An article in yesterday's Boston Globe entitled, "The problem with an almost-perfect genetic world," included this:
Supporters of abortion are especially wary of wading into a discussion over the ethics of prenatal testing, lest they be seen as playing into the opposing side in the fraught national debate over abortion rights.
The topic was a November 10 announcement in The New England Journal of Medicine of reliable prenatal screening for handicaps that can be conducted earlier in the pregnancy.
This means moms will be able to abort defective babies sooner rather than later, which is good. (Although we're told abortions are safer than eating an ice cream cone, early abortions must be 110% safe as opposed to 100% later.)
The fact that pro-aborts don't want to talk about this surprises me and is useful information. After all, "fetal anomalies" is one of the big four reasons pro-aborts use to keep abortion on demand legal (the other three being rape/incest and health and life of the mother).
So let's talk about it. On page two are compelling points to ponder, many surprisingly brought forth in the BG piece.
[Photo courtesy of the Boston Globe.]
Hat tip: Dr. Joseph and Mark Pickup
Comments:
I have no problem with women using prenatal testing in their decision to gestate or abort. I almost did when I received a false positive for downs. Luckily, they ran the numbers again and everything turned out okay.
I find nothing wrong with genetic testing and the abortion of a fetus with Down Syndrome.
Posted by: Lynn at November 21, 2005 6:54 PMWhy is there all this talk about "tolerance" and "diversity," but as soon as we know that a child will be different, it's considered a reason to abort? Where is our respect for diversity, when we consider people whose minds work differently, or who aren't as healthy, or whose bodies are different, ought to be put to death in-utero so the rest of us don't have to share our world with them?
Posted by: Christina at November 22, 2005 12:58 PMNo, so the woman will not be saddled with raising a child that will never grow up for the rest of her life.
Posted by: FOM at November 22, 2005 1:03 PMI would like to get on Jill Stanek e-mail list.
Thank you,
Georgie Scott
gscott@tacnet.missouri.org
If you think that aborting a child just because he or she happens to carry an extra chromosome is acceptable then you are ignorant of the facts. Don't kill before you learn the complete truth. Seek the potential that every child has before making such a harsh judgment on God's creation. No one on this earth is perfect. And my child who has DS has just as much and more to offer this world than people who have a false sense of what is "normal". Test numbers don't equate to equal love for a child.
Posted by: Donna at April 1, 2006 10:45 AM
