by
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
February 18,
2007
Princeton
Professor: Oppose Embryonic Stem Cell Research Because It's Wrong
Louisville, KY (LifeNews.com) -- Embryonic stem cell research
may never work to help patients because of several major scientific
hurdles. However, Princeton University professor Robert George said
the science should be opposed because it requires the destruction
of human life. George's comments came during a lecture at the Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary. "The fact that there's been a lot
of hyping going on and that embryonic stem cells probably will not
prove to be the therapeutic miracle that they have been hyped to be
isn't fundamentally the reason we should be opposed to the use of
those cells," the law professor said. However, he added that
"The reason we should be opposed is a moral reason. [Embryonic
stem cell research] involves, at least for now, the destruction of
innocent human life to obtain the cells." George argued that
advocates of embryonic stem cell research have obscured the fundamental
issue in the current debate over the practice. "If we were to
contemplate killing mentally retarded infants to obtain transplantable
organs, no one would characterize the controversy that would erupt
as a debate about organ transplantation, now would they? The dispute
would be about, rather, the ethics of killing retarded children to
harvest their vital organs," he said. "By the same token,
our contemporary debate is not about embryonic stem cell research.
No one would object to the use of embryonic stem cells in biomedical
research or elsewhere if they could be harvested without killing or
harvesting the embryos from whom they were obtained or if they could
be obtained from embryos lost in miscarriages."
Portugal
Physician Says Doctors There Strongly Oppose Doing Abortions
Lisbon, Portugal (LifeNews.com) -- The Portuguese government may
be pushing for abortion in the nation's parliament after voters failed
to approve an abortion referendum, but a leading physician says doctors
there don't want to do abortions and would seek a conscience clause
to make sure they can opt out. The Dean of the College of Medicine
of Portugal, Pedro Nunes, said this week that the Physicians’ Code
of Ethics defends human life from conception. Nunes said that doctors,
therefore, have the right to exercise conscientious objection in the
event that abortion is imposed on the country. In statements to the
EFE news agency, Nunes recalled that the College of Medicine did not
take an official position during the recent referendum on the legalization
of abortion. Nevertheless, he emphasized that most doctors defend
life from the moment of conception. Article 47 of the Code of Ethics
states, “Doctors must show respect for human life from its inception.”
Likewise, it warns that the practice of euthanasia and abortion “constitutes
a grave ethical violation,” except in cases of rape or life and health
of the mother up to the twelfth week of pregnancy. About 58 percent
of the residents of Portugal voted in favor of abortion, but only
44 percent of all eligible voters participated in the vote, short
of the majority required for it to count. That means only a small
percentage of all voters voted for abortion. Despite the lack of overwhelming
public support, Prime Minister Jose Socrates announced his party would
present a measure to make abortion legal.
Uganda
Doctor Says He Doesn't Want Abortion Legalized There
Kampala, Uganda (LifeNews.com) -- Dr. Jacinta Sabiiti writes an
editorial last week in the New Vision newspaper saying he doesn't
want legalized abortion coming to the African nation of Uganda. "In
a way, the word abortion makes the act sound less cruel. If this word
didn't exist, somebody with intentions to terminate a pregnancy would
say 'I want to murder or kill my unborn child," Dr. Sabiiti wrote.
"The unborn child is a speechless person and has no protection
except from those who were given the right to be born and live. Who
will speak and defend the unborn child?" Sabiiti complains that
as many as 46 million abortions occur around the world every year
and he laments that 26 out of 100 pregnancies worldwide end in abortion.
The physician says that making abortion legal won't make it any safer.
"Abortion is a public health problem due to the severity of complications
involved. Women may bleed to death following an abortion," he
said. "Severe infection (sepsis) may occur after abortion and
result in death. The internal organs could get damaged." Sabiiti
concludes, "I am told all doctors train for many years, and also
take an oath of ethics called the Hippocratic oath. This oath forbids
them from procuring an abortion. Thank God my mother found such people
to take care of her regularly before I was born. How glad I am to
be alive. It's a beautiful world out here!"
West
Virginia Senate Panel Wants More Info on Abortion Notification Bill
Charleston, WV (LifeNews.com) -- A West Virginia Senate panel
wants more information about parental notification bill it's considering
to strengthen the state's existing law. The bill requires abortion
practitioners to document the reasons for doing an abortion on a teen
without parental involvement. It comes into play when abortions are
done in sexual abuse cases and asks that a tissue sample be sent to
state police to assist them in catching the perpetrator. Senate Health
and Human Resources Committee members decided Thursday decided to
wait on voting on the bill. “We want to deter sexual predators,” said
Melissa Adkins, who represents West Virginians For Life, a pro-life
group supporting the measure. The bill has criminal penalties for
noncompliance. Adkins said, “The penalties that are in this bill are
exactly what we agreed to” during last year's negotiations on a similar
bill in the Senate. Sen. Ron Stollings, D-Boone, asked that the bill
be laid over a day so the committee can obtain more information. The
measure make it through the Senate, but a key concern in the House
is that Carrie Webster, the new chair of the House Judiciary Committee,
is pro-abortion and opposes the bill. She told the newspaper she plans
to give the bill a fair hearing if it reaches her panel but she has
serious reservations about it.
Virginia
Legislature Defeats Bill Punishing Women for Killing Unborn Baby
Richmond, VA (LifeNews.com) -- A Virginia state legislative committee
defeated a bill that would publish pregnant women who kill their own
unborn children. The bill was a response to a case in Suffolk, where
23-year-old Tammy Skinner shot herself in the stomach to kill her
own baby. Prosecutors twice tried to hold Skinner accountable for
the death of the baby and twice judges prohibited them from sentencing
her. "If the lady had delivered and left the baby in a dumpster,
she would have been charged," said Delegate Chris Jones, R-Suffolk,
who sponsored the bill. The Senate Education and Health Committee
voted 8-7 against the bill. The vote came atfer the state House approved
the bill on a vote of 72-25. Jones tried to make it clear that his
bill would have no effect on legal abortions but the panel defeated
the measure after lobbying from pro-abortion groups worried about
any acknowledgment of the right to life of unborn children, whether
dealing with abortion or not. Jones is already planning to introduce
a revised bill during next year's General Assembly session.


