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What is the difference between abortion and harvesting fetal body parts?
Posted By Rachel Alexander On November 27, 2005 at 11:08 pm
What may finally turn the tide against abortion is the increasing use of fetal body parts for experimentation and body parts. Or, the tide could go the other way – with the legalization of abortion used to justify the use of fetal body parts. But how far will it go? Will fetuses eventually be dissected alive? Will they be kept alive to develop into a kind of sub-human creature that serves only to provide replacement body parts for humans, through “fetal farming?”
It may seem too demented to ever happen, but think about what is already legal. Abortion causes pain, as evidenced by fetuses’ behavior as they are aborted. Yet no anesthesia is given to those fetuses (and Planned Parenthood opposes any laws that would require anesthesia). We already place different values on various levels types of human life – Terri Schiavo in a vegetative state, as well as elderly sick patients, are considered somewhat sub-human and it is permitted for their relatives to have their lives terminated. Embryos are created by fertility clinics every day and discarded later. And more embryos are cloned from those embryos.
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An organization in Ukraine, the Institute for Problems of Cryobiology and Cryomedicine of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, sells fetal body parts online. Here in the U.S., the sale of fetal body parts appears to be prohibited by the 1993 Revitalization Act and the National Organ Transplant Act, but companies have found a loophole, which is currently under investigation by Congress. Two U.S. companies known for trafficking in fetal body parts are the Anatomical Gift Foundation of Laurel, Maryland, and Opening Lines, which was operating in West Frankfort, Illinois. Not surprisingly, Planned Parenthood is opposed to laws prohibiting the selling of fetal body parts.
What are fetus parts being used for? Fetal stem cells are used in face creams to supposedly fend off aging. Chinese companies use tissue from aborted fetuses and executed convicts for collagen, which is then exported to the U.S. and other countries. Swiss researchers are testing fetal tissue on wounds. (The article reporting this comments, “Certainly eight youngsters and their families in Switzerland are grateful the physicians did.” It failed to note that the 8 youngsters did not include the destroyed fetuses) 70 U.S. companies doing human embryo research expect their annual revenues to reach $3.6 billion by 2015. Although President Bush banned federal funding of fetal research in 2001 except on a few existing embryos, Majority leader Bill Frist expanded that number earlier this year, and several states are attempting to get legislation passed providing funding. California, Connecticut, Illinois and New Jersey already provide funding.
Experimentation on fetal stem cells hasn’t produced the breakthroughs as expected; none have proven “therapeutic” for clinical trials, unlike adult and umbilical cord stem cells, which are currently used to treat 65 diseases. What does this mean? Robert P. George writing for the Weekly Standard believes that the lack of success experimenting on embryos means that the next phase will entail using older fetuses, and possibly fetus farming.
Where is this all going? Will it be standard someday for every human to have a clone of themselves created, kept in a cage to provide spare body parts as needed? Unless society collectively realizes that abortion is wrong, this is just a slippery slope away.
It should be noted that the left refers to conservative opposition to abortion as “the literal exploitation of human remains,” which would be humorous in its absurdity if it wasn’t so awful
What is the difference between abortion and harvesting fetal body parts?
Posted By Rachel Alexander On November 27, 2005 at 11:08 pm
What may finally turn the tide against abortion is the increasing use of fetal body parts for experimentation and body parts. Or, the tide could go the other way – with the legalization of abortion used to justify the use of fetal body parts. But how far will it go? Will fetuses eventually be dissected alive? Will they be kept alive to develop into a kind of sub-human creature that serves only to provide replacement body parts for humans, through “fetal farming?”
It may seem too demented to ever happen, but think about what is already legal. Abortion causes pain, as evidenced by fetuses’ behavior as they are aborted. Yet no anesthesia is given to those fetuses (and Planned Parenthood opposes any laws that would require anesthesia). We already place different values on various levels types of human life – Terri Schiavo in a vegetative state, as well as elderly sick patients, are considered somewhat sub-human and it is permitted for their relatives to have their lives terminated. Embryos are created by fertility clinics every day and discarded later. And more embryos are cloned from those embryos.
%between%
An organization in Ukraine, the Institute for Problems of Cryobiology and Cryomedicine of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, sells fetal body parts online. Here in the U.S., the sale of fetal body parts appears to be prohibited by the 1993 Revitalization Act and the National Organ Transplant Act, but companies have found a loophole, which is currently under investigation by Congress. Two U.S. companies known for trafficking in fetal body parts are the Anatomical Gift Foundation of Laurel, Maryland, and Opening Lines, which was operating in West Frankfort, Illinois. Not surprisingly, Planned Parenthood is opposed to laws prohibiting the selling of fetal body parts.
What are fetus parts being used for? Fetal stem cells are used in face creams to supposedly fend off aging. Chinese companies use tissue from aborted fetuses and executed convicts for collagen, which is then exported to the U.S. and other countries. Swiss researchers are testing fetal tissue on wounds. (The article reporting this comments, “Certainly eight youngsters and their families in Switzerland are grateful the physicians did.” It failed to note that the 8 youngsters did not include the destroyed fetuses) 70 U.S. companies doing human embryo research expect their annual revenues to reach $3.6 billion by 2015. Although President Bush banned federal funding of fetal research in 2001 except on a few existing embryos, Majority leader Bill Frist expanded that number earlier this year, and several states are attempting to get legislation passed providing funding. California, Connecticut, Illinois and New Jersey already provide funding.
Experimentation on fetal stem cells hasn’t produced the breakthroughs as expected; none have proven “therapeutic” for clinical trials, unlike adult and umbilical cord stem cells, which are currently used to treat 65 diseases. What does this mean? Robert P. George writing for the Weekly Standard believes that the lack of success experimenting on embryos means that the next phase will entail using older fetuses, and possibly fetus farming.
Where is this all going? Will it be standard someday for every human to have a clone of themselves created, kept in a cage to provide spare body parts as needed? Unless society collectively realizes that abortion is wrong, this is just a slippery slope away.
It should be noted that the left refers to conservative opposition to abortion as “the literal exploitation of human remains,” which would be humorous in its absurdity if it wasn’t so awful