Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Hopes NOT Shattered By Bush Veto

On June 20th, President Bush again vetoed legislation that would overturn his embryonic stem cell research policy.  Critics of the President's veto in Nevada say that this removes hope for sufferers.  These critics cannot be taken seriously. 



In an article in the Reno Gazette Journal, Bob Fulkerson of the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada said President Bush, "with the stroke of a pen, struck away the hopes and dreams" of cures for chronic illnesses.  “It's a shame (Bush) is kow-towing to a very small group instead of doing what's best for the American people suffering from chronic ailments.”  Mylan Hawkins, executive director of the Nevada Diabetes Association said, “We are deeply saddened that once again the hope for so many Americans who suffer with incurable conditions has been shattered.”  Planned Parenthood's Allison Gauldin told KOH that thinking that adult stem cells are superior is naive.



It is obvious to anyone with a little knowledge about the research that embryonic stem cell research is not the only hope-if it has any hope at all.  There is plenty of hope beyond embryonic stem cell research and embryonic stem cell research appears to show NO hope at all.  When the president announced his veto a woman who had her bladder replaced with one made from her own stem cells was standing with the president.  This month we learned that diabetic participants in a Brazilian study went off of insulin for long periods of time after being treated with their own stem cells.   Another woman Carol Franz; of Las Vegas was also with the president.  She has beaten cancer twice by using her own adult stem cells.  Who's naive?



You would think that people speaking for sufferers and working for relief and cures for their ailments would know that there are over 70 benefits for human sufferers through non embryonic and adult stem cells.  There are well over 1000 human trials.  There are no human embryonic stem cell benefits or trials.



There is also hope beyond stem cell research.  Two stories have appeared in the last few days that have nothing to do with any kind of stem cell research.  One concerns an experimental Parkinson’s trial using gene therapy.  The other is about a promising Alzheimer’s vaccine which attacks the plaque build up in the brain.  Those possibilities have nothing to do with stem cell research at all. 



It is utterly irresponsible and unconscionable to crush hopes of sufferers by telling them that if the President will not expand their preferred-and for many, their politically preferred-option, that they have no hope. 



We should expect that the people above would know about these things and understand that these are huge reasons for hope.   And critics should think twice before calling pro-life ideas naïve.  What is truly naive saying there is no hope after researchers began taking back their promises this summer.  Instead of cures, they are now talking about models for understanding disease.  That is a far cry from the miraculous cures that are said to be at our fingertips if the president would open the treasury to the special interests of the biotech lobby. 



We may cure many of the diseases that concern us most before embryonic stem cells ever get a human trial.  Embryonic stem cell advocates may not notice.



Rewriting History: The FOCA Findings, HR 1964:1

HR 1964, the Freedom for Partial Birth Abortionists Act… I mean the Freedom of Choice Act is a classic example of rewriting history.  For instance, finding 5 says:



(5) These decisions (Roe v. Wade, Griswold, Doe v. Bolton and etc)have protected the health and lives of women in the United States. Prior to the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973, an estimated 1,200,000 women each year were forced to resort to illegal abortions, despite the risk of unsanitary conditions, incompetent treatment, infection, hemorrhage, disfiguration, and death. Before Roe, it is estimated that thousands of women died annually in the United States as a result of illegal abortions.



Give me a break.  If there were 1.2 million illegal abortions in unsanitary conditions per year before Roe, why did abortion go down to 750,000 abortions the year after Roe when those same doctors who let women in through the back alley were now legal?  There weren’t 1.2 million abortions per year until 1977.  There were probably 100-200,000 abortion a year, legal and illegal, in the years before Roe. 



Were those doctors incompetent back alley butchers?  That depends on when you ask abortion advocates.  That’s the mantra now, but in 1960 Planned Parenthood’s Mary Calderone noted that almost all illegal abortions were performed by licensed physicians in good standing.



What about the 5-10,000 women who were dying every year?  Didn't happen.  Bernard Nathanson one of the founders of NARAL writes,  "How many deaths were we talking about when abortion was illegal? In NARAL, we generally emphasized the frame of the individual case, not the mass statistics, but when we spoke of the latter it was always ‘5,000 to 10,000 deaths a year.’ I confess that I knew the figures were totally false, and I suppose the others did too if they stopped to think of it. But in the ‘morality’ of our revolution, it was a useful figure, widely accepted, so why go out of our way to correct it with honest statistics? The overriding concern was to get the laws eliminated, and anything within reason that had to be done was permissible." B. Nathanson, Aborting America, Doubleday, 1979, p. 193”



A thousand women a year died from abortion in the 40’s, but with the availability of antibiotics and improving trauma care, this was reduced to 39 deaths in 1972, the year before Roe. The findings are nonsense.



Sunday, June 17, 2007

So Much For Choice-Abortion Advocates Are The New Totalitarians

Life News.com is reporting that "Abortion advocates in Congress have introduced new legislation that would force pharmacists across the country to dispense birth control and the morning after pill, which can cause an abortion in some instances. Under the bill, pharmacists who decline to dispense such drugs could be required to pay as much as $500,000 in fines."



So much for choice.  The mantra of choice is a fraud.  They never meant it anyway.  Don't agree with abortion advocates' choice, then you can pay.  $500,000 in fines.  These people are the new totalitarians.



What's next?  If you are a pharmacist and don't fill a prescription for suicide, or a doctor and don't want to do an abortion, or a Catholic heath network and you don't want to provide coverage against your morals-I forgot, they already are forced to do that in California, you will pay fines for that too?



In Nevada, abortion advocates wanted to fine pharmacists $10,000 and take away their licenses.  One pharmacist I spoke with in rural NV was the only pharmacist serving many thousands of people.  He said he'd leave the state and he thought no one would come to take his place, especially with the national pharmacist shortage.  But who cares about the needs of those thousands of Nevadans?  Abortion advocates want what they want when and how they want it.



Friday, June 8, 2007

There's No Defending Partial Birth Abortion

This Nevada LIFE's op-ed on Partial Birth Abortion that was recently published in the Reno Gazette Journal.  It may be available at the RGJ or you can access it at our site.



Opinion-There's No Defending Banned Procedure



May 18, 2007



In the weeks since the partial birth abortion decision, it's clear that abortion proponents are sticking to their game plan: don't say anything about the unborn child. The reason is clear: partial birth abortions are so revolting that even a clinical description causes us to shudder.



In a partial birth abortion, the unborn child is pulled feet first from the womb until only his head is left inside. The abortionist punctures the skull with scissors, inserts a tube and sucks the brains out.



Nurse Brenda Shafer's testimony of the partial birth abortion she witnessed was cited by the court. "The baby's little fingers were clasping and unclasping, and his feet were kicking. Then the doctor stuck the scissors through the back of his head, and the baby's arms jerked out in a flinch, a startle reaction, like a baby does when he thinks that he might fall. The doctor opened up the scissors, stuck a high-powered suction tube into the opening and sucked the baby's brains out."



How can anyone defend a procedure where a doctor kills a child dangling from the womb inches from birth?



That question led Congress to act. Congress argued that "implicitly approving such a brutal and inhumane procedure by choosing not to prohibit it will further coarsen society to the humanity of not only newborns, but all vulnerable and innocent human life, making it increasingly difficult to protect such life." And "partial-birth abortion " confuses the medical, legal and ethical duties of physicians to preserve and promote life, as the physician acts directly against the physical life of a child, whom he or she had just delivered, all but the head, out of the womb, in order to end that life."



The court agreed that a description of the procedure "demonstrates the rationale" for the ban and that Congress can use its powers "to promote respect for life, including life of the unborn." Substantial majorities, pro-life and pro-choice, agree.



Abortion advocates usually respond that partial birth abortions happen as a result of "wanted pregnancies" going horribly wrong. But partial birth abortionists say that almost all partial birth abortions are performed for women whose unborn child poses no risk to her physical well-being.



Justice Ginsburg's dissent argued, among other things, that women's "ability to realize their full potential, the Court recognized, is intimately connected to 'their ability to control their reproductive lives.' ... Thus, legal challenges ... center on a woman's autonomy to determine her life's course, and thus to enjoy equal citizenship stature." The "Casey Court described the centrality of 'the decision whether to bear ... a child,' to a woman's 'dignity and autonomy,' her 'personhood' and 'destiny,' her 'conception of ... her place in society.'"



Here Ginsburg makes the leading abortion feminist argument that partial birth abortion and abortion are necessary to fulfill a woman's potential and to achieve or protect her equal standing in society. That has to be news to most women. Ginsburg's argument is dangerous because it says that equality is not a property inherent to women. It also says that children are obstacles and expendable in the pursuit of these ends.



The gruesomeness of partial birth abortion and the arguments for it are the reasons large majorities of Americans oppose it. It's about time the court got something right on abortion.



Tuesday, April 24, 2007

No One Is Afraid Of The Freedom Of Choice ACT

In the wake of last week's partial birth abortion decision, NARAL, Planned Parenthood and others are promoting the reintroduction of the Freedom Of Choice Act (FOCA).  The act would write Roe v. Wade into law.



Last time they tried this it was 1993 or 1994.  Bill Clinton was president and he had majorities in both houses of Congress.  Speaker Tom Foley (D-WA) said that if the Court tampered with Roe, the Congress would write Roe into law through FOCA.



By the way, what's Tom Foley doing now.  Just after his announcement that he was going to pass FOCA his party was swept from power and Foley was the first Speaker to ever lose an election.   FOCA is not going to make it.  Go ahead, make our day. 



Note to pro-lifers, elections have consequences.  If it wasn't for the election of president Bush and a pro-life congress, there would be no partial birth abortion ban and no new Supreme Court members to uphold it.  If it were not for the election of a pro-abortion party to congress this year, we would not be facing all of these nutty pro-abortion bills.  Elections have consequences. 



Monday, April 16, 2007

The Bush Abortion Ban?

Planned Parenthood is calling the Partial Birth Abortion ban the "Bush Abortion Ban."   Partial birth abortion is barbaric and kills the unborn during delivery by poking a hole in the unborn's head and sucking his brains out.  Leave it to Planned Parenthood to defend against that.  Planned Parenthood and the abortion establishment used to say that there were hardly and abortion bans.  Now they are saying that it's an abortion ban as if it would ban abortion everywhere.



What kind of interests does someone have where they would feel compelled to defend a brain suction abortion?



Sunday, April 1, 2007

British team grows human heart valve from stem cells

The non-embryonic stem/adult stem cell successes and breakthroughs keep pouring in.  Read about this breakthrough in the UK.  Apparently, scientists have created heart valves from bone marrow blood cells.  This has been reported previously with amniotic fluid cells.  If they can make it work, it will be huge.



It will be interesting to see if US media reports this.  I wonder if there will ever be so many ASC successes/breakthroughs that one day they will report studies like this without this line, "but experts mean it doesn't mean that we should stop embryonic stem cell research.  Everyone (with a brain) knows that embryonic stem cells can become any kind of cell."  I'm not counting on it.