Half-fetus,
half-child
Fr. Frank Pavone,
National Director
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In one of his few remarks during
the two hours of arguments in the Supreme Court today about partial-birth
abortion, Justice Scalia responded to Justice Stevens’ assertion that we should
say “fetus” rather than child.. Justice Scalia said, “half-fetus, half-child.”
The point was clear. This is not
simply about abortion. This is a hijacking of the delivery process for the
purpose of killing the child. This is infanticide. I don’t know why Justice
Scalia was otherwise so quiet, and Justice Alito completely silent during the
arguments, but I know one reason I would be. The barbarity of partial-birth
abortion is so self-evidently wrong that it is beyond dispute, beyond
discussion, that it should not be legal in our country – or anywhere else, for
that matter. Silence in this matter speaks volumes.
In the course of the two hours of
oral arguments, the Court considered three key reasons why abortion advocates
want the Court to strike down the Federal ban on partial-birth abortion: a) the
ban lacks a health exception; b) the ban is too broad, that is, by its wording
it actually bans most if not all second and third trimester D&E (dismemberment)
abortions rather than just partial-birth abortion, and c) the ban is vague, and
because the language is not clear and specific enough, doctors won’t know if it
really applies to them.
Having listened carefully to the
oral arguments and having read all the briefs, I don’t think the abortion
advocates made their case, and I don’t think a majority of the Justices think
they did either.
One of the most important
admissions made in the arguments by the pro-abortion side was that we really
have no measurements about what kind of a health need is met by partial-birth
abortion. Their key argument, after all, is that the procedure must be allowed
for the sake of women’s health. They admitted that the Court could ban this
procedure if its health advantages were minimal rather than significant, yet
they could not establish, by statistical measurement, the assertion that the
health advantages of partial-birth abortion are significant.
In regard to safety, one of the
key questions from Chief Justice Roberts was that if, as the abortionists claim,
partial-birth abortion is safer because it requires fewer insertions of
instruments into the woman’s body, why would it not then also follow that the
safest method is live birth altogether, with the killing of the child outside
the womb? The pro-abortion side did not have an answer to that specific
question, which proves the point that Congress and the Bush Administration make,
namely, that this procedure must be banned so that society has a clear barrier
against infanticide.
Isn’t it just amazing that in our
highest court in this great nation, this debate occurred today about the
legality of “dismemberment” and “pulling the arms and legs off” a child. In the
end, it’s not a matter of which version of killing should be used. It’s a matter
of stopping the killing altogether.
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