3/9/01
in this issue:
abortion: NIGERIA, STATISTICS abortion
NIGERIA: Christian Association of Nigeria Youth Division: "the
inalienable rights of the person must be recognized and respected by civil
society and political authorities, and such fundamental rights include the
right to life from the moment of conception until death."
(Reading: "Nigerian Women:
Catholic Women Register Opposition to Abortion," Catholic World News,
2/20/01)
STATISTICS: The National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action
League (NARAL) has compiled useful statistics
on abortion including state-by-state analyses.
activism
CATHOLIC BURIAL: Msgr. Edward Kavanaugh, president of St. Patrick's
Home for Children and pastor of St. Rose Church in Sacramento was assisted
by four altar boys as he performed a Rite of Catholic Burial outside the
city's sewage treatment center, which is the final resting place for tens
of thousands of aborted babies flushed down area drains and sewers during
the past 28 years since Roe v. Wade.
(Reading: "Catholic Burial Rite at Sewage Treatment Center," The Wanderer, 2/1/01, p. 7)
FATHER NORM WESLIN: Friends of this great priest (and that
includes ALL) are asking all interested parties to contact Attorney
General John Ashcroft, asking him to drop all federal charges against
Father. The U.S. attorney filed charges against Father Weslin last month.
Thanks to Mary Jane Ziola for alerting us.
(Contact: U.S. Department of
Justice. For details about Father Weslin's dedication to life, see
"Obeying a Higher Court," Nov./Dec. 2000 issue of Celebrate Life magazine,
available by request from American Life
League; also see Lambs of
Christ, Father Weslin's ministry)
bush watch
JOHN D. NEGROPONTE: President Bush's new U.N. ambassador, John
D. Negroponte is not known or identified as a pro-life American. He
does have associations with the Council on Foreign Relations, is a Yale
graduate, and has years of government service.
(Reading: "Negroponte
Choice for U.N. Post," Associated Press, 2/16/01; "Bush Names
Establishment Career Diplomat as U.N. Ambassador," Republican National
Coalition for Life FaxNotes,
2/19/01)
STEM CELL MURDERS: The White House still has not condemned, out
of hand and without apology, the destructive research that takes the lives
of embryonic human beings, who are persons in every sense of the word. The
March 15 deadline is fast approaching. To contact President George W. Bush
and request his public condemnation of this practice, and his promise to
work for legislation that will ban the practice nationwide, write to The
White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington DC 20500, call
202-456-1414, fax 202-456-2461 or e-mail President George W. Bush.
contraceptive practice
FAILURE RATES: Researchers studied contraceptive use and
"accidental pregnancy" from statistics gathered by the 1988 and 1995 National Surveys of Family
Growth. "The average failure rate for all reversible methods, adjusted
for abortion underreporting, declines from 13% to 8% from the first year
of method use to the second year ... The chance of accidental pregnancy
does not differ significantly between method users younger than 18 and
those aged 18-19." The study also found higher failure rates among
Hispanic women and black women. But below the poverty level, white and
black women experienced the same level of failure.
(Reading: "Contraceptive Failure in the First Two Years of Use:
Differences Across Socioeconomic Subgroups," Family Planning
Perspectives, 1-2/01, pp. 19-27)
eugenics expert
MARY MEEHAN: With years of writing experience, and other talents to
draw on, Mary Meehan would love to come and speak to your group on any
number of topics, including eugenics, population control and the history
of the pro-life movement. If interested, direct your inquiries to Mary Meehan.
human cloning
CRIME: The Exploratory Initiative on the New Human Genetic
Technologies comments, "Human cloning is a crime against human dignity and
humanity. It is a step toward the commodification and brutalization of
human life. We must not allow ourselves to be pushed any further down this
road. If we can't stop human beings from being cloned, try to imagine what
we won't be able to stop next."
(Reading: Exploratory Initiative Bulletin No. 1, 1/30/01; a
subscription to this valuable e newsletter can be obtained by contacting
Exploratory Initiative)
VIRGINIA: State senators and delegates and been selected to work
out differences in two versions of a bill that would ban the cloning of
humans. For details on HB 2463 see Virginia Legislature and search by
bill number.
human experimentation
LATIN AMERICAN GUINEA PIGS: Public Citizen's health research group
alleges that the Food and Drug
Administration is set to approve unethical clinical trials that could
result in the deaths of at least 17 premature infants. Discovery Laboratories of
Pennsylvania would conduct the study to prove the effectiveness in using
the drug Surfaxin
to treat pediatric respiratory distress syndrome. Some of the children in
the study would not be treated, but would be given placebos instead. FDA
spokesperson Janet Woodcock says that if the FDA "concludes the [study]
design is unethical, the drug's developers could legally perform the trial
outside the United States."
(Reading: "Group Claims
FDA Set to Approve Unethical Study," Reuters, 2/23/01; "Pa. Firm Asks
FDA to Back Experiment Forbidden in U.S.," Washington Post, 2/23/01,
subscription only)
personhood
KENTUCKY: A senate committee recently approved SB157, which defines
the unborn child from fertilization onward as "person." The bill applies
to cases where injury is inflicted on the mother. The bill also says that
if a woman freely consents to an abortion, the stipulations do not apply.
And, in commenting on the bill, Sen. Elizabeth Tori (R-Radcliff) explained
that fertilization occurs "48 hours after the sperm and egg have met."
COMMENT: This is an error since fertilization/conception occurs
WHEN the human male sperm and the human female ovum (egg) meet.
(Reading: "Bill
Would Restrict Chemical Abortions, Define Life," Messenger-Inquirer,
2/21/01; text of SB 157; for
correct embryology on when the person -- the human being -- begins, see
"When Do Human Beings Begin?
‘Scientific’ Myths and Scientific Facts")
VALUABLE RESOURCE: The Pontifical Academy for Life has published
the proceedings of its 1997 meeting on the topic of the status and
identity of the human embryo. This invaluable resource confirms the
personhood of the human being at conception, and is available on line for
$33.00 from IXT Media.
pill bill
NEW YORK: The New York Times reports Cardinal Edward Egan of New
York will "thwart a bill that would require Catholic hospitals and schools
to provide insurance coverage for contraceptives for their female
employees." Some fear that the Catholic lobbying arm will settle for a
simple "conscience" clause provision.
COMMENT: Action is needed to stop the bill, period.
(Reading: "Egan To Fight Coverage of Contraceptives in Women's Health
Bill," New York Times, 2/21/01, on line with paid subscription only; "Study
Boosts Push for Birth-control Options," New York Post, 2/12/01; "Catholic
Conference Urges Senate/Assembly Conference Committee to Support Religious
Freedom of Conscience"; to contact the New York State Catholic
Conference and urge total opposition to the bill, write Dennis Poust.)
rock for life
CHERONE II: Rock star Gary Cherone has again challenged Eddie
Vedder on his position in favor of abortion. The Cherone challenge may be
found at "What About the 98.6 Degree
Angle."
victory
TARGET SAYS NO TO PLANNED PARENTHOOD: Douglas Scott of Life
Decisions International is reported to have announced that Target Corp.
has agreed to end its sponsorship of Planned Parenthood.
(Reading: Life Advocacy Briefing, e-version, part B, 2/26/01, available
via paid subscription from Life Advocacy
Alliancee)
zinger
WHEN ABORTION ISN'T: Columnist Judy Freeman reports "the National
Right to Life Committee, which strenuously opposes RU-486 (the abortion
pill), takes no position on prevention of fertilization. Like standard
birth control pills, emergency contraception (EC) pills, better known as
morning-after pills, are hormones that act, at least in part, by blocking
ovulation, which occurs before fertilization."
COMMENT: But the morning-after abortion pills do prevent the
embryonic baby from implanting, as verified by manufacturers and
proponents alike. So, what type of abortion is it that NRLC opposes?
(Reading: "These
Pills Meet Approval of Some Staunch Abortion Foes," [Minneapolis] Star
Tribune, 2/4/01; queries may be sent to the National Right to Life Committee)
reflection for prayer
BALWIN OF CANTERBURY: Bishop, 1186 AD
In the sphere of action, a right thought is one ruled by the will of
God, and intentions are holy when directed single-mindedly toward Him. In
a word, we could see clearly through any action of ours, or into our
entire lives, if we had a simple eye. A simple eye is an eye, and it is
simple. This means that we see by right thinking what is to be done, and
by our good intention we carry it out with simple honesty, because
deceitful action is wrong. Right thinking does not permit mistakes; a good
intention rules out pretense. This then is true discernment, a combination
of right thinking and good intention.
Therefore, we must do all our actions in the light of discernment as if
in God and in His presence.
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