This week marks the forty-first anniversary of Roe vs. Wade and the legalization of abortion on demand in the U.S. In the forty-one years since the Supreme Court ruling, over 50 million babies have been murdered through abortion--more than were killed by Adolf Hitler (nine million) and Josef Stalin combined (twenty-five million) combined. To remember those who have been lost, I am reposting this post from last year:
In 1979, the modern Christian theologian Dr. Francis Schaeffer and
the U.S. Surgeon General Dr. C.Everett Koop co-authored a book titled, Whatever Happened to the Human Race?. Published
within the decade that saw the legalization of abortion on demand
through Roe vs. Wade, the book explored the premise that acceptance of
abortion leads to a general devaluation of human life on at all levels.
Abortion leads to infanticide, which leads to euthanasia, which
eventually leads to genocide. Schaeffer and Koop wrote,
We are concerned that there is not more protest, outcry, or activism in regard to these issues of life and death. We can even recognize that there are people who are led to starve children to death because they think they are doing something helpful for society. Lacking an absolute ethical standard, they have only the concept of what they think is beneficial for society to guide them. But we cannot understand why other people, those with a moral base--and we know there are many of them--do not cry out. We are concerned about this because, when the first German aged, infirm and retarded were killed in gas chambers, there was likewise no perceptible outcry from the medical profession or from an apathetic population. It was not far from there to Auschwitz.
I read Whatever Happened to the Human Race
over twenty years ago, but I have been reminded of it in the last few
days watching the events surrounding the Kermit Gosnell trial. Anyone
who has followed this trial at all knows that Gosnell is the 71-year old
abortion doctor and proprietor of the "Women's Medical Center" in
Philadelphia who is on trial for murder of infants born alive and at
least one adult patient. Various workers in the clinics have testified
that when infants survived the abortion procedure, Gosnell snipped their
spinal cords or in some cases slit their throats. Jack McMahon,
Gosnell's attorney, argues that although Gosnell did perform abortions
past the 24 week limit written into the state's statute, not one of the
babies he is accused of harming was over 24 weeks and there is no
evidence that any of them was born alive. His arguments persuaded the
judge in the case to throw out three of the infant murder counts against
Gosnell for "Baby A, "Baby B" and "Baby C" as well as five counts of
corpse abuse. (Apparently, babies were kept in jars and their feet and
sometimes entire legs were severed and preserved as well. Multiple
babies appeared in photographs which showed their upper spinal columns
had been cut in order to snip the spinal cords.) Four remaining counts
of infanticide and one count of murder of an adult remained against
Gosnell on Tuesday, April 23 after the judge's ruling.
Yesterday,
in an apparent about-face, the judge reinstated the murder charge for
"Baby C". "Baby C" survived its abortion procedure, and according
testimony by clinic workers, was laid on a counter where it lived for
twenty minutes and moved its arms. Workers testify that they "played"
with the baby by pulling on its arms and watching it pull back before
killing it.
The outcome of this hideous trial and
Gosnell's ultimate fate remain to be seen but the reaction to it by our
society reveals a lot about how far we have fallen morally. The
mainstream press has remained silent on a trial that is one of the most
grisly, scandalous, and shocking of my lifetime. I have seen photos of
the empty courtroom seats reserved for the press. When Gosnell
announced this week that he would not take the stand in his own defense,
Huffington Post actually made that a headline. But when the
judge reinstated the murder charge for a baby brutally murdered after
twenty minutes of life, I saw the update on my Twitter feed because TheBlaze.com
had covered the story. The disgusting, macabre details of this man's
crimes are the stuff of nightmares, but in a society where grisly,
bloody violence sells almost as well as sex, and people will pay high
ticket prices to see slasher movies like the "Saw" series, nobody wants
to talk about Kermit Gosnell.
Why? I have seen some
conservative commentators speculate that the media does not want to
cover the Gosnell trial because it shows abortion for what it really
is--murder. That's part of it; but it really is only a part of media
black out of this story. The other part is that our society is rapidly
morphing into the society that Schaeffer and Koop predicted and
feared--a society without compassion, without empathy, without concern.
We are fearsomely close to pre-Nazi Germany in our attitudes about the
value of human life.
In 1949, Leo Alexander, a
psychiatrist from Boston who had been consultant to the Secretary of War
and had served with the office of the Chief Council for War Crimes in
Nuremberg from 1946-1947, wrote a paper titled, "Medical Science Under
Dictatorship." He writes that before Hitler became the German
Chancellor in 1933, a barrage of indoctrination had already begun
against, "traditional, compassionate nineteenth century attitudes
against the chronically ill, and for the adoption of a utilitarian,
Hegelian point of view." This propaganda spread everywhere, from mass
entertainment, as in a German film called, I Accuse in which the
husband of a woman suffering from life-long multiple sclerosis finally
euthanizes her while a sympathetic colleague plays the piano softly in
another room, to the public education system which included high school
textbooks such as Mathematics in the Service of Political Education,
2nd edition 1935, 3rd edition 1936, which included "problems stated in
distorted terms of the cost of caring for and rehabilitating the
chronically sick and crippled. One of the problems asked, for
instance, is how many new housing units could be built, and how many
marriage-allowance loans could be given to newly-wed couples for the
amount of money it cost the state to care for 'the crippled and
insane.'" In other words, the German people were fed a steady diet of a
philosophy that some lives are not as important as others, and that the
less worthy lives were draining funds which could be used for the
happiness of those more deserving than they.
Hitler did
not issue the first euthanasia order until 1939, after the German
people had received a sufficiently steady diet of this philosophy to no
longer object. The organization that he established to kill children
under the Third Reich was called Realm's Committee for Scientific
Approach to Severe Illness Due to Heredity and Constitution. Patients
who were being killed were transported by "The Charitable Transport
Company for the Sick" which billed their relatives for the cost of their
extermination while falsifying the death certificates so that they
would not understand how their loved ones had actually died. Leo
Alexander tells us, "It all started with the acceptance of the attitude
that there is such a thing as a life that is not worthy to be lived."
From there, Hitler was able to kill more than 9 million people in
Europe.
What does all of this have to do Kermit
Gosnell? Very simply, I believe that the media black out of the Gosnell
trial has less to do with protecting the abortion industry than it does
with an overall move to retrain our society away from respect for life
and the sanctity of life and towards an overall apathy and callousness
toward the deaths of others. We are now seeing our own media propaganda
in this direction. In the last twenty four months, I have seen an
episode of The Mentalist in which a regular character who is
dying of cancer decides to commit suicide and asks the show's main
character, Patrick Jane, to stay with him while he dies so that he will
not be alone. Although Jane is at first very uncomfortable with this
request, he does stay and performs sleight of hand coin tricks to
distract the dying man until his life ebbs away. Criminal Minds
last year featured an episode in which the ex-wife of one of the main
characters also finds out that she is terminally ill and decides to
commit suicide and asks that her ex-husband stay with her while she is
dying. Again, he is uncomfortable, but she has already consumed a fatal
dose of some toxin, and so he compassionately holds her while she
expires. I want to note that in neither one of these shows did the
principle character do anything to actively kill the person who died or
to actually assist in the suicide, but the overall message was that they
were compassionate good people by respecting the other person's right
to die and by being a friend and not interfering. This is the first
step in saying that death can be preferable to life.
There
are going to be a lot of other steps. Next year many parts of The
Affordable Care Act will be fully implemented. This coverage was
supposed to provide every American with full access to health care
regardless of health issues or pre-existing conditions. Are we still so
naive that we really think that a government who can't manage to pay
the air-traffic controllers in order to avoid long delays at the airport
will be able to cover the cost of every American's healthcare? Even
Democrats like Max Baucus are now calling the Affordable Care Act a
"train wreck". What the Act will do is force Americans to think in
terms of which lives are worth saving. The oft mocked "death panels"
are a necessity when a society of finite resources takes it upon itself
to make health choices for every person. As Alexander points out, "It is
important to realize that this infinitely small wedged-in lever from
which all this entire trend of the mind [the German mass euthanasia
program] received its impetus was the attitude towards the
nonrehabilitable sick." When we as a society have to start making these
decisions what will we choose? Should healthy young people not be able
to get as many benefits from the government because public resources
are being used to treat people with chronic illnesses, or seniors with
cancer? How many scholarships could be given to our best and our
brightest if the money were not being spent caring for the "crippled and
insane"? And so it begins.
Whatever happened to the
human race? The Germans could have chosen not to listen to the
propaganda. They could have chosen to reject Hitler and his social
engineering and ethnic cleansing in favor of respect for all life and
protection for all people. They didn't. The choice is now ours. Will
more of us stand against Kermit Gosnell, not just for the sake of the 8
original infants he was charged with murdering and the many, many more
who died as the course of his normal practice, but because we understand
that more is at stake than the life of a 71 year old abortion doctor in
Philadelphia and his victims? Will we allow ourselves to be lulled
into apathy ("Those babies weren't wanted anyway. Who would have taken
care of them if they had lived?") Hitler succeeded in his genocide in
large part because German people from every walk of life supported him
and furthered his goals. If the Germans had refused to participate,
they could have stopped the Holocaust before it began. What will we do?
Alexandra Swann is the author of No Regrets: How Homeschooling Earned me a Master's Degree at Age Sixteen and several other books. Her newest novel, The Chosen,
about one small group of Americans' fight to restore the Constitution
and end indefinite detentions without trial, is available on Kindle and
in paperback. For more information, visit her website at http://www.frontier2000.net.
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