A number of years ago, the pro-life movement discovered the “partial birth abortion.” This particular kind of abortion was developed by a physician in Ohio. Basically, he would inject a needle into the head of the fetus and remove the contents so the head would shrink. Then, he would bring the dead fetus down the birth canal. He developed this procedure to mitigate the possible trauma that a large head could cause the woman.
Not surprisingly, the pro-life movement reacted with horror, calling upon the Congress to ban its practice. This procedure thus became the subject of great national debate for many years.
Because there has always been a disconnect between the pro-choice organizations and the abortion clinics, pro-choice leaders were caught by surprise. Suddenly, they were being forced to defend an actual abortion procedure and their first reaction was to “apologize.” Their first response was that only a few hundred of these procedures were performed each year and that they were only done in “tragic” circumstances where the woman’s life was endangered or if there was a severe fetal abnormality.
The problem was that what they were saying was not true.
Ultimately, the press started doing their own research and newspapers like the Washington Post and the Bergen County Record learned that there were many more of these procedures being performed and most of them were performed in the late second trimester where there were no extenuating circumstances. Ultimately, the shit hit the fan when a little-known pro-choice advocate talked frankly about the procedure, describing when the procedure was done and how many times, basically verifying the previous newspaper reports. The pro-choice community, as you can imagine, was pissed – despite the fact that this pro-choice advocate had been giving them the facts about this procedure for over a year. Despite his pleas to “fess up” about the procedure, they continued to tout the “it’s not done often and only in tragic circumstances” line.
The revelations of this pro-choice advocate made the front page of every newspaper in the country, embarrassing his colleagues. Suddenly, the pro-choice groups had to come up with a new argument because the pro-life movement was getting very close to passing the law banning this procedure. So, the pro-choice groups switched gears and said that passage of the bill would expose most abortion doctors to criminal prosecution because the “partial birth abortion” was not clearly defined and the ban could extend to any kind of abortion procedure.
Well, it is now over a decade since this issue was in the forefront of the national consciousness and the “partial birth abortion” procedure is now outlawed, the legislation having been upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court.
And to this day not one abortion doctor has been prosecuted under this law.
At the same time, not one abortion has been prevented by this law because abortion doctors who perform later abortions have other methods of terminating the pregnancy.
And what was this furor all about?

May 3, 2010 at 10:10 am
That procedure is horrible! Do the pro choice people on this blog actually support doing that to the baby?
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May 3, 2010 at 2:33 pm
OK – As i said before i am neither pro-choice or pro-life, but in this matter, i would hold up the pro-life flag with pride! That, in my way of looking at things, it is murder! I can’t conceive the idea of this happening to a baby… Again, there is exceptions, like for example, if it is a mother who already have kids and this new baby it will cause the mom to die when giving birth, i don’t even know if that still happen now in days, or if the baby will born and die of a horrible disease, and probably other FEW, but just because a woman decide that she is not into being a mom anymore!!!! PLEASE!
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May 3, 2010 at 9:55 pm
Abortion is wrong no matter the stage of pregnancy!
In this case it is KILLING….
Where are the justice on this situation?
NO ABORTION!
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May 4, 2010 at 5:49 am
So’called “partial birth abortion” is where the so-calledl “pro-life” movement has its greatest ally, so of like the BP ooil spill in the Gulf.
The reason this works for the movement is our biological drive to value babies– after all, if we didn’t, the species would die out rather soon– and our intellectual ability to abstract from the real to a possibility.
To explain that latter, we learn “hide and seek” early. AS young as nine months, we can already understand that the toy that has disappeared from our sight still exists– Mommy just put it under the blanket! We learn that if we lift the blanket, we will see it again. We subsequently learn to imagine the toy being under the blanket– abstracted from our experience of seeing Mommy put it there. It might not be there, but that doesn’t stop us from creating a belief that it’s there.
And so it is that we imagine the fetus, especially in its latter stages, as being human. Bilologically we WANT it to be human, and physically it looks so human, we are revolted at the idea of turning it into butchered little baby bits. Even I find that upsetting.
Which of course makes PBA an ideal rhetorical device for the so-called “pro-lifiers.” They can very effectively use it to walk away from even more born children!
The fact is, nobody stands an even remote chance of being a human unless there is a primary caregiver– and it always starts with the pregnant woman– who will say, “This is my baby; this is my child.” All else is nothing but a 70% chance of delayed doom for the born child. See the Warner Jones Maui longitudinal study for a better understanding.
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May 4, 2010 at 7:18 am
Interestingly, I find the PBA procedure to be more “humane” than the other option – a D&E abortion. With a D&E, the physician uses forceps to grab parts of the fetus and extracts them. The doctor literally pulls it apart. With the PBA, the fetus is extracted whole.
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May 5, 2010 at 4:31 am
I’m stating to shiver.
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May 5, 2010 at 5:42 am
Hey, John, just because your life has been satsifactory doesn’t mean you can expect everybody’s to be. It’s interesting that yours went so well that you feel everybody ought to be born, whereas mine had enough problems in it that I feel it’s my duty to all those whom I want born to protect them from as much of the bad stuff that I can.
Aborticentrism points out that one’s own fear of death is brought dangerously near the surface when triggered by certain events, such as a description of abortion techniques, which might explain the onset of shivers.
Aborticentrists are extremely sensitive to our unfortunate knowledge of our own mortality. While most of us develop mechanisms for successfully repressing that knowledge– religion, philosophy, flights into alcoholism or hedonism, etc.– some people deal with it by engaging in an allegorical struggle against Death by callng themselves “pro-life” and dedicating themselves to rescuing “unborn humans.” The fetus represents themself, and they act the part of God in sparing them AND showing His love for them through a direct action.
They also embrace the very imagery that makes you want to shiver, to use as a tool in their public relations campaign to persuade the public of the worth of their cause. By using the imagery, they prove to themselves that they are indeed greater than that Death which threatens them.
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May 5, 2010 at 6:40 am
As you know I won’t ask him here myself, but can any of you figure out what the heck Charles is talking about?
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May 5, 2010 at 10:52 am
Well, John everybody has SOMEBODY in their life that they care for. When I was clerking in a drugstore back in the early Sixties a woman came in looking for a confirmation card for a dog. She had friends who had no children, but they’d managed to get their dog baptized, and now they were getting it confirmed (I didn’t know anything about Unitarians at the time, but now I realize those people HAD to be UU’s).
And you have SOMEBODY in yours. We know it’s not a human, and my sources say it’s a very wonderful old cocker spaniel. I’m willing to baby-sit it the next time you head south to avoid the winter cold. And I’m asking the readers to guess what your response is to my offer. Money’s riding on it!
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May 5, 2010 at 3:35 pm
Help! Help! Will someone please translate?
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May 5, 2010 at 3:59 pm
In plainer language, John: Unless you are some sort of Son of Sam wannabe, there is some real, living thing to whom you relate. You’ve already said you don’t have kids and you haven’t adopted anybody else’s. So, you have either a spouse or pets. If you didn’t, and you claimed to be “pro-life,” you would REALLY have some issues.
So, I have asked you how you would feel about me taking care of that Significant Other in your life during your absence.
Of course, you choose not to reply, so I am going to ask Tina instead.
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May 5, 2010 at 9:07 pm
Will someone ELSE please translate?
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May 6, 2010 at 4:26 pm
i dont even read his stuff half the time. I am really finding it obnoxious and condescending.
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May 6, 2010 at 5:30 pm
Okay, I yield to the needs of a willful obtuseness:
John (and by default, Tina), there is no way in Hell you would trust me with your family dog (if you have one). I am almost a complete stranger, and you would be absolutely NUTS to let any stranger, much less me, have your dog.
But you have absolutely no qualms about forcing a stranger to have a baby…
And I say this indicates a MAJOR problem.
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May 6, 2010 at 6:23 pm
Thanks, Pat.
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May 7, 2010 at 6:39 am
Can’t answer even that, huh, John?
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May 7, 2010 at 7:59 am
I think I understand Charles’ point!!! Hooray!
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May 7, 2010 at 9:46 am
Pat, please tell Charles, “Nope”!
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May 7, 2010 at 10:37 am
Northern Virginia beckons, Pat. Glebe and N. Henderson.
I’m going to be in Arlington to go to my eldest sister’s 70th. She’s single, John’s widowed; I think they’re meant for each other…
If you want to help play Cupid or to see one of your lesser tribulations in the flesh, I’ll be in the area 5/23- 26. You can always reach me through the RESPONSIBLE Right To Life website (rrtl@sover.net).
I was reflecting this morning how John’s role in the so-called “pro-life” movement makes it impossible for him to yield.
He’s been in the movement for 40 years; there’s hardly anyone else that’s been in it for so long and been so consistently active. He shows up, and the group admires him for his commitment, reveres him for his steadfastness, respects him for his age and looks upon him as both a model and an inspiration for them. It would be an extremely deracinating experience for him to step away from positions that would negate if not nullify more than half his life’s work. He cannot afford the luxury that the first Scholastic, St. Thomas Aquinas, said of his whole body of scholarship near the end of his life, “All I have written is as straw.” For John to do so would be to risk facing the fact that most of his labor has been to be a bully and a stalker.
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May 7, 2010 at 1:01 pm
Dear Pat, I think I had “a Charles moment” myself! At least up to “deracinating.” Tell him, please, that I am not widowed. Besides, I am not a dirty old man, stalking much younger women. Finally, tell him I am often avoided, even vilified, by pro-life people, just because I use the f-word — “force.”
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