
aborted at 27 weeks by intracardiac injection and prostoglandin
Yesterday, U.S. Representative Mike Quigley (IL-05) gave the following statement in the House Judiciary Committe, offering an amendment to the District of Columbia Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act (H.R. 3803). The legislation would protect cancer patients from an effort which would otherwise ban all abortions in the District of Columbia (DC) after twenty weeks of pregnancy with extremely limited exceptions.
Mr. Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk.
H.R. 3803 aims to ban abortion after 20 weeks in the District of Colombia.
First of all, this bill is patently unconstitutional. The Supreme Court has made clear a woman has the right to choose up to the point of viability, and this bill is a clear attempt to implement an unconstitutional pre-viability ban.
But it doesn’t stop there.
Not only does this bill attempt to overturn Roe v. Wade, it goes even further by not including a single exemption if a woman is raped, if a woman is the victim of incest, or if a woman’s health is at risk.
The only exemption is if the life of the woman is in jeopardy. This completely ignores the unique and often heart-wrenching situations of individual women.
The fact is, not all pregnancies go according to plan, and each woman has to be able to make the decision she feels is best for her and her family.
A woman could have a completely desired pregnancy, and find out that she has anhydramnios. This is a disorder where membranes rupture prematurely, leaving the fetus without sufficient amniotic fluid.
Without this vital fluid, the fetus will likely be born unable to move its limbs and unable to eat and breathe on its own.
Under H.R. 3803, a woman and her partner who know their fetus will not be able to survive on it own would be forces to carry the fetus to term only to watch it die.
This bill also ignores the situation of a woman who receives the horrible news that she has cancer while she is pregnant. This may sound rare, but sadly it’s not. Approximately one in 3,000 pregnant women has breast cancer during her pregnancy.
The choice between receiving vital cancer treatment or continuing her pregnancy was not hypothetical for Jennifer Peterson. Jennifer was 35 and pregnant when she found a lump in her breast, and soon learned she had invasive breast cancer.
She then had to make the impossible decision of receiving care for her cancer, including chemotherapy, which would likely end the pregnancy, or carry the pregnancy to term and forego caner treatment that could mean the difference between life and death.
My amendment would create an exemption for women, who like Jennifer are faced with eh impossible decision of whether to receive cancer treatment or carry a pregnancy to term.
But the truth is, this is just one of a number of gut-wrenching situations a woman can face during her pregnancy.
Every pregnancy is different, and every woman has to be able to make the decision that is right for her and her family. Every instance of cancer is unique and no one can know with certainty if it is life threatening.
But this bill ignores the unique circumstances of each woman and supplants the judgment of a woman with the judgment of a politician.
We hear a lot in this committee about government over reach, and we hear a lot of arguments that the government does not always know best.
Yet when it comes to a woman’s intimate, personal, and sometimes impossibly difficult decision of whether to protect her own health or carry a pregnancy to term, those same opponents of big government get quiet.
How can we, sitting in this sterile committee room, possibly think we should get to make that deeply personal and often heart-wrenching decision for a woman and her family?
The truth is: We can’t.
I encourage my colleagues to support my amendment and oppose this unsympathetic bill.
Yes, we can, because the bill already includes the 'limited exceptions' mentioned above, which represent less than one percent of abortions in the US. This is nothing more than politics as usual, pandering for votes from the extreme left. The self policing abortion industry hates to be called out on their so-called criteria for the abortions of viable babies. It's jokers like this one that invite more Gosnell types to continue breaking the law while enjoying the protection of Washington and the billion dollar abortion lobby. They don't give a damn about women's health-the extremely rare hardship cases Quigley attempts to manipulate here are only political tools to them. It's time to send them a clear message that they are not above the law. Love how he contradicts himself with "if a woman’s health is at risk...the only exemption is if the life of the woman is in jeopardy". Derp.
Just a comment about that aborted baby. He was aborted at 27 weeks by intracardiac injection to the heart and then prostaglandin abortion. I know, because I brought that picture to the fore some years ago. I got it from a thesis.
ReplyDeleteI thought I remembered seeing one of these images on your site. I kept thinking Morgenthaler. The site I got the pics from identified the baby as American. Thanks for letting me know, I'll correct the gestational age.
ReplyDeleteThat poor little guy ... my heart is just breaking. I can't help wondering who he would have been. I can't help wishing I could have somehow held him just once and let him feel cherished. By the way, 90% of babies born prematurely at 27 weeks survive.
ReplyDeleteI don't see any need for exceptions for rape and such after 20 weeks. That's five months. Even if we decide that abortion is morally acceptable in that tiny percentage of cases involving blamelessly problematic pregnancies, there's no excuse for waiting that long.
Since we're talking about viable pregnancies here, there is another option for women like Jennifer: induce labor early or perform a C-section. This may not be an ideal solution, as premature babies are at risk for a number of complications including death, but that's better than the certain death of a late-term abortion. Regarding both the mother's and the baby's lives as precious and valuable, we can search for creative solutions based on calculated risk that give us a chance to save them both if we can.
Look at his skin and forehead. Completely brutalized.
ReplyDeleteI don't know whether to be grateful that at least they killed him quickly rather than letting him suffer a slow death by burning and poisoning, or just to be angrier than ever that they killed him at all when obviously a live birth was entirely possible.
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking for some reason of my husband's baby pictures ... he was a handsome fellow even then ... weeping now ... wondering how anyone could ever destroy a beautiful little baby boy.
Oh, poor sweet baby. I wish I could have given him a hug or ten.
ReplyDeleteHe was perfect.