Posted on 01/14/2014 12:29:26 PM PST by Morgana
Today we have a tragic pregnancy situation out of Fort Worth, Texas. At Life News, Rachel Cox summarizes:
In November, Erick Munozs wife Marlise, who was 14 weeks pregnant, suffered a blood clot and is still in the hospital hooked up to machines. Doctors say she is brain dead and will never recover. Erick Munoz believes the baby will have defects and the babys life wont be worth living. Her husband says his wife clearly stated she never wanted to be on life support. Erick Munoz wants to honor his wifes wishes and remove her from life support which would kill her and their unborn baby. However, Texas law prevents the removal of a pregnant woman from life support and Erick Munoz is publicly voicing his opposition.
Doctors plan to assess the babys viability and decide whether to attempt a cesarean section at 24 weeks.
As Newsbusters Katie Yoder documents, pro-aborts far and wide are seething with rage over this. But curiously, thats despite the fact that almost none of their token justifications are present. Delivery will no longer affect Marlises well-being, and as Cox points out, whatever end-of-life wishes she had told Erick almost certainly didnt account for the remote possibility that ending her life would also end her son or daughters, in what is presumably a desired pregnancy.
That means a man is presuming to make a womans reproductive decision for herwith the full backing of the supposed reproductive rights champions. Apparently the outcome of a dead baby is all that matters.
At RH Reality Check, Katherine Taylor and Lynn Paltrow tie themselves into logic pretzels to argue that the case is dehumanizing:
Rather than archaic sexist laws left on the books from earlier times, the pregnancy exclusions are of a recent vintage. They establish that while men are free to determine what will happen to them if they become sick and unable to communicate their health-care wishes, women who may become pregnant are not free to plan the course of their health care, lives, and deaths.
*Sigh* for the millionth time, the sexes arent unequal; the situations are. Women are perfectly free to determine what will happen to them if they become sick and unable to communicate their health-care wishes in all cases except those where making that determination would kill someone else.
For that reason, pregnancy is fundamentally incomparable to a non-pregnant persons wishes to have his or her own feeding tube removed. (And in reality, the principle behind pregnancy exclusion laws very well could apply to menfor instance, whether one conjoined twin exercising his rights would infringe on the rights of his brother.)
Im sorry guys cant get pregnant, but your quarrel is with biology, not some patriarchal boogeyman. The fact that liberals have devolved feminism into a perpetual temper tantrum about natures unequal distribution of reproductive processes isnt a good enough reason to ignore the unborn life at stake.
It is hard to imagine a more absolute denial of a womans personhood than depriving her of the right to decide her own future, and then literally using her body without permissionpossibly for weeks or monthsas an object for a fetus to grow in.
Oops. So desperate are the authors to hijack pro-life language for themselves that theyve unwittingly conceded the legitimacy of some of our own principles.
Whether you consider Marlise Munoz dead probably depends on whether you believe her soul passed on with brain death or shes still in there until the rest dies, but the pro-aborts are clearly going by the former (or a secular equivalent), so lets run with it. Shes dead; she has no more earthly consciousness, sentience, pain sensitivity, desires, welfare, or future. What she would not have wanted can only possibly matter if she has or had some intrinsic worth completely unrelated to those qualitiesa sanctity of her life as a human being.
If thats the case, then an unborn baby, from his or her earliest moments of existence, must also warrant intrinsic respect regardless of those qualities. A zygote cant think, feel, or want, but he or she is a living human being with an entire future ahead. If anything, shouldnt a full life waiting to be had outweigh a life that is fully over?
And clearly, these laws interfere with the practice of medicine, substituting legislators values for what should be decisions made by pregnant patients and their families in consultation with physicians.
So I take it that means we should repeal ObamaCare, then? (Sorry. I know thats off-topic. But hey, low-hanging fruit.)
When you think about it, its only natural that pro-aborts accidentally make the pro-life case from time to time. There are no great morals to be protected or enlightenment to be learned by championing a cause of pure selfishness, so when looking for actual principles to wrap it in, there are only so many places to look.
I’ve read plenty of history.
That comment makes no sense whatsoever.
Do you also assert that the husband has the legal right to abandon the baby and leave it to die of hunger/dehydration should it be born alive?
Gibberish.
America's Founders had no such short-term view of life, of civilization's struggles for individual liberty, or of the great questions of life and its meaning.
They had studied the writings of the world's greatest thinkers and the history of nations. Their great passion was for liberty and of how to achieve and preserve it in this new land on behalf of future generations.
The LifeNews discussion of Katherine Taylor and Lynn Paltrow's RH Reality Check pretzel-twisting of logic in order to justify their Pro Choice views regarding the case in question is a good example of such "provinciality."
A longer view of history, of future benefits of the technology which can sustain the life of a child in the early weeks of a pregnancy even if the mother's life ends, and of what the future might hold for all of humanity were such technological advances utilized in this case--all such discussions are ruled out by the single-issue standard being employed by Taylor and Paltrow.
So consumed by what might be considered a false argument favoring the current right-to-choose vs. right-to-life political forces that they are "imprisoned by their own little present moments," these two never even consider what is surely the unknown potential future benefit of logical consideration of the pros and cons associated with allowing the hospital's position to play itself out.
Were they able to project their thinking into an "ideas-have-consequences" mode, allowing for all possible outcomes, perhaps they could envision a positive future for the family and for that which they choose to call the "fetus."
For instance, could those who choose to argue the woman's "choice" side see into the future 40 years, how would their argument change if, perchance, they could project themselves into the future and view a documentary featuring a story about an outstanding researcher who just announced a revolutionary cure for cancer, along with an accompanying story detailing the researcher's past, which included an extraordinary birth circumstance where his mother had died several weeks before he was delivered successfully?
Warped
Thanks Morgana.
There’s a line in the story about the husband being afraid the baby will have defects and its life not be worth living. (I don’t know what that would be from. Perhaps from a lack of oxygen during his wife’s medical emergency.)
It sounds to me as though he doesn’t want to risk being saddled with a “defective” baby. Even though there are many people who would step up to the plate and adopt it no matter what, especially since this story has gotten so much press. But if he abandons a sick baby, he’ll catch a lot of sh!t for that, whereas killing it by insisting on carrying out his wife’s theoretical wishes will get him sympathy instead.
And btw . . . a possible C-section at 24 weeks???? That’s pretty damned early. I would think the hospital would want to let it go as long as possible.
Lynn M. Paltrow, JD, Executive Director, founded National Advocates for Pregnant Women in 2001. Ms. Paltrow is a graduate of Cornell University and New York University School of Law. She has worked on numerous cases challenging restrictions on the right to choose abortion as well cases opposing the prosecution and punishment of pregnant women seeking to continue their pregnancies to term. Ms. Paltrow has served as a senior staff attorney at the ACLU's Reproductive Freedom Project, as Director of Special Litigation at the Center for Reproductive Law and Policy, and as Vice President for Public Affairs for Planned Parenthood of New York City. Ms. Paltrow conceived of and filed the first affirmative federal civil rights challenge to a hospital policy of searching pregnant women for evidence of drug use and turning that information over to the police. In the case of Ferguson et. al., v. City of Charleston et. al., the United States Supreme Court agreed that such a policy violates the 4th amendment's protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.
Katherine Taylor is the author of the novel Rules For Saying Goodbye
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