[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 38 (Thursday, March 8, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H1291-H1293]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE PREMEDITATED MURDER OF NEW-BORN BABIES JUSTIFIED AS MORALLY
EQUIVALENT TO ABORTION
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Ms. Foxx). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 5, 2011, the gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Smith) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. SMITH of New Jersey. Thank you very much, Madam Speaker.
Late last month, two bioethicists--Dr. Alberto Giubilini and
Francesca Minerva--published an outrageous paper in the Journal of
Medical Ethics, justifying the deliberate, premeditated murder of new-
born babies during the first days and even weeks after birth.
Giubilini and Minerva wrote: ``When circumstances occur after birth
that
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would have justified abortion, what we call after-birth abortion should
be permissible.''
Madam Speaker, they've just coined a brand-new phrase, ``after-birth
abortion,'' which is the killing of newborns, the killing of little
children--boys and girls--immediately after their births and up to
weeks later. These bioethicists argue that if a newly born child poses
an economic burden on a family or is disabled or is unwanted that that
child can be murdered in cold blood because the baby lacks intrinsic
value, and according to Giubilini and Minerva, it is simply not a
person.
Giubilini and Minerva write: ``Actual people's well-being--'' and you
and I, Madam Speaker, are actual people; adults are actual people
according to them ``--could be threatened by a new-born, even if
healthy child, requiring energy, money and care which the family might
happen to be in short supply of.''
As any parents--especially moms--will tell you, children in general,
and newborns in particular, require an enormous amount of energy,
money, and boatloads of love. If any of those things, however, are
lacking or pose what Giubilini and Minerva call a ``threat,'' does that
justify a death sentence? Are the lives of new-born children and new-
born babies so cheap? so expendable?
The murder of newly born children is further justified by Giubilini
and Minerva in this renowned journal's article--why they carried it is
certainly suspect--because new-born infants, like their slightly
younger sisters and brothers in the womb, ``cannot have formed any aim
that she is prevented from accomplishing.'' In other words, no dreams,
no plans for the future, no ``aims'' that can be discerned, recognized
or understood by adults equal no life at all.
This preposterous, arbitrary, and evil prerequisite for the
attainment of legal personhood is not only bizarre; it is inhumane in
the extreme. Stripped of its pseudo-intellectual underpinnings, the
Giubilini and Minerva rationale for murdering newborns in the nursery
is indistinguishable from any other child predator wielding a knife or
a gun.
Giubilini and Minerva say the devaluation of new-born babies is
inextricably linked to the devaluation of unborn children. Let me say
that again. The devaluation of new-born babies, even into weeks of
their lives outside their mothers' wombs, is inextricably linked to the
devaluation of unborn children and is, indeed, the logical extension of
the abortion culture. They also write this: that they ``propose to call
the practice after-birth abortion rather than infanticide in order to
emphasize that the moral status of the individual killed--'' that is to
say the baby ``--is comparable to that of a fetus . . . Whether she
will exist is exactly what our choice is about.''
So let's again get this right because the unborn child has been
deemed to be a nonperson and can be killed at will. For the new-born
child, who is very, very similar in almost every aspect except
dependency and its not being a little bit more mature, the choice is,
if it is unwanted, that the parents can order the killing, the
execution, of that child.
{time} 1320
Madam Speaker, these anti-child, pro-murder rationalizations remind
me of other equally disturbing rants from highly credentialed
individuals over the years. Princeton's Peter Singer suggested a couple
of years ago--and I quote him in pertinent part:
There are various things you can say that are sufficient to
give moral status to a child after a few months, maybe 6
months or something like that, and you get perhaps a full
moral status, really, only after 2 years.
Break that down. Only after 2 years, Madam Speaker, should we really
confer a sense of personhood to a child who is no longer a baby anymore
because of this particular intellectual's perspective.
Dr. James Watson, the Nobel Laureate for unraveling the mystery of
DNA many, many years ago, wrote in Prism Magazine:
If a child were not declared alive until 3 days after
birth, then all parents could be allowed the choice only a
few have under the present system. The doctor could allow the
child to die if the parents so choose and save a lot of
misery and suffering. I believe this view is the only
rational, compassionate attitude to have.
Compassionate to allow a newborn to die? I think not.
In like manner, Dr. Francis Crick, who received the Nobel Prize along
with Watson said:
No new-born infant should be declared human until it has
passed certain tests regarding its genetic endowment and that
if it fails these tests it forfeits the right to live.
Madam Speaker, the dehumanization of unborn children has been going
on for decades. What is less understood and appreciated is the
dehumanization of new-born and very young infants. That too has been
going on for years, but it has gotten in the last few years
demonstrably worse.
Giubilini and Minerva's article must serve as a wake-up call. The
lives of young children who are truly the most unprotected class of
individuals in our society are under assault. Hard questions need to be
asked and answered and defenders of life must be mobilized. I truly
believe we have a duty to protect the weakest and the most vulnerable
from violence; and now even the hospital nursery is not a place of
refuge or sanctuary.
Madam Speaker, we must strive for consistency. I have been hearing
about it for 32 years, and I've worked every single day of my
congressional life on human rights issues, from human trafficking to
religious freedom. I've written the Trafficking Victims Protection Act
back in 2000 to combat modern-day slavery. I work against torture all
over the world, wherever and whenever it rears its horrific head. That
is especially in places like China, North Korea, and elsewhere.
But I am left to wonder why so many who claim to be proponents of
human rights systematically dehumanize and exclude the weakest and the
most vulnerable human beings from legal protection.
Why the modern-day surge in prejudice and ugly bias against unborn
children and now, by logical extension, new-born children? Why the
policy of exclusion rather than inclusion? They are indeed part of the
human family. We should embrace them, love them, and protect them. Why
is lethal violence against children, abortion, and premeditated killing
of new-born infants marketed and sold as somehow benign or progressive,
enlightened, and compassionate? Why have so many good people turned a
blind eye and looked askance as mothers are wounded by abortion and
their babies in the womb pulverized by suction machines 20 to 30 times
more powerful than household vacuum cleaners or dismembered with
surgical knives or poisoned with chemicals? Looking back, how could
anyone in the House or the Senate or President Clinton justify the
hideous procedure called ``partial birth abortion''?
Madam Speaker, since 1973, well over 54 million babies have had
abortion forced upon them. Some of those children have been
exterminated in the second and third trimester. These are known as
pain-capable babies. Those kids have suffered excruciating pain as the
abortionist committed his violence upon him or her. Why are some
surprised that now the emerging class of victims, new-born kids, new-
born children, are being slaughtered in Holland and elsewhere while a
perverse proposal to murder any new-born children, sick or healthy, is
advanced in an otherwise serious and respected ethics journal?
I urge Members to read this article. It will make you sick. It
certainly is the opening salvo in an assault on new-born children.
In conclusion, Madam Speaker, children born and unborn are precious.
Children sick, disabled, or healthy possess fundamental human rights
that no sane or compassionate society can abridge. The premeditated
murder of new-born babies, those who are 1 day old after birth, 2
weeks, 3 weeks old is now being justified as being morally equivalent
to abortion.
I respectfully submit, Madam Speaker, that the Congress, the courts,
the President, and society at large have a sacred duty to protect all
children from violence, murder, and exploitation. We don't have a
moment to lose. The child predators are working overtime to create more
victims.
Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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