Posted by
Brett K on Wednesday, February 20, 2008 12:09:00 AM
Just the other night, a friend of my roommate (a girl) came in
discussing how irritated she was that a guy had the nerve to call
abortion "infanticide." She claims that infanticide is the killing of
an infant, which abortion is not. It is the killing of a "fetus," which
apparently is as worthy of life as the cockroach in your basement.
Because it is 9 months away from becoming a human, it is therefore not
worthy of life.
There were some horrific stories in the news
over the past year of mothers drowning their babies after their birth
or killing them in a microwave. No one challenges the disgust and
horror of these (what no one hesitates to call) murders. But what is so
different between these and abortions?
True, many abortions
occur while the baby is in the womb, while these were certainly not.
But what is so magical about the moment the head crowns? Why is it not
a human until that very instant?
I'll quickly mention
partial-birth abortions. These make up a very small percentage of
abortions, but are identical to these murders. The baby's head emerges
from the womb, and its throat is then slit. A ban on this procedure was
vetoed by Bill Clinton in the 1990s, a move supported by many prominent
Democrats. How is this better than putting your freshly born baby in
the microwave? I suppose the clean room, white lab coat, and scalpel
somehow make it "decent."
Life is more than just when the blood
starts to flow, when the brain is big enough to maintain conscious
thought, when the group of cells "looks" human, or even when pain can
be felt. This group of cells is going to become a human being. In 9
months, it will be crying in its parents' arms. It will grow up to
think, talk, cry, and be one of us. Who is some selfish mother to deny
this human being that right?
It is not about small government
vs. big government. As a conservative, I don't want the government
interfering in my life. But this is about one of the fundamental rights
spoken of in the Declaration of Independence and protected explicitly
by the Constitution: Every human being in the United States has the
right to live. It is not the
mother's place to decide whether or not this is true; the right is
given to us by God. And it is protected by this great government.
By
performing an abortion even in the first trimester, you are denying a
human being the right to exist. Maybe this bunch of cells can't think,
see, or feel; but in time, it will.
A
friend of mine, pro-abortion of course, referred to an unborn baby as a
"tumor." Granted, it does have the same qualities of a tumor: a bunch
of cells that use the resources of a host. But the difference between
it and cancer is that it won't be a tumor forever. It will grow into a
person.
This philosophy also extends to embryonic stem cells.
Not only do they have no proven scientific applications (compared to
over 73 by adult stem cells that do not require embryos), but by
"harvesting" an embryo you prevent its ability to grow into a human.
Life
is trying to begin. A human being is forming. Whether it is or not at
the moment of the abortion is irrelevant; as soon as the sperm meets
the egg, that zygote is destined to be a person. And denying it that
chance to live and grow is wrong.