Posted on 05/20/2002 2:51:41 PM PDT by dubyajames
I've often wondered the exact same thing about religionists. We obviously think a lot alike.
That is the most tortured reading of the Constitution's view of life I could ever imagine.
I guess if one doesn't believe in a creator, that part of the statement is moot to them, so instead we have our lives GIVEN to us by a piece of paper. Incredible.
You can begin to see what a libertarian US would look like, can't you? It certainly make you see why some were uncomfortable with the concept of a "Bill of Rights" in the first place.
He says he doesn't have a clue when this happens and then he proceeds to tell us exactly when it doesn't happen.
I've often wondered of the atheist libertarians who mouth the words "unalienable rights," what are they thinking when those words roll through their brains? How can any clump of mere biological matter birthed by mindless, directionless, purposeless chaos claim to have ANY rights?
Viewed honestly from the cramped, unbreathing, dead perspective of the atheist libertarian, "unalienable rights" is a totally absurd and illogical concept.
Cal Thomas
Bringing a very good thing to light
General Electric, which traces its history to 1878 when Thomas Edison established the Edison Electric Light Company, has been responsible for enhancing the quality of human life in many ways.
It adds to that tradition with a new ultrasound device that allows doctors and parents to look inside the womb of a pregnant woman and see the image of a baby in "real-time 4D" rather than the more difficult to read traditional "2D" image.
GE is running a TV commercial that's more exciting to watch than most programs. It shows the face of a woman as she reacts to seeing her baby for the first time. We also see her husband, an unusual twist on TV. If this scene doesn't touch you in the deepest recesses of your heart, the device could determine whether you have a heart. There's also a Web site where the commercial can be viewed (www.gemedicalsystems.com/rad/us/4d/index.html). Over the song, "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face," an announcer says, "When you see your baby for the first time on the new GE 4D Ultrasound system, it really is a miracle."
A press release from GE touts the medical benefits expected to come from the device because doctors will be able to see the developing child more clearly, enabling them to better diagnose potential problems. But this device may have some unintended consequences in the cultural battle over the meaning and value of human life.
The clarity of the image resembles a high quality photograph. Everyone who sees such a picture will find it extremely difficult to regard the image as anything but that of a baby; not a "fetus," not a "product of conception," not disembodied tissue. The hands move. So does the head. Does the baby's status change because the parents love him or her and want their child to be delivered safely so they can hold in their arms what the mother now holds in her womb? Or does the child inherit an intrinsic right to life separate from what politicians, lawyers, judges and even the woman herself might think?
This, of course, is the great debate. Which side we come down on has implications and applications not only for abortion, but in relation to end-of-life issues and in-between ones, like cloning.
In more than 30 years of speaking to pregnancy help centers, I've met hundreds of women who've had abortions. Virtually all have told me that if they'd seen a picture of their baby, they would have made a different choice. They've also told me that many abortion clinics turn sonogram machines in such a way that the mother is prevented from seeing her baby's image on the screen.
In an age when federal law mandates labels on cans, bottles and cars and truth-in-lending information at banks, why should women be denied information when it comes to a far more important choice about another human life? Few people regret choosing one car over another, or a can of string beans over a can of corn. But many women with whom I've spoken profoundly regret deciding to have an abortion and say their choice would have been different had they seen the person most directly affected by the procedure.
In a press release, GE quotes Michelle Tooms, a patient from Mansfield, Texas, who could see her baby on the GE 4D machine: "On other ultrasound systems, my doctor pointed to my baby's anatomy on the monitor and I couldn't understand what the doctor was trying to explain. With GE's 4D ultrasound, the quality was amazing. I even think I saw the baby smile. The images made me feel close to her." (italics mine). GE publicity does not suggest the Ultrasound 4D be used in the war against abortion, yet it will be and should be. At $120,000, the machine is expensive, but every pregnancy help center should have one and the law should require every pregnant woman seeking an abortion to view this image of her baby. It might even make her smile and decide to bring another "good thing" to life. questions?
What is a person?
What is a human?The answer to that question is continually expanding.
Different races were seen as somehow less than human;
Indeed, anyone who was different.The Elephant Man was seen as somehow sub-human.
He could be ridiculed, abused, placed on display at carnivals.People who were born without all the "right" proportions,
Again, somehow less than human.Left-handed people, treated as objects of suspicion,
Considered as "sinister."
They offer "left-handed compliments."An unborn child,
Called a "parasitic lump of cells,"
A "non-person."We can see the development of an expanding awareness,
Of a more and more inclusive definition of humanity,
In the eyes of the world,
Coming to view people less and less with superstition.
This development comes from God,
Directing His Church to bring Gospel-Light to the world,
To ALL humanity.
p.s. - Don't trust Righty.
Please read. If you still believe everything you've put forth after reading this, well, I won't say anything.
Paying close attention to RE:21&99.
Um, the thread was deleted. Do you still want us to consider an essay or article deemed unworthy by the owner?
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