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Protect the unborn
By Mary Spaulding Balch
Editor’s note. The
following appeared on the USA Today editorial page today as an
“opposing view” to the newspaper’s editorial. Mary Spaulding
Balch is director of state legislation for the National Right to
Life Committee.
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NRLC State
Legislative Director
Mary Spaulding Balch, J.D. |
Should public policy seek
to increase or decrease the number of abortions? No matter what
you think about abortion and when it should be legal, the answer
is obvious.
Every abortion stops a
heart that begins beating 22 days after fertilization. Brain
waves are detectable in the sixth week, and in the seventh week
an unborn child has been observed kicking and swimming. Every
organ is in place by the eighth week, when the child begins to
respond to touch. By 20 weeks, an unborn child reacts to being
pierced by a needle with vigorous body and breathing movements,
moving away and showing an increase in stress hormones.
USA TODAY’s editorial on
laws limiting abortions curiously fails to focus on Nebraska’s
ground-breaking 2010 statute, versions of which are being
considered in several states this year. Asserting “a compelling
state interest in protecting the lives of unborn children from
the stage at which substantial medical evidence indicates that
they are capable of feeling pain,” the law prevents abortions
from 20 weeks. In a 2000 Supreme Court dissent, Justice
Anthony Kennedy described
the “D&E” abortion procedure used at this stage: “The fetus, in
many cases, dies just as a human adult or child would: It bleeds
to death as it is torn limb from limb.”
We believe that when women
are informed about unborn development and abortion alternatives,
rather than just whatever they may be told by abortion
providers, they’re more likely to choose life. Currently, 23
states with informed consent/women’s right-to-know laws protect
a mother’s right to receive this kind of information prior to
undergoing an abortion.
The abortion-rights
advocacy group NARAL has acknowledged that “Medicaid-eligible
women in states that exclude abortion coverage have abortion
rates of about half of those women in states that fund abortion
care.” Limiting insurance coverage of abortions to separate
policies can similarly help save lives.
That we may not equally
protect the unborn children of those who can afford to evade
these laws does not diminish the value of saving those who can
be saved. Abortion is a tragedy that public policy should
discourage, not promote.
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Part One
Part Two |