|
NRL News
Page 24
September 2009
Volume 36
Issue 9
New
Educational Tools for a New School Year
By Joe Landrum
In case
some of you missed it in the July/August issue of NRL News, the
National Right to Life Educational Trust Fund has a new resource
available which teachers and students will find extremely helpful. A
DVD titled A Baby’s First Months—Infinite Possibilities takes the
viewer through the major milestones of the development of the unborn
child in just six minutes. A detailed description and order form can
be found on page 4 of that issue, or seen at
http://www.nrlc.org/news/2009/NRL07-08/InfinitePossibilities.html.
The DVD
teaches the humanity of the unborn child without ever getting into
the abortion issue. Thus A Baby’s First Months—Infinite
Possibilities is suitable for all audiences.
The
writer, director, and producer of the DVD, Pam Rucinski, indicated
that she “wanted viewers to lose themselves in the breathtaking
moments of their first days of life.” We believe she succeeded ($10
each, no shipping charge).
The DVD
is a perfect companion to the booklet, a baby’s first months, with
pictures of babies in utero at various stages. Brief descriptions
tell the reader what’s new at each stage, but the pictures do most
of the talking. These are small booklets, and may be great additions
to high school biology classes dealing with human development.
Unlike
the DVD, these booklets do briefly discuss the legality of abortion
on one page, noting that even the child at 20 weeks could be legally
aborted. The focus of the booklets is on the child and the
information is well footnoted for those who want to delve into a
particular aspect of human development ($.45 cents each, with
quantity discounts).
Of
continuing importance are the Trust Fund’s factsheets—one-, two-, or
four-page descriptions of a particular topic. The most recent
addition to this line-up is the very significant study, Does
Legalizing Abortion Protect Women’s Health? In four pages and full
color it deals with the claim that legalizing abortion in countries
where is it not currently legal would save women’s lives. This is a
joint publication of Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life Global
Outreach and the National Right to Life Educational Trust Fund.
The
factsheet debunks this claim, pointing out that improving health
care in poorer countries would save lives, not legalizing abortion.
Indeed, in places where health care remains inadequate, legalizing
abortions would increase the number of women who die or are harmed
by abortion, as legalization would lead to an increase in the number
of women aborting. (More about factsheets below.)
The
subject of stem cells remains an important pro-life topic. The Trust
Fund offers a 30-minute DVD titled Stem Cells and Cloning. This
easy-to-follow introduction to the topic discusses what stem cells
are, the difference between adult and embryonic stem cells, and the
use of so-called “therapeutic cloning” to obtain embryonic stem
cells.
The
presenter, NRLC President Dr. Wanda Franz, discusses the scientific
interest in stem cell research, successes with adult stem cells, and
the ethical implications of destroying human embryos for some
potential future benefit to others. In contrast to adult stem cell
research, embryonic stem cell research requires killing human
embryos, whether those embryos were originally created to bring a
child to birth or were created solely for research. This can be a
perfect introduction to this subject in biology classes, or in
government classes dealing with current events ($10, no extra
shipping).
Another
excellent resource is Angela Franks’ Margaret Sanger’s Eugenic
Legacy. This is best suited for college or advanced high school
students. This scholarly book delves into the eugenic philosophy
behind the rhetoric that guided Planned Parenthood’s founder, and
still guides many advocates of abortion, embryonic stem cell
research, euthanasia, and assisted suicide ($15).
On the
subject of abortion complications, the second edition of Women’s
Health after Abortion: The Medical and Psychological Evidence is
available on the web page of the De Veber Institute, which published
this edition in 2003. See
http://www.deveber.org/drupal/womens-health-after-abortion.
This book
summarizes the results of a number of studies that have demonstrated
the detrimental health effects of abortion, effects such as
increased risk of breast cancer, infertility, substance abuse, and
even suicide. This can really help the pro-lifer answer the
oft-repeated but ridiculous claim that abortion is safer for the
mother than childbirth.
One
overlooked resource students, librarians, and educators might wish
to consider is the Research Bulletin of the Association for
Interdisciplinary Research in Values and Social Change. The Bulletin
provides information from top researchers in their fields on the
medical, psychological, and sociological aspects of abortion.
Several issues are available online at
http://www.abortionresearch.us/, with more to come.
The most
recent issue, titled Mothers Living in Poverty: How Uninvolved and
Unreliable Men in Their Lives May Drive Them to Abortion and How
Abortion Increases Risk for Adverse Outcomes, deals with one of the
factors involved in the decision to abort, and how counselors and
health care professionals might better respond to the needs of
mothers. Past issues deal with the effects of abortion on the
family, the link between abortion and breast cancer, the increase in
self-destructive behaviors following abortion, and the perinatal
hospice option for children in the womb who cannot survive. The
range of topics makes this an excellent resource for a number of
classroom discussions or essay assignments. A complete list of
titles is available. (Membership in the Association is $25 annually.
Single copies of back issues are $1 each.)
We
mentioned factsheets at the beginning of this article. We have
available four factsheets that deal with various aspects of Planned
Parenthood, the largest abortion provider in the United States. They
include PPFA’s political activities, its involvement in abortion,
its finances, and recent activities involved in restructuring,
clinic mergers, etc.
Other
topics include Arguments Made for Abortion … and Some Answers;
Abortion’s Physical Complications; Abortion’s Psycho-Social
Consequences; Teens and Abortion: Why Parents Should Know; Abortion
Statistics and Trends; The Pain of the Unborn; Deaths from RU486;
Supreme Court Decisions; and Abortion’s Impact on Minorities. These
are great introductions to different aspects of abortion, and can
really help jump start the class discussion. All these are available
on our web page at
http://www.nrlc.org/factsheets/index.html. Single copies of each
are free, and you are free to make copies or download from our web
page. |