing.'" The Advocate (publication of
Advocates for Life Ministries, Portland, Oregon), June 1986, page 3.
[7] "Abortion Clinic Staff Worker Gives Her Excuses." Life
Advocate (publication of Advocates for Life Ministries, Portland,
Oregon), April 1992, page 21.
[8] Magda Denes. "Performing Abortions." Commentary,
October 1976, pages 33 to 37. A truly frightening and profoundly
sickening article by a doctor who observes and describes in graphic
detail a number of saline abortions and their results. She acknowledges
that abortion is killing, but a type of "necessary" killing.
Also see the "Letters" sections in the December 1976 and
February 1977 issues of Commentary.
[9] Norman Mailer on the David Frost Show. Quoted in "Norman
Mailer Speaks Out on Sex and AIDS." American Family Association Journal,
March 1992, page 3.
[10] Dr. Frank M. Guttman, quoted in "Infanticide." National
Right to Life News, April 1979, page 5.
[11] Nick Thimmesch. "The Abortion Culture: My Turn." Newsweek
Magazine, July 9, 1973. Page 9.
[12] Margery W. Shaw, M.D. "Genetic Counseling." Science,
Volume 184, May 17, 1974, page 751. Available as Reprint #2009 from the
Hastings Institute, address given above. This is a noteworthy short
article if only for the author's profoundly and unforgivably naive
assertion that "I am not afraid that genetic screening will lead to
genocide, nor that abortion will lead to infanticide, as many have
warned. If we need checks on our behavior the law will provide
them." Available as Reprint #2005 from the Institute of Science,
Ethics and the Life Sciences, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York 10706.
[13] Melinda Delahoyde. Fighting for Life: Defending the Newborn's
Right to Live. Servant Books, Post Office Box 8617, Ann Arbor,
Michigan 48107. 1984, 81 pages. Page 11.
[14] Charles J. Sykes. "Medical Nightmares: German Doctors/
American Doctors." Milwaukee: Catholic League for Religious and
Civil Rights, 1987, pages 16 and 17.
[15] As described in Dr. Bernard Nathanson's address at the New York
State legislative building on March 17, 1981.
[16] Anne Nicol Gaylor. Abortion is a Blessing. New York, New
York: Psychological Dimensions, Inc, Publishers. 1975, 124 pages. Pages
81 and 84.
[17] Jeffrey Perlman. "Waddill Trial Has Heavy Impact." Los
Angeles Times, May 15, 1978. Part I, page 3. Also see Dexter Duggan.
"California Abortionist Testifies in His Own Defense." Life
Advocate, May/June 1979, pages 14 to 16. Also see Susan Fraker and
Janet Huck. "The Trial of Dr. Waddill." Newsweek
Magazine, April 3, 1978, page 35. Also see "The Ordeal of a Divided
Jury." Time Magazine, May 22, 1978, page 24.
[18] The Laufe abortion/infanticide is described in Francis Schaeffer
and C. Everett Koop, M.D. Whatever Happened to the Human Race?
Fleming H. Revell Publishers, Old Tappan, New Jersey. 1976, pages 46 and
47. This incident was also described in the November 1, 1974 issue of
the Pittsburgh Press.
[19] Dr. Victor G. Rosenblum, Professor of Law, Northwestern
University. Quoted on page 8 of The Silent Holocaust, by John
Powell, S.J.
[20] David K. Stevenson and Ernie W.D. Young. American Journal of
Diseases of Children. May 1990.
[21] James M. Gustafson. "Mongolism, Parental Desires, and the
Right to Life." Perspectives in Biology and Medicine.
16(1973), pages 529 to 577. This case is also described on page 45 of
the Spring 1982 Human Life Review.
[22] Robert J. Lifton. The Nazi Doctors. New York: Basic
Books, 1986.
[23] Fredric Wertham, M.D. A Sign for Cain An Exploration of Human
Violence. Warner Paperback Library, 1969, page 175.
[24] For more information on spina bifida babies and the 'quality of
life,' see Leslie Bond. "Federal Court Allows Suit to Continue in
Case of Oklahoma Infanticide." National Right to Life News,
July 16, 1987, page 2 and 9. Mary Jane Owen, MSW. "Assessing the
Value of Life With Handicaps." National Right to Life News,
April 11, 1985, page 13. An article explaining the infamous
"quality of life" mathematical formula. David H. Andrusko.
"Death By the Numbers." National Right to Life News,
May 16, 1985, page 2. "Gauging a Baby's "Net
Worth."" National Right to Life News, May 30, 1985,
page 10. Letter by two doctors in Pediatrics deploring
"quality of life" formulas. Leslie Bond. "Federal Court
Allows Suit to Continue in Case of Oklahoma Infanticide." National
Right to Life News, July 16, 1987, page 2 and 9.
[25] Debra Braun. "Oklahoma Hospital Allegedly Withholds
Life-Saving Treatment from Handicapped Babies." National Right
to Life News, May 16, 1985, page 1.
[26] Richard H. Gross, M.D., Alan Cox, M.D., Ruth Tatyrek, MSW,
Michael Pollay, M.D., and William A. Barnes, M.D. "Early Management
and Decision Making for the Treatment of Myelomeningocele." Pediatrics
(Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics), October 1983.
[27] C. Everett Koop. "The Family With a Handicapped
Newborn." Human Life Review, Winter 1981, pages 116 to 123.
[28] Joseph R. Stanton, M.D. "From Feticide to
Infanticide." Human Life Review, Summer 1982 pages 35 to 45.
[29] Looseleaf booklet entitled "Organizing for Action."
Prepared by Vicki Z. Kaplan for the National Abortion Rights Action
League, 250 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019. 51 pages, no date.
[30] Joseph Fletcher. Humanhood: Essays in Biomedical Ethics.
Prometheus Books, 1979, page 142. Quoted in Joseph R. Stanton, M.D.
"From Feticide to Infanticide." The Human Life Review,
Summer 1982, page 40.
[31] "Medicide: The Goodness of Planned Death. An Interview With
Dr. Jack Kevorkian." Free Inquiry ["An International
Secular Humanist Magazine"], Fall 1991, pages 14 to 18.
[32] Dr. Christiaan Barnard. Omni Magazine, March 1986. Also
quoted in Jim McFadden's Introduction to the Spring 1986 issue of The
Human Life Review, page 6.
[33] Malcolm Muggeridge. "The Humane Holocaust." Human
Life Review, Winter 1980, pages 13 to 22.
[34] Diana Crane. The Sanctity of Social Life: The Physician's
Treatment of Critically Ill Patients. New York: Russell Sage
Foundation. 1975, page 205. Also quoted in Gary Crum. "Nazi
Bioethics and a Doctor's Defense." The Human Life Review,
Summer 1982, page 66.
[35] Jack Kevorkian, M.D. "A Fail-Safe Model For Justifiable
Medically-Assisted Suicide (Medicide)." American Journal of
Forensic Psychiatry, February 1992. Also quoted in Associated Press.
"Doctor Asks Suicide-Aid Network." The Oregonian,
January 23, 1992, page A11.
[36] Harvard University Professor Thomas Snelling, quoted in Steven
R. Valentine. "Briefs Ordered Sealed in "Infant Doe"
Appeal Case." National Right to Life News, November 24,
1982, page 2.
[37] Obstetrician Walter Owens. Transcript of April 13, 1982, No.
JU-8204-038A (Circuit Court of Monroe County, Indiana).
[38] Anne Bannon, M.D. "The Case of the Bloomington Baby." Human
Life Review, Fall 1982, page 68.
[39] Mary Arnold. "Some Doctors Feel They Have the Right to Kill
Defective Children." Catholic Twin Circle, August 23, 1983.
Page 4.
[40] Johnny Cox, 'ethicist' at the Sacred Heart Medical Center in
Spokane, Washington, quoted in The Spokesman-Review and the Spokane
Chronicle, August 15, 1987. Also described in Anti-Life Report.
"Born as a Non-Person?" ALL About Issues,
November-December 1987, page 12.
[41] This proposal was also published in the October 1-14, 1990 issue
of Obstetrics and Gynecology News.
[42] Syndicated columnist James J. Kilpatrick. "Fetal Tissue
Issue Will Haunt Bush." The Oregonian, April 26, 1992, page
B4.
[43] Kathleen Stein. "Last Rights." Omni Magazine,
September 1987, page 34.
[44] Jim Detjen. "Proposals to Enlist the Dead in
Research." Philadelphia Enquirer, August 12, 1986.
[45] World Trends and Forecasts. "Recycling Human Bodies to Save
Lives." The Futurist, April 1976, page 108.
[46] Commentator Harry Schwartz. "Suicide Is a Basic
Right." USA Today, May 20, 1992, page 10A.
[47] Leslie Bond. "Female Infanticide: An Indian
Holocaust." National Right to Life News, December 4, 1986,
page 3.
[48] Miller Williams poem. "The Ones That Are Thrown Out."
Quoted in National Right to Life News, March 27, 1986, page 15.
References: Infanticide.
Biblical Reflections on Modern Medicine.
This 12-page monthly
magazine consists of detailed comments and essays on recent developments
in the field of medicine from a Scriptural standpoint, with an emphasis
on those procedures that threaten human life: Infanticide, abortion, and
euthanasia. Write to Covenant Distributors, Box 4009, Martinez, Georgia
30917-4009.
Christopher de Vinck. The Power of the Powerless: A Brother's
Legacy of Love.
New York: Doubleday. 1988, 156 pages. Oliver de
Vinck was born blind, mute, crippled, and helpless. Instead of letting
him die as most families would these days because his "quality of
life" was too low, they took him home where he lived upstairs for
33 years. Despite the fact that he almost never even moved, he served as
an enduring example of hope, not only to his family but to many others
as well.
Eugene F. Diamond, M.D. This Curette for Hire.
Published by
the ACTA Foundation, 4848 North Clark Street, Chicago, Illinois 60640.
1977, 141 pages. Order from: Life Issues Bookshelf, Sun Life, Thaxton,
Virginia 24174, telephone: (703) 586-4898. The author discusses the
deterioration of medical ethics and the critical role of the doctor in
all anti-life activities: Abortion, fetal experimentation,
sterilization, euthanasia, infanticide, sex therapy, abortifacients, and
more.
Philip K. Dick. The Golden Man.
New York: Berkeley Publishing
Corporation, 1980. 336 pages. This anthology of short stories includes a
fascinating little tale set in the near future: "The
Pre-Persons," pages 303 to 331. It is the story of what life is
like for children and dissenters once Planned Parenthood (now
all-powerful) has determined that life begins when a person can perform
algebraic mathematics at the age of twelve. Up until this time, abortion
is legal. Mr. Dick must have struck a raw pro-abortion nerve with this
story, because states in his Afterword that he received large volumes of
unsigned hate mail and threats from pro-abortion organizations. His
story is an absolute chiller.
Nancy Dubler and David Nimmons. Ethics on Call: A Medical Ethicist
Shows How to Take Charge of Life-and-Death Choices.
Harmony Books,
210 East 50th Street, New York, New York 10022. 1992, 405 pages.
Reviewed on page 2,819 of the May 27, 1992 issue of the Journal of
the American Medical Association. A revealing look at the day-to-day
decisions that go on in a large hospital. The author, who has advised
medical personnel on many occasions, describes specific cases, including
passive euthanasia, making critical decisions for newborns, notification
of a person whose spouse tests HIV-positive, and questions of sustained
care. The author also examines the agendas, habits, and "circles of
consent" that interact in such decisions.
Sherman Elias. M.D., and George J. Annas, J.D. Reproductive
Genetics & the Law.
Chicago: Year Book Medical Publishers, Inc.
1987, 310 pages. The medical and legal backgrounds of some of the
hottest topics in artificial reproductive technologies today: Newborn
genetic screening, genetic counseling, prenatal diagnosis, treatment
(and nontreatment) of handicapped newborns, "noncoital
reproduction," frozen embryos, and gene and fetal therapy.
Greenhaven Press. Death and Dying: Opposing Viewpoints.
Greenhaven Press Opposing Viewpoints Series, Post Office Box 289009, San
Diego, California 92128-9009. 1987, 215 pages. Each section includes
several essays by leading authorities on both sides of each issue. The
questions asked are: "How Should One Cope With Death?;"
"How Can Suicide Be Prevented?;" "Is Infant Euthanasia
Ever Justified?;" "Should Euthanasia Be Allowed?;" and
"Do the Dying Need Alternative Care?" Authors include Helga
Kuhse, Melinda Delahoyde, Peter Singer, Charles Krauthammer, and David
H. Andrusko. This topic is covered by a series of books, beginning with
a basic set of essays entitled Sources and continuing with an
additional and updated annual series of essays. A catalog is available
from the above address and can be obtained by calling 1-(800) 231-5163.
Greenhaven Press. Euthanasia: Opposing Viewpoints.
Greenhaven
Press Opposing Viewpoints Series, Post Office Box 289009, San Diego,
California 92128-9009. 1989, 231 pages. Five sections featuring essays
written by leading activists on both sides of the euthanasia debate:
"Is Euthanasia Ethical?;" "What Policy Should Guide
Euthanasia?;" "What Criteria Should Influence Euthanasia
Decisions?;" "Who Should Make the Euthanasia Decision?;"
and "Is Infant Euthanasia Ethical?" This book provides
excellent debating and research background for the anti-euthanasia
activist. A catalog is available from the above address and can be
obtained by calling 1-(800) 231-5163.
Germain Grisez and Joseph Boyle. Life and Death and Liberty and
Justice.
Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1979. Reviewed
by Richard Stith on pages 185 to 189 of the Summer 1979 issue of the International
Review of Natural Family Planning. An extraordinarily detailed and
broad examination of all of the primary areas of contention in the
euthanasia battle. Considered by most to be a 'must read' for serious
anti-euthanasia activists.
Dennis J. Horan and Melinda Delahoyde (editors). Infanticide and
the Handicapped Newborn.
Brigham Young University Press, 1982, 127
pages. Reviewed by David Andrusko on page 15 of the March 24, 1983 issue
of National Right to Life News and by Charles E. Rice on page 22
of the April 1983 ALL About Issues. An excellent collection of
nine essays by Dennis Horan, Jerome LeJeune, M.D., C. Everett Koop,
Eugene F. Diamond, M.D., and others.
Issues in Law and Medicine.
This periodical contains information
and updates on the legal and medical issues pertaining to medical
treatment for handicapped and disabled persons of all ages. Edited by
James Bopp, Jr., of the National Legal Center for the Medically
Dependent and Disabled. Write to the National Legal Center for the
Medically Dependent and Disabled, Post Office Box 1586, Terre Haute,
Indiana 47808-1586.
D. Gareth Jones. Brave New People: Ethical Issues at the
Commencement of Life.
Eerdmans Publishing Company, 255 Jefferson
Avenue SE, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503, telephone: (616) 459-4591.
1985, 225 pages. This book was so 'controversial' (which means that
Leftist censors didn't like it), that it was withdrawn from the market
after its original release in 1984. The author addresses complicated
issues that apply to the beginning of human life: In-vitro
fertilization, artificial insemination, cloning, and genetic tinkering.
Eike-Henner W. Kluge. The Practice of Death.
London: Yale
University Press. 1975, 250 pages. The author ties together in a general
manner the philosophy and tactics of all of the pro-death movements:
Abortion, infanticide, suicide, euthanasia, and 'senicide.' Although the
book is nearly twenty years old, it is still relevant today.
Sheldon B. Korones, M.D. High Risk Newborn Infants: The Basis for
Intensive Nursing Care.
C.V. Mosby Company, St. Louis, 1981. 3rd
Edition.
Helga Kuhse and Peter Singer. Should the Baby Live?: The Problem
of Handicapped Newborns.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1985.
225 pages. The authors begin their Preface with the words "This
book contains conclusions which some readers will find disturbing. We
think that some infants with severe disabilities should be killed."
This pretty much says it all. Those who want to read past the first two
sentences will find that all human life is not equal (it all
depends upon your quality of life); that it is all right to kill those
newborns who do not measure up to the quality of life formulas; and that
the "sanctity of life" doctrine, while it does have its
good points, is not really relevant to today's world. This book is an
excellent summation of the utilitarian ethic applied to the weakest and
most helpless born human beings of all the handicapped newborn.
Carol Levine (Editor). Taking Sides: Clashing Views on
Controversial Bio-Ethical Issues.
Dushkin Publishing Group, Inc.,
Guilford, Connecticut. 1984, 297 pages. Leading thinkers on both sides
of bioethical issues express their opinions in scholarly essays on
subjects including abortion, in-vitro fertilization, surrogate
motherhood, involuntary sterilization of the retarded, informed consent,
active euthanasia, withholding treatment from handicapped newborns,
suicide, the insanity defense, animal experimentation, prisoners
volunteering for research, justifiable deception in research, organ
harvesting from the dead, and genetic engineering. A good primer on the
bioethical issues.
Jeff Lyon. Playing God in the Nursery.
New York: Norton Press,
1984. 340 pages. Reviewed by Carleton Sherwood in the April 11, 1985 National
Right to Life News. This is perhaps the most frightening inside look
at the true anti-life mentality ever written. The author has reversed
the roles of 'good' and 'evil' completely. He tries to reconcile the
role of doctor as both healer and killer in the nursery as he decides
which babies have sufficient "quality of life" to go on living
and which do not. The story revolves around the struggle over whether or
not to keep a Down's Syndrome baby alive. The pediatrician who tries to
get a court order to feed the little baby is described as
"intimidating," "threatening," and "a
sadist." The author cruelly refers to the poor infant himself as a
"bad baby," although none of his troubles are his fault. Those
people who want the baby to die of starvation and thirst are, of course,
"courageous, loving, caring, decent, ethical," and on and on ad
nauseam. This book is written by an author whose outlook is so
warped and twisted that, hopefully, it will literally terrify many
pro-life activists into action.
Effie A. Quay. And Now Infanticide.
Sun Life: Thaxton,
Virginia. 1980, 64 pages. Reviewed by Paulette Joyer on page 8 of the
November 24, 1983 issue of National Right to Life News.
Earl Shelp. Born to Die?
New York: Free Press, 1986. 206
pages. A candid endorsement of euthanasia and infanticide for all the
usual reasons, including 'quality of life' and cost containment.
Reviewed by Rosemary Bottcher on pages 5 and 6 of the October 23, 1986
issue of National Right to Life News.
Robert and Peggy Stinson. The Long Dying of Baby Andrew.
Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1983. 384 pages. Reviewed by Rosemary
Bottcher in the April 11, 1985 National Right to Life News. This
is the story of two alleged "parents" who do everything they
can to rid themselves of a newborn baby who doesn't meet their high
expectations. Perhaps this book should have been entitled How We
Finally Escaped the Brat Who Wouldn't Die. The Stinsons bitterly
regret not aborting the baby because, as they said, "Once the baby
breathed, all choices were lost." The baby was born healthy but
premature, and, by all accounts, would have grown up perfectly healthy.
But the parents did everything in their power to kill him; they reduced
his oxygen, refused a simple procedure that would have allowed him to
breathe easier, and tried to get him transferred to a hospital that
would kill him outright. At last, the doctors trying so hard to save him
simply gave up, because too many people wanted him to die. He was dumped
unattended in a corner. Nobody held him. Nobody fed him. Nobody loved
him. At six months of age, the unloved little boy finally did the only
thing that he could to make his parents happy He died.
Michael Tooley. Abortion and Infanticide.
Oxford University
Press, Walton Street, Oxford, England OX2 6DP. 1983, 440 pages. A very
detailed and deep examination of the more obtuse and exotic moral
aspects of infanticide, abortion, and the many connections between the
two. Recommended for those people who have been in the pro-life movement
for some time and who want a really good look at the foundation of
ethics and morals of the pro-life and anti-life philosophies.
United States Government. Neonatal Intensive Care for Low
Birthweight Infants: Costs and Effectiveness.
Reviews the evidence
on the effectiveness of treating low birthweight babies in special
hospital units, and examines recent changes in related technology and
medical practice and long-term consequences of treatment. Serial Number
052-003-01089-5, 1987, 83 pages. Order by mail from Superintendent of
Documents, United States Government Printing Office, Washington, DC
20402, or by telephone from (202) 783-3238.
Leonard J. Weber. Who Shall Live?: The Dilemma of Severely
Handicapped Children and Its Meaning for Other Moral Questions.
Paulist Press, 545 Island Road, Ramsey, New Jersey 07446. 1976, 140
pages. A basic examination of the fundamental moral questions
surrounding the indirect euthanasia of handicapped newborns: The
framework of the question, the ethical context, the conflicting values,
the value of human life, the mechanics of the decision, and the role of
the public.
Robert F. Weir. Selective Nontreatment of Handicapped Newborns:
Moral Dilemmas in Neonatal Medicine.
Oxford University Press, 1985.
292 pages. Reviewed by Carl R. Schmahl on pages 48 to 50 of the April
11, 1986 issue of National Review. This author takes the
'progressive' (slippery slope) view that some infants are going to lead
'lives not worth living,' and should therefore be allowed to die of
starvation and thirst. Although he would be extremely strict in his
criteria for such killings, he still makes a very smooth presentation of
all of the anti-life arguments for infanticide, which will be very
useful for those who want to oppose the people who advocate this type of
silent killing. Mr. Weir performs a great service in pointing out the
almost complete lack of standards used to determine which infants will
receive life-sustaining medical treatments and which will not.
Wolf Wolfenberger. The New Genocide of Handicapped and Afflicted
People.
Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Training Institute.
1987, 114 pages. Reviewed by Julie Grimstad on page 46 of the May 1990 ALL
About Issues. This little volume deals with the progressive
expansion of "deathmaking" and its ties to the anti-life
mentality.
© American Life League BBS 1-703-659-7111
This is a chapter of the Pro-Life Activists Encyclopedia published
by American Life League.
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