Reintroduced Fetal Pain Bill Garners Unlikely Supporter
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2005
Kansas Senator Sam Brownback reintroduced a bill on Wednesday that
requires abortionists to notify women who want abortions after 20 weeks of
pregnancy that their unborn baby can likely experience extreme pain.
Following the bill's introduction came mystifying news that pro-abortion
advocate Frances Kissling, president of "Catholics" for a Free Choice
(CFFC), was offering conditional support for the proposed legislation.
The Unborn Child Pain Awareness Act requires the abortionist to
verbally inform and to provide a brochure to the woman seeking an abortion
about the medical evidence of pain experienced by an unborn child 20 weeks
after fertilization. The proposed law also requires that the pregnant
woman be given the option of providing anesthesia for the unborn baby.
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On the same day as the bill's introduction Kissling released a
statement saying CFFC could support an amended version of the legislation
because their "principles in regard to abortion include both respect for a
woman's right to choose abortion and a commitment to treating fetuses with
respect."
To gain CFFS' unqualified support, Kissling said the bill would
have to include a provision that would provide for the cost of
anesthetizing the unborn child and the requirement that doctors verbally
read a speech to the pregnant women must be eliminated.
That announcement comes just weeks after publication of an article in
which Kissling declared that pro-abortion activists should show greater
value for "fetal life." Kissling's comments and partial support of the
fetal pain bill hardly qualifies as an about-face on abortion. But both
are notable for the way they violate radical feminist dogma that forbids
support for any legislation that is even vaguely pro-life.
Response from the pro-life community has been varied. Many see
Kissling's recent statements as a cynical calculation on the part of a
woman who knows that for her cause to succeed she must soften its
extremist image. Other pro-lifers think that however slight it may be,
Kissling's new tune indicates that a subtle shift is underway in the
public debate over abortion.
One senior U.S. House staff member told Culture & Cosmos that while
Kissling's announcement may have been intended to make her seems more
compassionate it may have the opposite affect. "It is interesting that
they admitted unborn children may feel pain in an abortion and that fetal
pain is something women want to know about.
"I think they are so
comfortable with killing unborn children that they do not mind admitting
that they believe killing an innocent child is sometimes a worthwhile
thing. That is a very scary position to take."
The fetal pain bill, originally introduced by Brownback last May, has
more than 30 cosponsors. A companion bill was introduced in the House by
Rep. Chris Smith, R-NJ, who joined Brownback and three other Senators at a
press conference announcing the bill's reintroduction.
It is one of two
pieces of pro-life legislation set for consideration in this year's
Congress. The other is the Child Custody Protection Act which forbids an
adult from transporting an underage girl across state lines for an
abortion if the state of origin requires parental consent for an abortion.
The Associated Press reported on Sunday that Congressional backers of the
Child Custody bill, originally introduced last year, believe it will
probably pass this year.
Copyright 2005---Culture of Life Foundation. Permission granted for
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