July 30, 2009

Assisted Suicide and Your End-of-Life Chat With Your Doctor

Assisted Suicide and Your End-of-Life Chat With Your Doctor



Fifteen years ago, Colorado's governor Richard Lamm got himself in trouble by saying elderly people have "a duty to die and get out of the way."

Lamm knew how much end-of-life care costs. About one-third of Medicare's budget goes for costs incurred in the last one year of life, and 40% of that goes for expenses in the last one month of life.  It is so much cheaper if old people just do their duty and get out of the way rather than use hospitals, expensive tests and surgeries, and medications.

Congress knows this too, which is why they include Section 1233 in the proposed health care reform bill.

Under Section 1233, doctors get paid to sit down with all patients over 65 years old to talk about end-of-life issues.  The idea is to encourage people to sign living wills and enter hospices rather than getting expensive treatments. Since hospice provides only pain relief and palliative care, everyone else saves money. Under the new rules, you enter hospice when you have only 18 months to live, compared to today's six months– so this way you speed things along even faster for us.  In states where physician-assisted suicide is legal, end-of-life talks would no doubt include assisted suicide, the cheapest option of all.

The lawmakers  pushing cheap "end-of-life" healthcare call it the "complete lives system." The idea is that old people have already led "complete lives," so it's time for them to do their duty, as Lamm put it.

The lawmakers behind these proposals are compassionate. They don't like that dying people suffer, and they don't like that a 90-year-old with cancer takes a government Handy Van to chemotherapy, while a baby in Africa dies because he can't get clean water.  In fact, none of us like that, and we all agree something has to be done.

The problem is putting our compassionate ideas into practice. Even very smart compassionate people are not smart enough to make every decision for everyone else.  And what happens in practice is that most people want every treatment possible at the end of their lives.  Who gets to decide which people get which treatments?

Jane Strum spoke up at a presidential press conference in July 2009. Five years ago, her mother got a pacemaker at age 99 years, and is still alive today. Under the new government plan, Strum asked, would there just be cut-offs at certain ages, or would doctors be able to consider factors likes a "certain spirit? A certain joy of living?" Her mother's doctors considered those things.

President Obama answered Jane Strum like this.

"We can let doctors know, and we can let your mom know," he said, "that maybe this is not going to help. Maybe you're better off not having the surgery, but taking the painkiller."

In this particular case, however, if you believe she would be better off not having the surgery but taking the painkiller, you believe she would be better off dead.

Let's look at the particular cases of Randy Stroup and Barbara Wagner, who have cancer. They are sort-of old people: Stroup is 53 years old and Wagner is 64. They both got letters from the state of Oregon, which pays their medical expenses. The letters said that Oregon won't pay their cancer treatments because each has only a slim chance of living more than five years.  However, the good news is that Oregon will pay for a painless, doctor-assisted suicide, defining it as "comfort care," and including it as just another choice for them, like taking painkillers.  They could choose to be humanely put to sleep, the way you'd do for a beloved pet.

What this means is that some of the most caring people among us are willing to reduce each of us to a bunch of numbers, statistics, and risk factors because they think this will make things better for humanity as a whole.  It is medicine by accountancy. Accountancy has no philosophy or art in it. It lacks what Wordsworth called "the sweet sad music of humanity."

The New York Times reports that six Senators are sitting around a table making these decisions. There are no doctors, nurses, nursing home attendants, psychologists, medical ethicists, theologians, priests, rabbis, artists, shamans, and wise elders in their discussions. Congress alone decides who must do the noble thing and die for our country, the same way they make laws deciding who gets the criminal death penalty and who must go to war.

One of the first things they decided was to exempt themselves from healthcare reforms like Section 1322 and vote to keep their own healthcare plan just the way it is, thus avoiding end-of-life chats, issues of "complete lives," duties to die, and assisted suicide.

Assisted suicide is like the line from the movie, "Young Frankenstein," when Igor whispers, "Wait, Master, it might be dangerous. You go first."

Since Congress is proposing this, and since the way is very dangerous, they should go first.

For a continuation on this story, please read the following article:
House Health-Care Bill Would Establish 'Medical Homes' for the Elderly and Disabled and Euthanasia and Health Care Reform and Obama's 'Department of Death with Dignity'

Contact: Jane St. Clair
Publish Date: July 29, 2009
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House Health-Care Bill Would Establish 'Medical Homes' for the Elderly and Disabled

House Health-Care Bill Would Establish 'Medical Homes' for the Elderly and Disabled


A copy of H.R. 3200, America Affordable Health
Choices Act of 2009 sits on the desk of House
Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman
Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., after the markup
on the health care bill was postponed on Capitol
Hill in Washington, Wednesday, July 29, 2009.
(AP photo/Susan Walsh)


The House health-care reform bill proposes to decrease hospital visits by establishing a "medical home pilot program" for elderly and disabled Americans.
 
Such a medical home would not require a physician to be on the staff, and therefore could be run solely by nurse practitioners and physician assistants. Medical homes also would practice "evidence-based" medicine, which advocates only the use of medical treatments that are supported by effectiveness research.
 
But physicians' groups say the legislation could lead to restrictions on which treatments may be used for certain conditions, despite the fact that some patients might require a unique or unconventional approach. It also may lead to dumping Medicare/Medicaid patients in facilities that are not required to have physicians on staff.
 
The Center for Medicine in the Public Interest (CMPI) expressed its concerns in a report that explains why statistical evidence does not always reflect reality of effective medicine.
 
"'One size fits all' rarely does," the report said. "From clothes to shoes to hats, few people find that items carrying that label work with their individual bodies. So why do we entrust the health of our bodies -- one of the most important assets we have -- to a one-size-fits-all mentality?"
 
According to CMPI and individual physicians, however, this one-size-fits-all mentality is just what congressional health-care reform suggests.
 
"Unfortunately, policies being advanced under the guise of 'evidence-based medicine' (EBM) could do just that," the CMPI report said. "The idea behind EBM, empowering physicians with sound evidence to incorporate into their treatment decisions for individual patients, is a good one.
 
"Unfortunately, EBM now is being distorted by government bureaucrats and HMOs in ways that impose top-down, one-size-fits-all restrictions on patients and their healthcare providers."
 
Rather than enforcing a formulaic approach to medicine based on statistical and clinical research, CMPI says health-care reform should preserve physicians' autonomy to use the research in conjunction with their experience and knowledge of the patient.
 
"It is so critically important for the physician to maintain his or her ability to combine study findings with their expertise and knowledge of the individual in order to make the optimal treatment decisions. Evidence-based medicine in its present, distorted form emphasizes just one aspect of the clinical pie over all the others," the report found.
 
Kathryn Serkes of the American Association for Physicians and Surgeons echoed the observation.
 
"There is no typical patient," Serkes told CNSNews.com. "Every patient is different from a medical perspective. If we have evidence-based medicine that basically says 'well, we start at treatment one, which leads you to treatment two, to treatment three to treatment four. In practice, that doesn't work for the patient. That's the 'art' part of the art and science of medicine. That's what we still need doctors to do, is to figure out what's right for the patient."
 
In the long run, according to CMPI, evidence-based medicine may not even cut costs as Congress suggests it would.
 
"Evidence-based medicine may provide transitory savings in the short term, but the same patient who takes the cheapest available statin today may very well be the patient costing you -- the taxpayer, the policymaker, the thought-leader, the sister, the spouse -- big bucks when that patient ends up in the hospital because of improperly treated cardiovascular disease," .
 
"The repercussions of choosing short-term thinking over long-term results and cost-based medicine over patient-based are pernicious to both the public purse and the public health," the CMPI report said.
 
Provisions for the medical home pilot program are an amendment to the Social Security Act, which governs the administration of Medicare and Medicaid services.
 
The medical home is an approach to medical practice that "facilitates partnerships" between patients and physicians, according to the proposed bill.
 
The pilot program targets Medicare beneficiaries who have a high medical "risk score" or who require regular monitoring, advising or treatment. This currently applies to more than 22 million Americans, according to Kaiser Family Foundation statistics.
 
At least $1.5 billion would be redirected from the Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance Trust Fund to fund the medical homes, "in addition to funds otherwise available," according to the bill.
 
The Senate health-care reform bill also includes provisions for medical homes, although to lesser detail than the House bill.
 
If this portion of the legislation passes through Congress, medical homes will be part of the greater health-care reform experiment known as "the public (health insurance) option."
 
According to the committee, the provisions for medical homes will make the public option a stronger competitor against private health insurance companies.
 
"The public health insurance option will be empowered to implement innovative delivery reform initiatives so that it is a nimble purchaser of health care and gets more value for each health care dollar," the House Committee on Energy and Commerce's summary says about the bill.
 
Medical homes are tied to "comparative effectiveness research" via something called "evidence-based medicine."
 
"It will expand upon the experiments put forth in Medicare and be provided the flexibility to implement value-based purchasing, accountable care organizations, medical homes, and bundled payments. These features will ensure the public option is a leader in efficient delivery of quality care, spurring competition with private plans," the committee's summary also said.
 
A statement by the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) said that the effectiveness of the medical home model should be carefully evaluated before applying the model far and wide.
 
"There should be more research to demonstrate the benefits and continuing costs associated with implementation of the full (patient-centered medical home) model," the ACEP statement said.
 
"Demonstration projects being conducted by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services must be carefully evaluated. There should be proven value in healthcare outcomes for patients and reduced costs to the healthcare system before there is widespread implementation of this model."
 
The proposal, meanwhile, specifically allows for facilities to be run by staff who do not possess medical degrees – including nurses and nurse practitioners.

Also read:
Obama's 'Department of Death with Dignity' as well as House Health-Care Bill Would Establish 'Medical Homes' for the Elderly and Disabled and Euthanasia and Health Care Reform

Contact: Marie Magleby
Source: CNSNews.com
Publish Date: July 30, 2009
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Ethical stem cell alternative advances

Ethical stem cell alternative advances


Dr. YAMANAKA Shinya, the Director of the Center for
iPS Cell Research and Application and a professor at
the Institute for Frontier Medical Sciences of Kyoto
University.


Researchers in China have shown that induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells are as powerful as embryonic stem cells while avoiding their ethical problems.

Scientists in Shanghai and Beijing revealed July 23 they had created live mice from the skin cells of adult animals after reprogramming the cells into an embryonic-like state, The Washington Post reported. Their research produced at least 100 first-generation mice and hundreds of second-generation ones that were almost genetic matches for mice from which the iPS cells were extracted, according to The Post.

"This clearly says for the first time that iPS cells pass the most stringent test," said Konrad Hochedlinger, a Harvard University stem cell researcher, according to The Post.

Many scientists have promoted embryonic stem cell research, because stem cells from embryos are pluripotent, meaning they can transform into any cell or tissue in the body. Embryonic stem cell research however, not only has failed to provide any therapies for human subjects, but it has been plagued by the development of tumors in lab animals.

With the publication of these studies in the journals Nature and Cell Stem Cell, iPS cells have been confirmed also to be pluripotent. Unlike embryonic stem cell research, iPS research does not involve embryos and is supported by pro-lifers.

The research is good news, and potentially bad news, a Southern Baptist bioethicist said.

"These experiments continue to demonstrate that the destruction of embryos is unnecessary to retrieve stem cells," said C. Ben Mitchell, Graves professor of moral philosophy at Union University in Jackson, Tenn. "So, in that sense, this is good news. And we can make all the mice we want using the procedure.

"The problems arise when these findings are applied to human research," said Mitchell, who is a consultant for the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission. "It would be unethical to subject human embryos to potentially deadly experiments just to see if they work. The only ethical justification for experimenting on an unborn human being is for that person's own good."


Dr. Mehmet Oz on the program Oprah

"Dr. Oz" of Oprah fame told a nationwide TV audience he believes the "stem cell debate is dead" because of the promise of iPS research.

In addition to iPS stem cells, adult stem cells provide an ethical alternative and have produced therapies for at least 73 ailments in human subjects, according to Do No Harm, a coalition promoting ethics in research. Such results have been achieved even though adult stem cells are considered multipotent, meaning they can convert into many but not all cells or tissues in the body.

For more reading, please see: Using pig cells to treat human illness

Contact: Tom Strode
Source: BP
Publish Date: July 29, 2009
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Sotomayor Endorsed by Senate Judiciary Committee as NRLC Highlights Troubling Questions Left Unresolved

Sotomayor Endorsed by Senate Judiciary Committee as NRLC Highlights Troubling Questions Left Unresolved

As most know, the Senate Judiciary Committee endorsed the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to replace Justice David Souter on the Supreme Court. The 13-6 vote split along Democratic/Republican lines with the sole exception of Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), who voted in favor of Judge Sotomayor.


The Senate Judiciary Committee endorsed
Judge Sonia Sotomayor by a vote of 13-6.
If confirmed by the full Senate,
Ms. Sotomayor would be the 111th
Justice of the Supreme Court.


The full Senate is expected to up take the nomination next week before it adjourns for its August recess. As the New York Times described it, if confirmed the 55-year-old Sotomayor would "be the 111th justice to serve on the Supreme Court, the first Hispanic and the third woman."

On Monday  a letter was sent to members of the Senate, expressing its opposition to the confirmation of Judge Sotomayor. You can read the correspondence in its entirety at www.stoptheabortionagenda.com.

Although Sotomayor seems headed for easy confirmation next week, NRL's objections are important to remember because they raise fundamental issues. Let me just briefly address three points made in this thoughtful letter.

1. While Judge Sotomayor "encountered little in the way of abortion-related litigation, either at the district court or the court of appeals," nonetheless "there are many troubling indications that Ms. Sotomayor believes that it is the proper role of the U.S. Supreme Court to construct and enforce constitutional doctrines on social policy questions, even where the text and history of the Constitution provide no basis for removing an issue from the realm of lawmaking by the duly elected representatives of the people." As dissenting Justice Byron White wrote in 1973, Roe was "an exercise of raw judicial power."

2. "The evidence indicates that Ms. Sotomayor approves of the Roe ruling and approves of the type of judicial activism that produced it," write NRL Executive Director David N. O'Steen, Ph.D., and NRL Federal Legislative Director Douglas Johnson. They cite her service on the governing board of the Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund (PRLDEF). "During her tenure on the board, the PRLDEF was actively involved in litigation that attempted to persuade the Supreme Court to expand the judge-created 'right to abortion,' often beyond what the Court was willing to embrace."

During this period, the fund joined briefs at the U.S. Supreme Court in six abortion-related cases. "These briefs urged the Court to regard abortion as a 'fundamental right' (a right on the level of freedom of speech), to apply the strictest standard of scrutiny when reviewing abortion-regulated laws, and thereby to nullify informed consent requirements (including those involving ultrasound), waiting periods, parental notification requirements, restrictions on taxpayer funding of abortion, and even record keeping requirements. The PRLDEF's own 'statement of interest' in three of these cases said that the PRLDEF 'opposes any efforts to overturn or in any way restrict the rights recognized in Roe v. Wade.""

As the letter also pointed out, "During her recent confirmation hearings, Ms. Sotomayor suggested that she was only aware of this litigation activity in the most general terms, and had no responsibility for or awareness of the substance of the briefs." About this the letter concluded, "Frankly, this testimony was not very believable."

3. In her testimony Sotomayor often talked of following Supreme Court precedent, as an appeals court judge. But "If confirmed to the U.S. Supreme Court, Ms. Sotomayor will no longer be constrained by the precedents of that Court, including the precedents in which the Court upheld laws requiring notification of a parent before performing an abortion on a minor, requiring a pre-abortion waiting period, barring public funding of abortion, and – by a single vote, in 2007 – banning partial-birth abortion. Nor, it appears, will she feel greatly constrained by the text and history of the Constitution, in which Roe v. Wade and its progeny find no support."

Judge Sotomayor's defenders in the Senate Judiciary Committee and beyond positioned her as "within the mainstream." That, too, I would argue, "was not very believable."

Contact: Dave Andrusko
Source: NRLC
Publish Date: July 29, 2009
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NEWS SHORTS FOR THURSDAY

NEWS SHORTS FOR THURSDAY

Case Study In Pro-Abort Media `Spin'

Last week the Los Angeles Times reported on the pro-life activities of Walter Hoye, who became the first person convicted of breaking a 2008 Oakland, Calif., ordinance that creates an 8-foot buffer zone, or "bubble," around people entering abortion clinics. L.A. Times reporter Robin Abcarian rightly describes Hoye's conviction, stemming from two Tuesday appearances at Family Planning Specialists Medical Group in the spring, where he tried to talk women out of ending their pregnancies. And that Hoye looks more "like actor Don Cheadle than a public menace." But the rest of the story—while giving space to Hoye's own words—delivers a few amazing sucker punches that display the profound difference that reporters' perspectives bring to the abortion debate.
Click here for the full article.



Four People Arrested for Giving Illegal Stem Cell Treatments from Aborted Fetuses

Hungarian police have detained four people on suspicion of carrying out illegal, untested stem cell treatments using embryos or aborted foetuses at a Hungarian private clinic. A police statement said the suspects – two Hungarians, one man living in the United States and one Ukrainian citizen – were detained on 27 July as they were preparing to treat a new patient. Police said they launched a procedure on "suspicion of a banned use of the human body". "There is well-founded suspicion that a US citizen called Julliy B has carried out stem cell treatments for money within the framework of a Hungarian stem cell research laboratory and a Hungarian-owned private clinic since 2007," police said.
Click here for the full article.


Legal Protection of Unborn is "of course" Needed

In an interview last week, Rocco Butiglione, one of Italy's best-known Christian Democrat politicians, made remarks which sparked concerns from pro-life activists, as he seemed to suggest that promoting laws against abortion is a mistake.

Butiglione had said that he had come to believe that pursuing a "common ground," abortion reduction approach is the best way to combat abortion. He also spoke of a new network of pro-life parliamentarians who are not against Law 194, which permits abortion. "We do not want the law changed. Less than ever," he was quoted as saying in an interview with Corriere della Sera, Italy's leading daily newspaper.

However in an exclusive interview with the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute (C-FAM), Buttiglione has now clarified his position, saying that he was quoted "out of context" and reaffirming that protection of the right to life in law is the right way to go.
Click here for the full article.


Conyers to Introduce Constitutional Amendment Making Health Care a 'Right'

During his speech at a recent National Press Club luncheon, House Judiciary Chairman John Conyers (D-Mich.) said he is introducing a constitutional amendment that would establish health care as "a right" for all Americans.
 
"We need a real serious bill and, by the way, the fundamental question, 'Is health care a constitutional right?'" he said. "I mean, do you have a right to health care in the American system of government or not?"   Click here for the video
Click here for the full article.


Over 100k Letters Sent Urging Congress to Keep Abortion Out of Health Care

Today the Susan B. Anthony List announced that pro-life activists nationwide have sent over 100,000 letters to Congress urging the exclusion of abortion from any national health care reform effort.

"As we approach the August recess, already tens of thousands of pro-life Americans have contacted Congress urging them to keep abortion out of health care," said Susan B. Anthony List President Marjorie Dannenfelser. "Americans are urging Members of Congress to preserve the real common ground, our long-standing tradition of limiting taxpayer funds for abortion. This is exactly the type of policy the President has sought to achieve, one that stands the test of time, has popular support and appeals to members on both sides of the aisle. Yet both the House and Senate versions of health care reform legislation seek to undo this commonsense policy. Without language to explicitly exclude an abortion mandate, the legislation will result in Americans footing the bill for abortion on-demand in the largest expansion of government-backed abortion since Roe v. Wade."
Click here for the full article.


Obama Science Adviser: Trees Should be Allowed to Sue, Babies Not Yet "Human Beings"

Just when you thought that the high advisers to President Obama couldn't get any more radical. Consider: Cass Sunstein, his nominated regulations czar, wants animals to be able to sue their owners and has asserted that the lives of elderly people should be given less value in government regulatory cost/benefit determinations.  Ezekiel Emanuel, a high health care adviser, wants to ration health care against the elderly and has asserted we all have a moral obligation to be experimented on.  And now, it turns out that his science adviser wrote years ago that trees should be allowed to sue!
Click here for the full article.

July 29, 2009

Important News on the Swine Flu and Pregnancy...

Important News on the Swine Flu and Pregnancy...

First Target for Swine Flu Vaccine Injections: Pregnancy Women!

Swine flu has been hitting pregnant women unusually hard, so they are likely to be among the first group advised to get a new swine flu shot this fall. Pregnant women account for 6 percent of U.S. swine flu deaths since the pandemic began in April, even though they make up just 1 percent of the U.S. population. On Wednesday a federal vaccine advisory panel is meeting to take up the question of who should be first to get swine flu shots when there aren't enough for everyone. At the top of the list are health care workers, who would be crucial to society during a bad pandemic.
Click here for the full article.

Quoted from the Associated Press:

Pregnant women's risk from swine flu has been a raging topic in Europe, following the contentious suggestion this month by British and Swiss health officials that women should consider delaying pregnancy if they can.
 
Most health officials call that advice unwarranted, but have agreed that the health risks are significant. In a recent report, World Health Organization experts found that pregnant women appear to be "at increased risk for severe disease, potentially resulting in spontaneous abortion and/or death, especially during the second and third trimesters of pregnancy."
Click here for the full article.

More on this...

CDC Panel to Recommend Who Should Get Swine Flu Shot

With the first trials of a vaccine against the new H1N1 swine flu set to begin shortly, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will convene a panel of experts Wednesday to recommend a priority list of candidates for the vaccine. Those recommendations will assume that a safe and effective vaccine will be available by October in sufficient quantity to start a mass vaccination program in the United States. If all goes well, the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine should be known by late August or September, federal officials said.
Click here for the full article.

Obama’s Science Czar Said a Born Baby ‘Will Ultimately Develop Into a Human Being’

Obama's Science Czar Said a Born Baby 'Will Ultimately Develop Into a Human Being'



President Obama's top science adviser said in a book he co-authored in 1973 that a newborn child "will ultimately develop into a human being" if he or she is properly fed and socialized.
 
"The fetus, given the opportunity to develop properly before birth, and given the essential early socializing experiences and sufficient nourishing food during the crucial early years after birth, will ultimately develop into a human being," John P. Holdren, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, wrote in "Human Ecology: Problems and Solutions."
 
Holdren co-authored the book with Stanford professors Paul R. Ehrlich and Anne H. Ehrlich. The book was published by W.H. Freeman and Company.
 
At the time "Human Ecology" was published, Holdren was a senior research fellow at the California Institute of Technology. Paul Ehrlich, currently president of The Center for Conservation Biology at Stanford, is also author of the 1968 bestseller, "The Population Bomb," a book The Washington Post said "launched the popular movement for zero population growth."
 
"Human Ecology: Problems and Solutions" argued that the human race faced dire consequences unless human population growth was stopped.
 
"Human values and institutions have set mankind on a collision course with the laws of nature," wrote the Ehrlichs and Holdren.  "Human beings cling jealously to their prerogative to reproduce as they please—and they please to make each new generation larger than the last—yet endless multiplication on a finite planet is impossible.  Most humans aspire to greater material prosperity, but the number of people that can be supported on Earth if everyone is rich is even smaller than if everyone is poor."
 
The specific passage expressing the authors' view that a baby "will ultimately develop into a human being" is on page 235 in chapter 8 of the book, which is titled "Population Limitation."
 
At the time the book was written, the Supreme Court had not yet issued its Roe v. Wade decision, and the passage in question was part of a subsection of the "Population Limitation" chapter that argued for legalized abortion.


 
"To a biologist the question of when life begins for a human child is almost meaningless, since life is continuous and has been since it first began on Earth several billion years ago," wrote the Ehrlichs and Holdren. "The precursors of the egg and sperm cells that create the next generation have been present in the parents from the time they were embryos themselves.  To most biologists, an embryo (unborn child during the first two or three months of development) or a fetus is no more a complete human being than a blueprint is a building. The fetus, given the opportunity to develop properly before birth, and given the essential early socializing experiences and sufficient nourishing food during the crucial early years after birth, will ultimately develop into a human being. Where any of these essential elements is lacking, the resultant individual will be deficient in some respect."
 
In the same paragraph, the authors continue on to note that legal scholars hold the view that a "fetus" is not considered a "person" under the U.S. Constitution until "it is born." But they do not revisit the issue of when exactly the "fetus" would properly be considered a "human being."
 
"From this point of view, a fetus is only a potential human being [italics in original]," wrote the authors. "Historically, the law has dated most rights and privileges from the moment of birth, and legal scholars generally agree that a fetus is not a 'person' within the meaning of the United States Constitution until it is born and living independent of its mother's body."
 
The same section of the book goes on to argue that abortion spares "unwanted children" from "undesirable consequences."
 
"From the standpoint of the terminated fetus, it makes no difference whether the mother had an induced abortion or a spontaneous abortion," write the Ehrlichs and Holdren. "On the other hand, it subsequently makes a great deal of difference to the child if an abortion is denied, and the mother, contrary to her wishes, is forced to devote her body and life to the production and care of the child. In Sweden, studies were made to determine what eventually happened to children born to mothers whose requests for abortions had been turned down. When compared to a matched group of children from similar backgrounds who had been wanted, more than twice as many as these unwanted youngsters grew up in undesirable circumstances (illegitimate, in broken homes, or in institutions), more than twice as many had records of delinquency, or were deemed unfit for military service, almost twice as many had needed psychiatric care, and nearly five times as many had been on public assistance during their teens."
 
"There seems little doubt that the forced bearing of unwanted children has undesirable consequences not only for the children themselves and their families but for society as well, apart from the problems of overpopulation," wrote the authors.
 
The Ehrlichs and Holdren then chide opponents of abortion for condemning future generations to an "overcrowded planet."
 
"Those who oppose abortion often raise the argument that a decision is being made for an unborn person who 'has no say,'" write the authors. "But unthinking actions of the very same people help to commit future unheard generations to misery and early death on an overcrowded planet."
 
Holdren has impeccable academic credentials. He earned his bachelor's degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his doctorate at Stanford.  He worked as a physicist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory before becoming a senior research fellow at California Institute of Technology. He then became a professor at the University of California at Berkeley before joining the faculty at Harvard in 1996, where he was the Teresa and John Heinz Professor of Environmental Policy and director of the Program in Science, Technology and Public Policy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government.
 
In addition to his duties at Harvard, Holdren was director of the Woods Hole Research Center in Falmouth, Mass.
 
His curriculum vitae posted at the Woods Hole Web site lists "Human Ecology" as one of the books he has co-authored or co-edited.
 
"Dr. Holdren," says the Web posting, "is the author of some 300 articles and papers, and he has co-authored and co-edited some 20 books and book-length reports, such as Energy (1971), Human Ecology (1973), Ecoscience (1977), Energy in Transition (1980), Earth and the Human Future (1986), Strategic Defences and the Future of the Arms Race (1987), Building Global Security Through Cooperation (1990), Conversion of Military R&D (1998), and Ending the Energy Stalemate (2004)."
 
The next to last subsection of the chapter on "Population Limitation" in "Human Ecology" is entitled, "Involuntary Fertility Control," which the authors stress is an "unpalatable idea."
 
"The third approach to population control is that of involuntary fertility control," write the Ehrlichs and Holdren. "Several coercive proposals deserve discussion mainly because societies may ultimately have to resort to them unless current trends in birth rates are rapidly reversed by other means."
 
"Compulsory control of family size is an unpalatable idea, but the alternatives may be much more horrifying" the authors state at the end of the subsection. "As those alternatives become clearer to an increasing number of people in the 1970s, we may well find them demanding such control. A far better choice, in our view, is to begin now with milder methods of influencing family size preferences, while ensuring that the means of birth control, including abortion and sterilization, are accessible to every human being on Earth within the shortest possible time.  If effective action is taken promptly, perhaps the need for involuntary or repressive measures can be averted."
 
In February, when Holdren appeared before the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee for a confirmation hearing, he was not asked about his comment in "Human Ecology" that a baby "will ultimately develop into a human being."
 
Sen. David Vitter (R.-La.) did ask him, however, about the population-control ideas he expressed in 1973.
 
"In 1973, you encouraged a, quote, 'decline in fertility to well below replacement,' close quote, in the United States, because, quote, '280 million in 2040 is likely to be too many,' close quote," said Vitter. "What would your number for the right population in the U.S. be today?"
 
"I no longer think it's productive, senator, to focus on the optimum population for the United States," Holdren responded. "I don't think any of us know what the right answer is.  When I wrote those lines in 1973, I was preoccupied with the fact that many problems in the United States appeared to be being made more difficult by the rate of population growth that then prevailed.
 
"I think everyone who studies these matters understands that population growth brings some benefits and some liabilities," Holdren continued. "It's a tough question to determine which will prevail in a given time period. But I think the key thing today is that we need to work to improve the conditions that all of our citizens face economically, environmentally and in other respects.  And we need to aim for something that I have been calling 'sustainable prosperity.'"
 
In a subsequent question, Vitter asked, "Do you think determining optimal population is a proper role of government?"
 
"No, senator, I do not," said Holdren.
 
The White House Press Office did not respond to emailed and telephoned inquiries from CNSNews.com about Holdren's statement in "Human Ecology" that a baby will "ultimately develop into a human being."

Contact: Terence P. Jeffrey
Source: CNSNews.com
Publish Date: July 28, 2009
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Gardasil Causes 400 Percent More Deaths than Other Common Vaccine

Gardasil Causes 400 Percent More Deaths than Other Common Vaccine



A federal report has concluded that the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Gardasil has a 400 percent higher rate of adverse effects than another comparable vaccine, the Menactra anti-meningitis shot.

"It is unusual for there to be such a big discrepancy between two vaccines used in similar populations involving serious and relatively rare life threatening adverse events and autoimmune disorders," the researchers from the federal Vaccine Events Reporting System wrote.

Gardasil, marketed by Merck, prevents againt the strains of HPV believed to be responsible for 70 percent of cervical cancer cases and 90 percent of genital warts cases. GlaxoSmithKline's competing Cervarix vaccine protects against the same cervical cancer-causing strains.

The researchers considered Gardasil and Menactra equivalent for the purposes of comparison because they are given to similar age groups at similar frequencies. Their study concluded that Gardasil was associated with twice as many emergency room visits, four times as many deaths, four times as many heart attacks, seven times as many "disabled" reports and 15 times as many strokes. All reported cases of blood clots and heart attacks associated with Gardasil occurred when the vaccine was given alone, not in conjunction with other drugs.

"Fainting, which has been attributed by doctors and health officials as 'fear' of needles in teenage girls, is reported six times as often … after receipt of Gardasil than Menactra even though Menactra is also given to girls in the same age group," the researchers noted.

The report recommends that the government more thoroughly investigate reports of dangerous side effects from the HPV vaccine, that research be conducted into mechanisms by which the vaccine might cause these effects, and that patients and parents be more adequately warned of the risks before vaccination. It also recommends that Congress investigate how the vaccine was fast-tracked for approval in the absence of safety data on girls younger than 17.

Contact:
David Gutierrez
Source: NaturalNews
Publish Date: July 29, 2009
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Keeping Abortion Out of Health Care

Keeping Abortion Out of Health Care



Evangelical writer Jim Wallis has until now remained strong on the idea that nationalized health care should not force Americans to pay for killing unborn children. But, as May push comes to July shove, Wallis's liberal friends are giving him a "wedgie." Now, he seems to be wavering. He says he hopes that abortion will not become a "wedge issue," one that will prevent us from enacting a sweeping takeover of the health care industry.

Let's unpack that wedge issue comment. It stems from the pens of leftist thinkers like Thomas Frank, author of What's the Matter with Kansas? To such minds, the right to life of one-third of a nation is merely an annoyance, the death of millions of innocent unborn children is a distraction from the real business of politics -- the redistribution of wealth. Lenin said it before Frank and more succinctly: Kto kovo -- who gets?

Abortion is not a wedge issue at all. It is a bridge issue between the parties, between religious and ethnic groups. President Reagan recognized that. He reached out -- successfully -- to Democrats, Republicans, and independents.

Abortion was a major factor in Reagan winning the votes of 27 percent of Democrats. The Reagan Democrats were the key to his astounding political victories. For millions of Catholics and Evangelicals, the party of their parents was the Democratic Party. Reagan echoed FDR's "rendezvous with destiny" and let it be known he had voted for FDR four times.

Abortion was an important factor in Reagan's first landslide in 1980. President Jimmy Carter's refusal to support federal funding of abortion spurred the third-party challenge of Independent John Anderson. Anderson's direct mail appeals to liberal lists pounded away at the theme of extending full federal funding to abortion-on-demand. It was, in fact, the only major policy difference he had with Carter. Anderson's appeal fatally weakened Carter's campaign in several states. Anderson's strong pro-abortion position enabled him to tip into the Reagan column such states as Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, Maine, New York, Vermont, and Wisconsin When Reagan carried some states previously thought to be liberal bastions, the effect was one of shock and awe. Reagan's powerful performance contributed mightily to his success as an extraordinary politician. For millions of blue-collar Democrats, Reagan's values were their values.

Reagan made a point of addressing major religious groups; he spoke to the Southern Baptist Convention in 1980. This was President Carter's own denomination. Reagan told this largest legislative gathering in the world "you can't endorse me, but I can endorse you." The SBC messengers got the message -- and cheered heartily.

As President, Reagan spoke of his opposition to abortion to the Knights of Columbus in 1982 and the National Association of Evangelicals in 1983. He became the only sitting president to publish a book. In 1984, he wrote: Abortion and the Conscience of a Nation. Reagan's historic 1984 landslide was certainly not about abortion alone.

For Reagan's most vocal opponents, abortion was key. Lawrence Lader, the co-founder of NARAL, wrote: "Abortion is central to everything in life and how we want to live it." This explains why advocates for the government takeover of health care are so adamant about including abortion coverage.

Harold Ickes, Jr. is well-known in liberal circles. He's been a fund-raiser for his party and a key backer of Bill and Hillary Clinton for decades. As long ago as 1988, he weighed in in his home state of New York against then-Sen. Al Gore. This was Gore's first run for President and arguably his best shot. Gore came into New York State with 25 percent in the polls -- leading a crowded Democratic pack. But Ickes was outraged by Gore's position against federal funding of abortion. Ickes led a chorus of boos against Gore at a big meeting of liberal donors. Gore's standing in the New York Democratic primary plummeted. He won just 10 percent of the vote and limped out of the Empire State. Gore's campaign collapsed and he turned around on federal funding of abortion.

Why would Ickes' wealthy fellow liberals care so much about federal funding for abortion? After all, New York State, led by then-Gov. Mario Cuomo, would continue to pay for abortions. And Ickes' friends would themselves never need a public subsidy in order to avail themselves of abortion.

With Ickes and his fellow travelers on abortion it is absolutely essential that we cease calling it wrong. Federal funding for abortion is the indispensable piece of the puzzle. They have had abortion-on-demand -- what they always wanted -- ever since Roe. The Supreme Court has only rarely failed to deliver on their radical pro-abortion agenda.But it fell short in Harris v. McRae (1980) -- and then only by the slenderest of margins, 5-4. In that important case, the Court's majority said that the Hyde Amendment forbidding the use of federal Medicaid funds for abortions was constitutional.

For men like Ickes denying federal funding impermissibly taints abortion. There's something wrong with it if the federal government cannot fully and generously pay for it. For them, 48 million abortions are not enough.

Abraham Lincoln went to New York City 128 years before Al Gore went there. He recognized that his opponents would not be satisfied with holding their slaves in bondage, selling their slaves across state lines, and even pursuing their runaway slaves into the free states. So what else could Lincoln's adversaries want? "This, and this only," he famously said at Cooper Union "[We must]: cease to call slavery wrong, and join them in calling it right. And this must be done thoroughly -- done in acts as well as in words. Silence will not be tolerated -- we must place ourselves avowedly with them."

This is why Harold Ickes, Jr. and Barack Obama cannot yield on abortion-as-health care.

Obama sincerely wants to end all the controversy over abortion. He wants to end it by including abortion in his government takeover of health care. Then, he hopes, we will have to cease calling it wrong. Then, it will be officially designated as an indispensable and indisputable part of a mandated federal benefits package.

Obama has never called abortion wrong. He says he wants to reduce abortion -- when he's talking with the Pope -- but most of the time he says he simply wants to reduce the need for abortion. To accomplish this, he wants to open the floodgates of federal funding to Planned Parenthood, the world's largest traffickers in abortion.

This is why Jim Wallis's position is so precarious. For liberal activists, abortion-on-demand, fully funded, constitutionally protected, and no longer called wrong is the sine qua non of any national health care scheme. Jim Wallis will learn this to his sorrow.

(A special thanks to Robert Morrison of the Family Research Council for assistance with this column.)

Contact: Ken Blackwell
Source:
The American Spectator
Publish Date: July 29, 2009
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If People Really Knew the Truth About Abortion

If People Really Knew the Truth About Abortion

If people really knew the whole truth about abortion, how many of them would still support it?



Over forty million babies have been aborted since Roe v. Wade in 1973 and approximately 93% of those occured for social reasons (not medical problems, rape or incest click here).  It is estimated that 43% of all women will have an abortion (at least one) by 45 years of age (www.abortionno.org).  If what pro-lifers are saying is the truth, isn't this abysmal and abhorrent infanticide on a mass scale enough to at least give us pause?  As a friend of mine said, this is a "modern day sacrifice of the most innocent of human beings to a god of comfort and convenience."

Those who are not in Christ are spiritually blinded to His Truth (2 Corinthians 4:3-4). I understand the spiritual side of the issue of abortion. But I also understand that there are medical and biological facts. And if we approach this issue logically, I have a difficult time understanding why people that know the facts through and through, still believe choosing abortion is a moral choice.

What causes us to instinctively celebrate with friends and family when they announce that they are pregnant?  Is it because they are pregnant with a life?

When Does Life Begin?:

The 30-year old question of when life begins is not a religious one, as pro-choice proponents would like to have you believe.  This question can be (and has been) addressed scientifically, and plenty of evidence has shown that life does begin at conception.  It just has not been fully accepted by those unwilling to see the truth.

"You made all the delicate, inner parts of my body and knit me together in my mother's womb.  Thank you for making me so wonderfully complex!  Your workmanship is marvelous–how well I know it.  You watched me as I was being formed in utter seclusion, as I was woven together in the dark of the womb.  You saw me before I was born.  Every day of my life was recorded in your book.  Every moment was laid out before a single day had passed" (Psalm 139:13-16).

Wikipedia says "life is a characteristic of organisms that exhibit certain biological processes such as chemical reactions or other events that results in a transformation."  Time Magazine had a cover story in November of 2002 that addressed the issue of life at conception and detailed biologically what happens to an embryo from conception to birth.  This article states that cell division begins within hours of conception.  Is that life?  National Right to Life reports that a heart beat is formed somewhere close to 22 days after conception and brain waves at 40 days.  Is that life?  And yet, abortions usually are not performed until after those days.

So is it biology that determines life?  We've just seen above how biologically there is life in the cell division, heart beat, and brain waves of an embryo.  Is life determined by viability outside the womb?  Babies outside the womb can die without caretakers and those on respirators are still filled with life.  That is not a valid argument.  What about size?  Is a child that is 5 years old more alive than one a couple of weeks old? Is it intellect?  Is it brain development?  Do you see the flimsiness of these arguments?

Why are Planned Parenthood and other pro-choice activists fighting the Ultrasound Bill, that would "require all expectant mothers considering abortion to be shown ultrasounds and hear the heartbeat of their developing child, which is almost non-existent in abortion clinics."  Are they really interested in reducing abortions as they claim, because the simple act of viewing an ultrasound first has been shown to change 80% of women's mind about abortion (http://www.freemarket.org/Img/November%202008%20Design.pdf).  Are they afraid of this bill because they are not really interested in reducing abortions?  That would then reduce the millions of dollars that are made each year from this "medical" industry.

Why was Scott Peterson, for example, convicted of two counts of murder when he killed his wife Laci and their unborn child, Conner?  The courts have recognized, in such cases, that an unborn child is a life for which we can seek justice.

Right to Choose:

Can we be honest for a minute?  What are pro-choice advocates really asking to choose?  If we establish that life does begin at conception, then aren't they asking to be able to choose one life over another?  Their convenience over a defenseless baby?  Remember, according to statistics cited above, only 7% or less of all the millions of abortions are performed because of the life of the mother or rape and incest.  So let's address the 93%.  Do we have a right to take that baby's innocent life?  If we take a baby's life after he or she is born, then we are put on trial in a court of law for murder.  But "it's our body" women will say.  Do we have a right to "choose" our body over that baby's body–a body with a heartbeat, brain functioning, fingernails, and the ability to feel pain, especially the pain of an abortion?  Do we have that right?

Unwanted/Unplanned Pregnancy:

What if the child is "unwanted" or the pregnancy "unplanned"?  According to the National Council for Adoption, "there are 450 married couples for each child waiting to be adopted, and millions of qualified singles who could foster parent or adopt as well."  Given those statistics, there is no such thing as an unwanted child.  And to turn an unplanned pregnancy into the gift of a lifetime for a couple desperately wanting a child. . .what an incredibly selfless act that will bless others for years and years to come.  Many children secretly labeled unwanted or unplanned, or born into less than ideal circumstances, have gone on to become some of the world's leading figures and incredible defy-the-odds success stories.

Some would ask if an unwanted child then becomes an abused child?  Statistics actually show the opposite.  Child abuse has been on the dramatic rise since abortion on demand became legal in 1973.  Could this have to do with a culture that devalues life and treats it as a disposable commodity?

The Procedures:

This is by far the most disturbing part of this whole debate, and I firmly believe that this is where the greatest myths and lies are perpetuated.  Not all women seeking abortions have ultrasounds beforehand.  Why is that?  We discussed the Ultrasound Bill earlier, but shouldn't all women see the truth about what they are aborting before subjecting their baby (or themselves, for that matter) to this "procedure"?  Planned Parenthood, on their website, admits that an abortion may or may not be preceeded by an ultrasound (and I will not link to them for obvious reasons, but you can find the source if you so desire).  I wonder what lengths Planned Parenthood goes to discourage young, vulnerable women considering abortion from obtaining an ultrasound.

If people really knew the procedures for abortion, and had a chance to not only see their baby with an ultrasound, or see an abortion in progress, would humanity really sit by and advocate for this brutality?  Well, we have a chance to not be in the dark anymore.  If abortion providers and pro-choice advocates are not afraid to support these procedures (even though they are afraid of being honest with the public about them), let's combat this by being bold enough to know them ourselves, and speak out against them.  Check out "The Silent Scream" on YouTube.  It is the video that many abortion providers do not want you to see.  (Warning:  This video is incredibly disturbing and many, if not most, of you will be unable to watch it all the way through).

Let's begin with the most egregious and inhumane of all the abortion procedures, the partial-birth abortion.  This is for women beyond 20 weeks into their pregnancy, and sometimes much later.  Here is what a 20 week old baby looks like.  In this procedure, the doctor pulls the baby out by his or her legs until only the head remains inside the womb.  (If the head isn't "born," does this keep it from being called "murder" in their eyes?)  "Then the abortionist jams scissors into the back of the baby's skull and spreads the tips of the scissors apart to enlarge the wound. After removing the scissors, a suction catheter is inserted into the skull and the baby's brains are sucked out. The collapsed head is then removed from the uterus" (source).

Other procedures include:

    * Suction Aspiration–the baby is essentially cut into pieces and suctioned out with a vacuum; the patient is at risk for infection if all of the body parts and tissues are not removed properly.
    * Dilatation & Curettage–very similar to suction aspiration
    * RU 486–the abortion pill that starves the baby to death, causing the "embryonic baby to be expelled from the uterus."
    * Dilatation & Evacuation–similar to the D&C except the baby is torn limb from limb and the hardened skull is sometimes crushed before removing.
    * Salt Poisoning (aka "Saline Amniocentesis")–some of the baby's amniotic fluid, allowing him or her to live and breathe, is replaced with a concentrated salt solution causing "painful burning and deterioration of the baby's skin" until the baby dies.

The Aftermath:

Despite what many would have you believe, there are side effects to abortion in many cases–physical and emotional.  Bleeding, hemorrhage, laceration of the cervix, and infection are among the most common physical complications, but there are also psychological complications such as guit and regret (nrlc).  Some studies show upwards of 50% of the women experience this guilt, as seen in the many sources below:

    * http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/125515.php
    * http://www.abortionfacts.com/reardon/after_effects_of_abortion.asp
    * http://www.pregnancycenters.org/Fact%20Sheet%20on%20abortion-emotional%20risks.pdf
    * http://www.nrlc.org/abortion/ASMF/asmf13.html
    * http://www.nrlc.org/abortion/ASMF/asmf14.html
    * http://www.thefloridacatholic.org/mia/2009_mia/2009_miaarticles/20090205_mia_shanice.php
    * http://prolifeaction.org/providers/everett.htm  (Carol Everett is a former abortion provider that is now a strong pro-life advocate because of what she saw.  Her story is quite compelling.)

Now What?:

I have nothing but compassion for the majority of women who have had an abortion.  As stated earlier, I believe most of them are deceived, without the truth, and taken advantage of during a vulnerable time.  And knowing that many will feel guilt, regret, or experience significant physical complications from their abortion, I am not in favor of using our pro-life passion to condemn those already feeling the weight of their decision.  God is a God of forgiveness. . .it is not in His nature to deny anyone forgiveness when they seek it and it certainly isn't in His nature to condemn those who are in Christ.  As Christians, we need to remember that this issue, although heated at times, involves children of God (both the babies at risk, the women who are choosing abortion, and even the doctors who provide and perform these abortions).  Our approach must always be loving, and never violent, no matter how passionate the protest.

What we can do is speak up, stand on the Truth of God's Word, and not be passive anymore.  Let's be advocates for these precious children, let's refuse to allow them to be "sacrificed to a god of convenience," and let's get this information out to as many people willing to listen.  Then, knowing that we have the power of the God of the universe behind us, let's pray with fervency that the eyes of those who are blind will be opened and that one day soon we will see an end to these deaths.

I'll close with God's Word on the matter, as well as links to ways that you can further educate yourself on abortion and then make your voice heard.

Support Pro-Life Groups–with your time, talents and treasures; or volunteer with a local crisis pregnancy center.

Contact Your Elected Officials–let them know how important this issue is to you and your family, especially when there is legislation pending that threatens the right to life (such as now with President Obama).  Click here to locate state and local elected officials by zip code.

Get and Stay Informed–with credible websites such as http://www.abortionfacts.com/ and books such as  Why Pro-Life? or  Prolife Answers to Prochoice Arguments, both by Randy Alcorn.  He also has an excellent article on his webpage  entitled, "Fifteen Pro-Life Truths to Speak."

Encourage Your Church to Speak Up and Get Involved

1 Corinthians 6:19-20 "Don't you realize that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, who lives in you and was given to you by God?  You do not belong to yourself, for God bought you with a high price.  So you must honor God with your body."

Proverbs 31:8-9  "Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves; ensure justice for those being crushed.  Yes, speak up for the poor and helpless, and see that they get justice."

Proverbs 24:11-12 "Rescue those who are unjustly sentenced to die; save them as they stagger to their death.  Don't excuse yourself by saying, 'Look, we didn't know'."

Source: Standing on Truth
Publish Date: March 25, 2009
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Tens of Thousands Lobby Congress to Exclude Abortion from Health Care Bills

Tens of Thousands Lobby Congress to Exclude Abortion from Health Care Bills



Americans by the tens of thousands are making it clear to Congress that any health care legislation being considered should exclude abortion as a mandatory health benefit.

In just one week, over 65,000 Americans have joined with the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) by signing a national petition demanding that safeguards be enacted to ensure that abortion is not mandated or subsidized in legislation "as important and future-shaping as healthcare reform."

Meanwhile, the Susan B. Anthony List reported Tuesday that over 100,000 letters from pro-life activists nationwide were sent to Congress urging the exclusion of abortion from any national health care reform effort.

"The opposition to defining abortion services as a mandatory health benefit is clear," commented ACLJ chief counsel Jay Sekulow in a statement Tuesday. "It's time that Congress gets the message: When it comes to mandatory health benefits, Americans don't want their tax dollars – or forced private insurance plans – used to fund abortion."

Currently, two health reform bills are moving in Congress – the Kennedy bill and the House Democratic leadership bill – that contain multiple provisions that would result in federally mandated insurance coverage of on-demand abortion, large federal subsidies for abortion, mandated creation of many new abortion clinics, and nullification of at least some state limitations on abortion.

According to pro-life groups, the provisions – if enacted – would represent the greatest expansion of abortion since the Supreme Court handed down its Roe v. Wade ruling legalizing the procedure in 1973.

"Obviously, we all know what is taxed, what is subsidized, what tax money is used for will expand," explained Tom Minnery, Focus on the Family's vice president of Government and Public Policy, last week during a special teleconference that drew more than 36,000 people.

"If abortions are subsidized, we'll get many thousands more abortions. Many thousands of unborn children will die if abortion is covered in these regulations," he added.

The legislation has especially drawn criticism given past comments by President Obama stating that he wanted to make abortions "rare," and acknowledgments as recent as last week of America's "tradition ... of not financing abortions as part of government-funded health care."

"Americans are urging members of Congress to preserve the real common ground, our long-standing tradition of limiting taxpayer funds for abortion. This is exactly the type of policy the president has sought to achieve, one that stands the test of time, has popular support and appeals to members on both sides of the aisle," said Susan B. Anthony List president Marjorie Dannenfelser. "Yet both the House and Senate versions of health care reform legislation seek to undo this commonsense policy."

Currently, both the House and the Senate are rushing to meet their self-imposed deadline of getting bills through both chambers before leaving Washington for their annual August recess.

Presuming legislation makes it through both chambers, they would still have to be melded together by House and Senate negotiators – a process that plenty of bills never survive – and then passed again in final form by both the House and the Senate. Only then can the president sign it.

Obama has said he wants a bill on his desk in October and has praised House and Senate efforts to expand health care coverage to millions of Americans.

The president has also said the public should become less focused on whether abortion would be covered under federal healthcare.

In an interview with CBS Evening news anchor Katie Couric last Tuesday, Obama said what's important "at this stage, is not trying to micromanage what benefits are covered ... because I think we're still trying to get a framework."

"[M]y main focus is making sure that people have the options of high quality care at the lowest possible price, " he stated, before saying it is not appropriate to get "distracted by the abortion debate at this station."

Obama's top domestic priority is revamping the nation's health care system.

Contact: Eric Young
Source: Christian Post
Publish Date: July 28, 2009
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Pelosi Dodges Question of Whether Government Health-Care Plan Will Fund Abortion

Pelosi Dodges Question of Whether Government Health-Care Plan Will Fund Abortion


House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif. speaks
as President Barack Obama and Rep. George Miller, D-Calif.
look on after the president made remarks on healthcare,
Wednesday, May 13, 2009, outside the Oval Office of
the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)


 While many pro-life Democrats in the House of Representatives say they will not vote for a health care reform bill unless it explicitly prohibits federal funding for abortion through insurance plans, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) has declined to state whether the final legislation should address the issue.
 
On the July 26 edition of CNN's State of the Union, for example, host John King asked Pelosi: "If this bill passes and there's a public option, should that public option cover abortions?"
 
Pelosi said: "That's not--that's not the issue.  The issue is people go out there to--we'll be working on that issue. But that's not the issue. …"
 
King then asked the Speaker about pro-life Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.), who has said he wants language similar to the Hyde Amendment, to restrict taxpayer-funding of abortion, in the health care reform bill.
 
Pelosi said: "Well, I don't know that that – that Bart's language is exactly that. But those – we have people who are working together to help promote health insurance for all Americans, that people will be treated the same in a public option as they are in a private option and that this issue should not be an issue, being respectful of Bart Stupak's concerns and respectful of full reproductive health care for America's women."
 

Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.), co-chairman
of the House Pro-Life Caucus.


Stupak, along with 18 other House Democrats, sent a letter to Pelosi on June 25 stating that they "cannot support any health care reform proposal unless it explicitly excludes abortion from the scope of any government-defined or subsidized health insurance plan."
 
"Without an explicit exclusion, abortion could be included in a government subsidized health care plan under general health care," reads the letter. "The health care reform package produced by Congress will be landmark, and with legislation as important as this, abortion must be addressed clearly in the bill text."
 
In a July 22 interview with CBS News, Stupak noted that the Democratic leadership in the House was blocking all amendments that would prohibit funding of abortion through the health care bill.
 
"We are not even allowed to offer the amendment on the floor," said Stupak. "And there are members who are not pro-life, who are pro-choice, but who think it is wrong of leadership to deny me and others the opportunity to express our judgment on this issue."
 
Stupak said that there were at least 39 House Democrats would vote against health care legislation if it did not explicitly include language prohibiting funding of abortion through insurers.
 
When asked about the pro-life Democrats' letter on July 16, Pelosi told CNSNews.com: "We have a number of letters that are coming in to us. I don't know if they are all saying they are not going to support the bill, but that it might be more difficult for them to support the bill."
 
She further said:  "All of these issues will be worked out through the legislative process."
 
President Barack Obama told CBS's Katie Couric on July 21 that he did not want to "wade into" whether health reform should include coverage for abortion. Stupak told CBS that one cannot avoid the issue because reproductive rights are intrinsic to health care coverage.
 
"You cannot not talk about it," Stupak told CBS News in reference to the president's remark. "The president was elected to make tough decisions, just as I was elected to make tough decisions.  These are tough decisions – you don't run from them."

Source: CNSNews.com
Publish Date: July 29, 2009
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NEWS SHORTS FOR WEDNESDAY

NEWS SHORTS FOR WEDNESDAY

New U.N. Treaty Targets the Disabled Unborn

Obama's much-anticipated pro-United Nations treaty campaign has been launched with a White House ceremony declaring support for the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. But despite the title and language of the treaty, including the affirmation of a "right to life," it is doubtful whether the treaty would protect the rights of unborn children with disabilities, such as those with Down syndrome.
Click here for the full article.



Obama's Stance On Abortion Unacceptable Says Black Pro-Lifer

Pastor Stephen Broder of the Black Pro-Life Movement, says it is unacceptable that President Obama has supported "an [abortion] institution that has targeted [African Americans] for the purposes of depopulation." Broder says that the President's use of the term "reproductive health" is code for abortion on demand within health care reform.
Click here for the full article.


Synchronized Stealth: Obama's 'Department of Death with Dignity'!

The current debate over health care is one of those scenarios that might play well in a science-fiction thriller, but must not be allowed to play out on the backs and over the dead bodies of the uninformed. The intent to create a nationalized health-care system appears more and more like a behind-the-scenes project based on government control over who lives and who dies. I might even suggest that nationalized health care's real purpose is to keep feeding the vultures who prey off the culture of death, instead of keeping Americans healthy.
Click here for the full article.


Abortion - more harm than good

A survey shows increased recognition of the harm of abortion.

The poll conducted by Marist College suggests that over half (53%) of the American public believes abortion does a woman more harm than good. Georgette Forney of Silent No More says that is because more hurting women are opening up to loved ones about their abortion experiences.
Click here for the full article.


Pro-lifers protest healthcare reform in DC

Washington, DC, has seen visits from pro-lifers this week.

Protestors are urging Congress to halt passage of the healthcare reform proposals because they use tax dollars to underwrite abortion. One of the demonstrators has been Norma McCorvey, who was "Roe" in the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion in the U.S. McCorvey and other pro-lifers visited the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-California), but got no further than an aide.
Click here for the full article.


Abortion - more harm than good

A survey shows increased recognition of the harm of abortion.

The poll conducted by Marist College suggests that over half (53%) of the American public believes abortion does a woman more harm than good. Georgette Forney of Silent No More says that is because more hurting women are opening up to loved ones about their abortion experiences.
 
"We're the norm. We are women who have had abortions and then come to a place -- sometimes the day after, sometimes 20 years later, sometimes 30 years later -- when we realize that we didn't just have an abortion like you have your tonsils out, but that the abortion took the life of our child," she contends.
Click here for the full article.

July 28, 2009

Nurse forced to participate in abortion speaks out

Nurse forced to participate in abortion speaks out



 "It felt like a horror film unfolding," said Catherina Cenzon-DeCarlo, the Brooklyn nurse who says she was forced to aid an abortion against her will. Now Cenzon-DeCarlo is speaking out, describing the terror she felt as she was asked to sacrifice her religious convictions for the sake of her job.

Catherina Cenzon-DeCarlo, a devout Catholic, says she has been having nightmares and difficulty sleeping ever since the incident took place on May 24, reports the New York Post.

"I couldn't believe that this could happen," Cenzon-DeCarlo told the Post, describing how she was threatened with charges of insubordination and patient abandonment, which could result in possible loss of a job and nursing license, if she did not participate in the abortion.

Although she was told that it was an emergency and the woman would die if she did not assist, Cenzon-DeCarlo observed that the woman had not received the treatments typically given to a patient whose life is in danger as the hospital claimed it was.

She later found out that the hospital itself had declared the case a "Category II," meaning that it was not immediately life-threatening, and that there was a six-hour window for the operation to take place, allowing ample time for the hospital to find a replacement nurse who did not have moral objections to the procedure.

"I felt violated and betrayed," Cenzon-DeCarlo said.

The nurse had clearly stated that she was unwilling to aid in abortions during a job interview with Mount Sinai. She says she had put her beliefs in writing.

Cenzon-DeCarlo went on to explain that she was later told by two supervisors that she would need to sign a statement agreeing to participate in abortions if she wanted any more overtime shifts. Over the next month, she was designated only one overtime shift, instead of the eight or nine she was usually assigned, reported the New York Post.

Now, the Alliance Defense Fund is representing Cenzon-DeCarlo in a lawsuit that seeks to force Mount Sinai to surrender their federal funding because it has violated a federal rule protecting employees who morally object to controversial procedures.

The lawsuit also seeks damages on behalf of Cenzon-DeCarlo, as well as a restoration of her overtime shifts and a respect for her objections to abortion.

Now, the married mother of a year-old baby hopes the litigation will be enough to restore protection to her religious convictions. "I emigrated to this country in the belief that here religious freedom is sacred," she said. "Doctors and nurses shouldn't be forced to abandon their beliefs and participate in abortion in order to keep their jobs."

Source: CNA
Publish Date: July 28, 2009
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House Follows Obama's Plan to Replace Abstinence Grant with Contraceptive Funding

House Follows Obama's Plan to Replace Abstinence Grant with Contraceptive Funding



The U.S. House of Representatives Friday voted to eliminate $99 million in grant funds that would have bolstered abstinence education in the U.S.  The House's decision to cut the funds and to approve a new grant towards contraceptive-promoting sex education had been sought by President Obama in his budget recommendations earlier this year.

House lawmakers voted 264-153 to approve the annual health and education spending bill that cut funding for Community-Based Abstinence Education.  Also according to the Obama recommendations, Congress in late June chose not to renew the smaller abstinence-education funding initiative known as Title V.

Instead, the Departments of Health and Human Services, Education and Labor money will be directed to a new $114 million initiative to promote contraceptives and explicit sex education.

Democrat Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA) dismissed the abstinence program as "discredited and ineffective," and called the change a "huge, huge step in the right direction to ensure the health of our young teenage girls and boys," according to a Bloomberg report.

The move met with anger from House Republicans, who point to studies showing that the method has positive results.
 
"They've dramatically reduced the number of teenage pregnancies," said Representative Zach Wamp (R-TN), who called the de-funding "clearly a big shift in social policy" and a "big blow to the whole abstinence education movement in this country."

Democrats reportedly argued that abstinence programs could still apply for federal help under a provision in the bill that allots a total of $25 million for programs that "may not yet have rigorous evaluation demonstrating effectiveness" but "use promising or innovative approaches" to prevent teen pregnancy.

Several commentary outlets have pointed to a report by the Center for Disease Control (CDC) released July 16 as proof that President Bush's abstinence programs were ineffective at reducing teen pregnancy.

The report describes a rise in pregnancy rates among teens in 2006-2007 after a steady decline from 1991-2005.  It also tells of a rise in AIDS cases among males 15-24 years during 1997-2006, and a rise in syphilis infections in the same age group.

However, the researchers did not include a critique of any sex education methods as part of the study, nor did they mention abstinence education or otherwise attempt to draw conclusions about the cause of the findings. The CDC merely reported the findings as a "slowing" of "improvements in sexual and reproductive health of teens."

"It is ridiculous to say that a program we nominally invest in has failed when it fails to overcome the most sexualized culture in world history," Kristi Hamrick, a spokeswoman for the conservative group American Values, told the U.K.'s Guardian newspaper.

"Education that emphasizes abstinence as the best option for teens makes up a minuscule part of overall sex education in the United States."

"In every other area of public policy - food, drugs, alcohol - we tell children what is the best choice," she continued.  "It seems very bizarre that the sex education establishment rejects the idea that we should talk to kids about what is best for them. We don't take vodka to drivers education because children will drink and drive."

Contact:
Kathleen Gilbert
Source: LifeSiteNews.com
Publish Date: July 27, 2009
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Study: Turkish Women with Abortions Have Statistically Significant 66% Increase in Breast Cancer Risk / Researchers Likely Underestimated the Risk, Reports Scientist

Study: Turkish Women with Abortions Have Statistically Significant 66% Increase in Breast Cancer Risk / Researchers Likely Underestimated the Risk, Reports Scientist



I guess they didn't get the 'memo' from the U.S. National Cancer Institute (NCI), which declared back in 2003 that the non-existence of the ABC (abortion-breast cancer) link had been 'established'"! - Professor Joel Brind, Breast Cancer Prevention Institute

A retrospective study conducted by Dr. Vahit Ozmen and his colleagues at the Istanbul Medical Faculty and Magee-Women's hospital reported a statistically significant 66% increase in breast cancer risk among women who'd had any abortions.

According to Joel Brind, professor of endocrinology at Baruch College, City University of New York and a director at the Breast Cancer Prevention Institute, Ozmen's team most likely underestimated the breast cancer risk associated with abortion because of a flaw known as "selection bias."

Selection bias would also explain their team's unusual findings - significantly decreased risks for women who use oral contraceptives (OCs) and hormone replacement therapy (HRT). The World Health Organization and the NCI acknowledge that use of combined (estrogen + progestin) OCs and combined HRT increase risk.

Selection bias is a flaw in the study because only hospital or clinic patients were selected as study subjects, and they were therefore not representative of the general population. According to Brind's hypothesis, a disproportionate number of "modern" women were likely represented among the controls, a group more likely to use HRT and OCs, have abortions and visit the hospital often for minor complaints. By contrast, a disproportionate number of "traditional" women were represented among the patients; women less likely to use HRT and OCs, have abortions and visit the hospital (except in cases of serious illness, like breast cancer).

To their credit, Dr. Ozmen et al. did acknowledge the likelihood of selection bias in their study, although they were not specific in attributing any effects on their results to it.

Brind's analysis of Ozmen's research can be read here:
www.abortionbreastcancer.com/download/BrindTurkishStudy.pdf

"Although the NCI, the nation's largest funder of cancer-research, and others have worked feverishly to suppress the ABC link by publishing fraudulent research and even leaning on scientists whose studies have shown risk increases among women who have abortions, honest research occasionally escapes the NCI's purview," declared Karen Malec, president of the Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer.

The Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer is an international women's organization founded to protect the health and save the lives of women by educating and providing information on abortion as a risk factor for breast cancer.

References:

1. Ozmen et al. Breast cancer risk factors in Turkish women - a university hospital-based nested case control study. World J Surg Onc 2009;7:37. Available at: http://wjso.com/content/7/1/37

Contact: Karen Malec
Source: Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer
Publish Date: July 28, 2009
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