by
Eileen Roberts
October 20, 2005
On Nov. 30, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in Ayotte v.
Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, a case that will determine
whether states can continue to require that a parent be notified before
an abortion is performed on a minor daughter.
It
is imperative that we pray for the decisions the Supreme Court will
be making on this case. I've been working since 1987 to help restore
the rights of parents to be involved with their daughters' abortion
decision. I've testified throughout the country in favor of parental
notification and consent legislation, as well as in Congress on the
interstate transportation of minors to other states in order to evade
the parental notification law in that particular state.
Parents
are being excluded from this life-and-death decision, finding
out after the fact that an abortion has been performed. Parents are
being called to emergency rooms to sign consent forms to repair the
damage performed in legal abortion clinics.
Some of these so-called physicians do not even have medical degrees. Children do not know their complete medical histories--medical information that's imperative to perform any type of surgery.
Please
don't get hung up on the horrible cases of girls who are from
abused homes, because what we do in this country is give these girls
from abused homes secret abortions and send them back home to the
abuser.
Child abuse is illegal; the abuse needs to be reported and counseling obtained for the child.
The
case before the Supreme Court is not a case of abortion rights but
a case of parental rights. Parental notification laws do not take
away a woman's right to an abortion; they simply protect our daughters
from the harms of surgery. But more importantly, it allows parents
to put their arms around their daughters and say, "I love you,
and we'll get through this together."


