Posted on 11/15/2003 10:06:14 AM PST by MHGinTN
Edited on 11/16/2003 11:51:49 AM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
At the turn of the tumultuous twentieth century, a distinguished elderly journalist was guest speaker at a Washington Press Club luncheon for journalism students. Jack Anderson asked of his youthful audience, who rules America; who is the sovereign of this nation? Not surprisingly, his resounding answer was, We The People.
We citizens of America are the sovereigns of this nation, though the way some elected representatives conduct themselves while in office you might be hard pressed to convince them of that truth.
We The People elect representatives at the state and federal level whom we task with doing our business when things are running according to the founders designs, that is. It is unsettling to realize that events and discoveries at this time in our nations history tend to separate us from the decision making process.
If We The People are to be more in charge, we must have a better grasp of that which our elected representatives are addressing. Case in point: as this is being written, in the Fall of 2003, there are two bills currently developing in the United States Senate that address human cloning; one bill would ban all human cloning, while the other bill would ban human reproductive cloning yet make it legal to do human cloning for research purposes. But all human cloning is reproductive, at the start, else the desired parts of the clone wouldnt match the tissues of the parent of the clone.
To understand the differences in cloning bills requires some basic understanding of the biological processes. [Differences are claimed between reproductive cloning and what is loosely called research cloningsomeone tried to call it therapeutic cloning, but that didnt hide the tissue harvesting future reality enough for comfort. Really, it is the end use for the clone that determines the difference in characterization just ask Senator Orrin Hatch, hell tell you theres a difference!]
The biological information required to understand cloning in general is not so abstract that the average citizen cannot grasp it, if the basics are presented in clear terms and facts are not hidden via technical flourishes by scientists overly proud of their accomplishments those scientists who ignore all but their own moral perspective.
Some scientists will assert that they take no moral position. But theyre as human as any other member of human society, so they cant be as unbiased as they would have us believe. Humanity ought to have learned that lesson given the history of chem-bio weaponry baggage nations have carried into the twenty-first century. Not until decades after World War II does the public finally discover the extent to which Japan, Germany, Russia, and the United States built up stockpiles of pestilence and poisons. Nearly a half a century after the fact, the public learns the extent to which researchers in Japanese and German chem-bio weaponry were employed after WW II, by the Soviet Union and the United States, to further their stockpiles of horrific weapons during the Cold War. Those weapons programs and the pestilence produced by them still loom as threat to life on earth, as a new source of maniacal totalitarianism arises in the Middle East to spread around the world!
A bill making it legal to do research cloning will set a dangerous precedent, at least dangerous to a segment of the populace and, many believe, humanity in general. To explain these technological achievements in accessible language is a formidable task, but not impossible, if someone will just do it.
Ask yourself, If our Senators were debating whether to knowingly fund research into a doomsday bomb that if ignited would deplete all the oxygen on the planet, would We The People approve of that? Doubtful, and it is not too great an exaggeration to assert that human cloning holds nearly as dangerous a potential for the human speciesover timeas the outlandish example just offered.
We The People have little or no idea what are the details of cloning, details of the different bills, and details of future impact upon our civilization. Why? Because the facts have been kept in the abstract by scientists wanting to do the research and elected representatives in agreement with those scientists.
There is vast wealth to be gained by those who learn to harness the science, as long as the people dont object to the methodologies. But how can the people object if they dont understand what it is that the scientists want to do? And are there reasonable alternate ways to reach the medical goals?
Gradual application of technologies not well understood by the voting populace leads down slippery slopes that arrive at horrific ends The People would likely avoid, if we but understood the real destiny of the slippery slopes. Case in point, the abortion debate in America, now more than thirty years tied in a Gordian knot, tells us that we ought to get our facts straight and have open, honest debates, before small interest groups impose their will, their morality, their ethic upon the entire nation.
The court case, Roe v Wade, circa 1973, led to the horrors of partial birth fetacide in the name of a womans right to choose, circa 2003. Did anyone ask American voters in 1972 whether they would authorize planned parental partial-birth fetacide of healthy, sensing children as a means for a woman or couple to avoid the responsibilities of an already alive baby conceived via behavior willingly engaged in? No, but that horrific reality is where we are, debating in the Fall of 2003 whether to ban a grizzly way of killing alive unborn children, debating whether to keep legal planned parental partial-birth infanticide in the name of ghostly application of court rulings that came before the Roe decision and with the Roe decision accelerated our descent along the slippery slope of killing alive unborn children!
[Once individual humanity before birth is truly understood, it is no exaggeration to characterize partial birth fetacide as partial birth infanticide. Fetal ability to live outside the womb now reaches back to 22 weeks from conception (40 weeks is normal term to birth), and partial birth abortion is the most used method for killing the unborn from about week 18 all the way to birth. Those unborn babies are being killed in the name of a womans right to choose infanticide rather than have the already alive child continue their own individual lifetime.]
Did the 1973 court decision that de-legitimized state abortion laws nation-wide actually accomplish the dehumanization of the alive, viable unborn? No, the Roe decision was but one large slide along an already slippery slope, where personal liberty and personal pursuit of happiness were trumping personal right to life for the vulnerable. The nearly unopposed litany of lies from those demanding federal abortion legalization is why the slippery slope got steeper and more perilous with the Roe decision by the Supreme Court. It was difficult to imagine in 1973 that lawyers and physicians would tell lies to the Supreme Court, and that the Court would allow the lies to carry the day! A close reading of History reveals that is exactly what brought about the legalization of abortion on demand in America more than three decades ago.
This nation need not take a slide along a new slippery slope that includes in vitro fertilization and embryonic stem cell harvesting, and foretells human cloning for body parts. But to avoid the slide, We The People must have basic facts with which to discuss the honest perils and with which to discern the half-truths and outright lies already sullying the national discussion.
Somehow, We The People will have to make up our individual minds whether we want certain lines of research to proceedwith our blessing, or whether we will demand that our elected representatives ban certain manipulation with the earliest manifestations of human lives.
{ To illustrate the importance of knowing more about cloning: in February 2002, scientists at Texas A&M University reported successful cloning of a pet tabby cat. Cats are in the category of animals called mammals, the category in which we humans are also placed. But the clone cat was not visually an exact duplicate of the parent cat, even after the many, many failed attempts to duplicate the parent cat. Soon after announcing their success, the University entered into a partnership with a biotech firm, Genetic Savings and Clone (catchy name that), a company that plans to clone pets for their loving owners.}
The abortion issue has progressed beyond the slippery slope in just the 3 short years since that question was asked of Al Gore. Those who can justify the abortion of a child just seconds prior to its birth, have no problem in supporting the abortion of a child after its birth. This is evidenced by the growing number of young teens who deliver a viable baby at home and shove it inside a plastic garbage bag or wrap it in a towel and toss it under the bed to die. Why stop there? There are already murmurings in certain European countries that would allow a mother to destroy her child up to 3 months after birth.
If society deems it okay to terminate the life of its most defenseless babies, then surely it is okay to extinguish the life of the elderly or the incapacitated or the handicapped. This is like a snowball rolling down a mountain.
In the year 2000, Jill Stanek, a nurse who practiced at Chicago's Oak Lawn Hospital, appeared on Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor last Friday and described the practice.
"Many times an infant enters the world alive, only to be left to die--without any medical assistance or intervention in this abortion procedure."
The measure passed in the midst of this election year 380-15. The fifteen who voted against recognizing infants who are born alive during abortion procedures included 13 Democrats, (Representatives Julia [IN] Carson, John Dingell [MI] Chaka Fattah, [PA], Charles Gonzalez [TX], Alcee Hastings [Fl], Jesse L. Jackson [IL], Sheila Jackson-Lee [TX], Nita Lowey [NY], Carolyn Maloney [NY], Cynthia McKinney [GA], Nydia Valazquez [NY], Maxine Waters [CA], and Melvin Watt, [NC]) and two Republicans, Nancy Johnson [CT] and Benjamin Gilman [NY]. However, that vote apparently does not reflect the real strength of the vote of those who believe babies inadvertently born alive during an abortion procedure. New York's Jerry Nadler said during the debate on the bill:
"Speaker, I believe the only real purpose of this bill is to trap the pro-choice Members into voting against it so that they can slander us and slander the pro-choice movement as being in favor of infanticide. That is why I voted for the bill in the committee. Mr. Speaker, that is why I voted in the committee in favor of the bill. That is why I will vote again and urge my colleagues to vote in favor of the bill so we do not step into this trap."
In effect Roe v Wade made unborn babies the property of their mothers. Whether or not the mother disposed of the unborn child was totally up to her discretion. When the partial-birth abortion procedure was made known five years ago, there was an obvious reason why it developed in America and NOWHERE else. It was devised not as a medical procedure, but as a political procedure to get around Roe v Wade. The original Roe v Wade decision in 1973, using pages of discussion on the issue of when life begins, and the point in pregnancy when the unborn is "viable" created three "classes" of unborn:
(a) For the stage prior to approximately the end of the first trimester, the abortion decision and its effectuation must be left to the medical judgment of the pregnant woman's attending physician.
(b) For the stage subsequent to approximately the end of the first trimester, the State, in promoting its interest in the health of the mother, may, if it chooses, regulate the abortion procedure in ways that are reasonably related to maternal health.
(c) For the stage subsequent to viability the State, in promoting its interest in the potentiality of human life, may, if it chooses, regulate, and even proscribe, abortion except where necessary, in appropriate medical judgment, for the preservation of the life or health of the mother.
"During the Oct. 20, 1999, debate Barbara Boxer, Democrat of California, joined the caucus:
"Santorum: 'You agree, once a child is born, separated from the mother, that that child is protected by the Constitution and cannot be killed. Do you agree with that?'
"Boxer: 'I think when you bring your baby home...'
"She said more. What she would not say was 'yes.'"
We have now reached a point in our culture where one can be arrested for plowing up an endangered species - a wild morning glory or a kangaroo rat, but can be applauded for one's wisdom in killing one's own unborn child, and even one's newborn - especially if that child is designated as "handicapped" and a possible burden.
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