Value of human life

Can you imagine a world in which only scientists considered climate change; where only women cared about women’s issues; where just children held opinions about other children; where only farmers cared about animal welfare; a world in which only Catholics had an opinion on the value of human life?

The way some opine about abortion within the pro-choice (pro-abortion) and pro-euthanasia movements, you would think such a strange world actually existed. Such people describe a universe in which people blindly support causes, from which they may never deviate and for which they must somehow “take the blame” since such issues are important to them, topics about which they might have a broad knowledge.

That is the kind of world that some wish us to think that Catholics, for instance, inhabit. As a vociferous commenter on many subjects, Martin Scicluna, an inhabitant of this curious universe, recently launched a salvo against pro-lifers, including Ivan Padovani and myself. For some reason, he felt it necessary to name and lamely try to shame people who respect life, to make some kind of “examples” of us.

Unlike Scicluna, none of us might disingenuously claim never to ignore comments made regarding their articles. It was obvious from his approach that he did read our comments and that he was clearly bothered by them on behalf of womankind. The sort of article he wrote is a common occurrence these days.

The label “religious fundamentalist” is often bandied about, now the standard liberal way to describe anybody with whom they disagree. And what about those with no religious faith who respect human life? What kind of “fundamentalists” are they? Since Scicluna raised the issue of religion, clearly, his own brand of Catholicism never prevents him from taking the opposite view.

Those making such accusations fail to check themselves in their determination to sully the reputations of those who fully support life. It is blatantly obvious that, in their often nasty verbal attacks upon pro-lifers, they are themselves attempting to ensure that their own opinions are taken seriously and, indeed, to be imposed upon society through the making of statutes. Yet, they have the gall to accuse pro-lifers expressing their own opinions as “imposing” on others.

Whatever happened to basic respect for humanity? Humanists claim to respect human rights. Yet, the most basic right – the right to life – is carefully presented as non-existent, though only for the unborn segment of humanity. Only the “actual born” may have rights – any rights they like. For unborn life, the lack of laws which provide protection is cited as their sole reason why no such laws should be enacted.

This right to life is further eroded by deliberately dehumanising life before birth. Many humanists deny the most basic science surrounding human reproduction, always pointing the finger at religious fundamentalists as the authors of such truths solidly backed up by science. They cover their ears and eyes to avoid truthful facts, the inconvenient and most basic facts of life.

Cheap, sarcastic, unscientific remarks about sperm and eggs being on a par with human embryos are commonplace among those in denial about human biology. In a post-truth era (that is, where truth is no longer the most important objective of discourse), even the widely-known medical complications which result directly from the effects abortion has on a woman’s body, such as the vastly-increased risk of breast cancer, are dismissed as fiction by pro-abortionists. This has less to do with the fact that they know it is true and more to do with their claim that such facts are “scare tactics” invented by Catholics, so somehow unworthy of belief.

Similar overreactions occur concerning pictures or videos exposing truths about abortion. Though clear evidence, and despite their factual bases, these too are described as “scare tactics”. This comes from people who insist that all facts be known by women considering the life-changing decision to abort their unborn human children. They are very careful which facts get presented and which do not – facts required to make decisions, remember; life-changing also for the unborn child.

Pro-abortionists push abortion for their own reasons, the debate flooded with scare stories, erroneously suggesting women die through not having abortions. So why do so many die during abortions? Why do many abortions go wrong? Strange that they never mention these things.

Pro-lifers are not women-haters. Pro-life women, including mothers, are called misogynists for opposing the culture of death.  And not all who are pro-lifers are religious. They never seek to “impose” themselves on others, yet, are obliged to allow the culture of death to be imposed upon them.

Note this particularly demeaning humanist description of unborn human life, directly attacking humanity: “meaningless clumps of cells, worth no more respect than drops of blood”.

When challenged to ask their mothers exactly what they were carrying in the womb, humanists refuse or else invent a response. Neither would they challenge pregnant women by telling them what “meaningless parasites” they bear.

Rest assured that such descriptions, reducing the unborn to virtually nothing, come from those claiming to represent humanity while simultaneously denying that humanity, including their own.

Spin and sarcasm remain the stock in trade of the average pro-abortionist. Facts and basic truths are irrelevant to them; they distort what is said by pro-lifers in their attempts to discredit them.

How can one have a fair debate on the value of human life if we cannot even agree that life in the womb is human? Show me, with unequivocal evidence, that the “material of a pregnancy” or “contents of a uterus” are alien and I shall listen up!

Gerry Cowie is a teacher of English

Grumpy old men

It’s hard to understand Martin Scicluna’s fixation on abortion. For someone who accuses the anti-abortion lobby of obsessiveness, he writes about it a lot. He would have us believe that it is a non-issue, to him at any rate, yet, it seems he cannot stop thinking about it.

He claims to be short on time, still, he seems to find plenty to spare for his pro-abortion views. He writes off his dissenters as “post-menopausal women and elderly men” and delightfully fails to observe the irony of this label being put by a grumpy old man of 81 years (I shall take a leaf out of his own book to explain that, when I call him a grumpy octogenarian I, of course, do not mean to be derogatory. I am simply describing what I know of him. The description is accurate and it is not derogatory.)

When, albeit reluctantly, Scicluna gets down to considering the status of the unborn human child as a living human being, he glosses hastily over the biological facts of life, summarily dismissing them in his eagerness to place distance between himself and a field with which he is clearly unfamiliar. Instead, he plunges into a rambling, disjointed discourse on religiosity and personhood in a lame attempt to prop up his insubstantial argument.

The world’s most powerful proponents of abortion have given up peddling the nonsense that a human foetus, or a human embryo, is anything other than a living human being. Embryologists were never in doubt. Today, the debate persists only within the ranks of a motley assortment of variously-intentioned individuals, mostly short on fact and long on opinion.

It begs the question: why does Scicluna get into it at all?

Personhood is an exclusively philosophical concept, with as many definitions as there are schools of philosophical thought. The abortion industry, having given up trying to convince people that unborn children were not human, still had a product to market. It remained necessary to dissociate the status of pre-birth children from that of the rest of humanity if the world were to remain assured that it was still ok to keep on killing them.

Today, Malta is fixed firmly within the sights of the abortion purveyors of the western world 

In characteristically cynical fashion, they latched, instead, on to the notion of personhood. The blurrier outlines of this decidedly non-scientific concept lent themselves more easily to the obfuscation and deceit that are the domain of abortionists the world over and this looks set to remain the preferred strategy until it, too, runs its course.

As to religiosity, the modern Catholic Church’s teaching is, not surprisingly, in line with cutting-edge science. Other faiths have different takes on the subject but the fact of the matter is that this is not a religious question.

It is not a moral question.

It is not a philosophical question.

It is a matter of hard science and the science is unequivocal and has been so since at least the time of Wilhelm His’s groundbreaking research, 130 years ago.

The ‘Bureau of Standards’ of human embryology, to which all human embryologists are bound to refer, are the Carnegie Stages as verified by the Termina Biologica. They remain today’s international standards, detailing the long-known, objective scientific facts of when sexually reproduced human beings begin to exist. They clearly acknowledge that, at the beginning of fertilisation, when the sperm penetrates the oocyte, a new, living, genetically-unique, single-cell human being comes into existence.

The conclusion that human life begins at sperm-egg fusion is uncontested, based on the universally-accepted scientific method of distinguishing different cell types from each other and on ample scientific evidence (literally thousands of independent, peer-reviewed publications). Moreover, it is entirely independent of any specific ethical, moral, political or religious view of human life or of human embryos.

Today, Malta is fixed firmly within the sights of the abortion purveyors of the western world. Anyone who has followed the sequence of incremental events that have historically led to the introduction of abortion elsewhere can be in no doubt that the same is being replicated here. Complacency has often proved to be the undoing of many who have not wished to see it introduced and pro-abortionists, understanding this, like to press the claim that it is nowhere in sight.

Scicluna declares that abortion will not be seen here any time soon. I trust he will be moved to understand my lack of confidence in his prescient skills.

Ivan Padovani is a member of Life Network Foundation Malta

 

Life Networking Seminar – 31st March 2017

A 1 day Pro-Life seminar was recently organised by Life Network Foundation Malta at Dar tal-Providenza, Siggiewi where local Pro-Life groups networked together in order to discuss the road ahead relating to important Life issues. Strategies for cultural change were also discussed. Dr. Miriam Sciberras invites all supporters and friends to join Life Network in order to build a force for defending life!

Press Release from One of Us Federation regarding the 7th edition of the Week for Life at the European Parliament

The One of Us Federation claims in the European Parliament the urgent need of our society to defend and protect human life, women and maternity

  • Throughout these days it has become clear that the defence and protection of human life and women in their motherhood are matters of concern to the citizens of the different countries of the European Union
  • In the absence of solutions by public authorities, member organizations of the One Of Us Federation take up the baton to support, and protect women until the institutions decide to take concrete and effective measures to protect motherhood.
  • The public authorities must understand that the development of our society must be based on the protection of fundamental human rights, whose maximum expression is the defence of human life.

Brussels, March 23rd 2017. The One of Us Federation has participated in the 7th edition of the Week for Life at the European Parliament in Brussels. As in previous years, the One of Us Federation has had a special presence and participation in the European Parliament raising the voice, through the delegates of the organizations of the different countries that meet each year in the seat of the Parliament and whose main mission is the defence and protection of life.

Throughout this session the One of Us Federation, through a wide participation of the delegations of the different countries, has made it clear in the seat of the European Parliament – and therefore in the seat of the European citizens – through its representatives, that the defence and protection of human life and women in their motherhood are matters of concern to the citizens of the different countries of the European Union. Likewise, the report of commercial practices which seek to take up positions in the EU countries, through surrogacy, has been clearly described as practices involving the commercialization of women, their maternity, and their child.

In different panels shown, the lack of protection of life is seen as evident, a life that, today more than ever, is attacked in its different stages: the embryonic stage and the final stage of it. The need for protection of women in their maternity, as the great neglected by public authorities, shows how essential the involvement of social organizations that every day provide assistance, in different areas, to women in their maternity is.

Thus, in the absence of solutions by public authorities, the mediation by member organizations of the One Of Us Federation to support, and protect women in the various EU countries has become absolutely necessary and urgent, at least until the institutions decide to take concrete and effective measures to protect motherhood.

The One of Us Federation publicly states its concern about the practices that leave human life unprotected, and asks the public authorities for their urgent intervention so that the development of our societies should be based on their progress through the protection of Fundamental human rights, whose maximum expression is the defence of human life.

Abortion kills the unborn

Octogenarian and pro-abortion Martin Scicluna (March 8) rowed again into his usual rhetoric on abortion and women’s rights in Malta. In a perfectly identical fashion as other pro-abortion activists, Scicluna wrote about women’s rights but said nothing about the deliberate killing of unborn children by women through abortion.

He euphemistically called abortion a “choice”. A “choice” to kill an unborn child. He also mentioned the “freedom of conscience” of women to kill a little human being.  As if he were writing about the right of women to a facial or to cosmetic plastic surgery.

He showed no compunction at all about the deliberate killing of innocent and vulnerable unborn children in their mothers’ wombs. It’s not ignorance of scientific facts. It’s arrogance without bounds.

Scicluna seems to be happy and confident that “women who do not want to give birth will invariably find some way of making sure they do not”. He was referring to the availability of doing abortions overseas, in Britain and Italy. He called it “abortion tourism” no less.

Apparently he has not noticed or read what a good number of anti-abortionists from the pro-life movement and the three main political parties said about the beauty of life and the horrors of abortion during the last Pro-Life Day manifestation in favour of life by MUCM at the Oratory of St John’s Cathedral in Valletta. All of them were below 60 years of age, many of them young, or relatively young.

Unlike Scicluna who seems to be happy there is sufficient and adequate provision of abortion services for the “70 to 100 women” from Malta, each year, who want to do an abortion overseas, many members of parliament on both sides of the House  speak repeatedly on the need to provide more counselling and material services for pregnant women in difficulties.

Godfrey Farrugia, former minister of health, now the government’s whip and not “an elderly male” said: “Life is beautiful. Life is a fundamental right. I started my life as an embryo. To be pro-life means that you are also in favour of the dignity of the human person throughout his whole life, from conception to natural death.

“Embryo freezing can kill and can lead to other social problems. Emergency contraception before implantation of an embryo can kill a human person. To be pro-choice does not give any woman the right to determine the fate of another weak and vulnerable human being  in the womb. In my view this holds good also in the case of rape and disability.”

On the same day Clyde Puli, shadow minister and not “an elderly male” during the same event said: “It is my pleasure to be with you for the celebration in favour of life from conception to its natural death.

“Our law reflects the high value we give to human life. The Act on the Protection of the Embryo, passed unanimously in Parliament in 2012, is the law about the right to life of the unborn child. The leader of my party Simon Busuttil has instructed me to assure everybody that the protection of life from conception until its natural death was, and will remain, on the agenda of the Nationalist Party.”

Life is beautiful. Life is a fundamental right. I started my life as an embryo 

Simon Galea from Alternattiva Demokratika, also not “an elderly male”, said:  “AD has been in favour of life and against abortion since it was set up.  While recognising the difficulties which pregnant women normally find themselves in, the right to life of the unborn child comes first.”

Deborah Schembri, a junior minister and not “a post-menopausal female”, in her speech on Pro-Life Day in Valletta said: “The child in the womb, a human life from conception, has the right to life. There are those who argue that a woman should have the right to do what she likes with her body and that the right to choose whether to keep the baby or not is a decision she only has to make. Those who argue this way conveniently forget that there are two human lives, with equal rights, in every pregnancy, wanted or not.”

On Pro-Life Day in 2015 Paula Mifsud Bonnici, shadow minister, and not “a post-menopausal female”, said: “I believe in the dignity of the human person. It is my privilege to declare that I and the Opposition are in favour of life in all its stages even when it is most fragile and cannot defend itself. I feel proud that our country still values human  life from conception, a value which many other countries have lost.”

Justyne Caruana, junior minister, and not “a post-menopausal female” on Pro-Life Day in 2009 said: “My presence here is to testify that the Labour Party is in favour of life from conception until its natural death. When we hear the pro-choice people say there is nothing wrong in women having the right to choose, actually they are saying they are in favour of abortion. I believe the right to life from conception is a fundamental right. Not only, but pregnant mothers  have the duty, and the obligation, to do what it takes to protect the life of the child in their womb, until birth.”

Government backbencher Deo Debattisita (not “an elderly male”) has urged the government to set up a “pro-life” clinic to help expectant mothers thinking of aborting their unborn children.

In 2013, Carmelo Abela, now Minister of the Interior, and not “an elderly male”, said: “Abortion is illegal and that is how it should remain – it is nothing less than murder.” And he added: “Parents were obliged to do their utmost and protect their offspring from the moment of conception… Society and the State were in duty bound to support mothers during their pregnancies and help them provide a good quality of life to their newborns”.

The Pro-Life Movement has been offering the service HOPE to pregnant women in difficulties for many years and there are plans to enhance these services even further in the coming months.

So much for Scicluna’s obscure perception of “moral paranoia, tilting with windmills and obsessional compulsive disorder of Maltese anti-abortionists”.

Scicluna’s article contrasts sharply with the 2015 report by the Today Public Policy Institute, of which he was director general, on “the environmental dimension of Malta’s ill-health and action to prevent obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and dementia”.

It is claimed the report is focused on “environmental factors that encourage incorporating healthy lifestyles into everyday life”. Yet Scicluna utterly disregards the right to all the good conditions for a healthy life in the womb, the first environment to man, for the 4,000 and more unborn children every year in Malta.

Unlike many articles which Scicluna writes in this newspaper, and which I read and admire, every time he writes on abortion and women’s rights he discredits himself.

In her article ‘Be bold(er) for change’ (March 8) Equalities Minister Helena Dalli writing on the occasion of Women’s Day draws a broad outline of what she intends to do to advance further the cause of women in Malta. Yet she makes no reference to sexual and reproductive health, in international circles synonymous with abortion, as other pro-abortion women are doing in Malta. Has there been a ‘change’ here also?  A change of heart after the controversy on the morning-after pill?

Paragraph 25 of the report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review on Malta at the UN in Geneva (December 2013) says that Dalli led a Maltese delegation of 11 persons which “reiterated the (Malta) government’s belief in the need to protect the right to life, including that of the unborn child. It expressed the view that, as human life begins at conception, the termination of pregnancy through procedures of induced abortion at any stage of gestation, was an infringement of this right. Malta, therefore, could not recognise abortion or any other form of termination of pregnancy as a legitimate measure of family planning”.

Tony Mifsud, coordinator, Malta Unborn Child Movement.

Marriage undermined

As was to be expected, Malta is about to legalise same-sex marriage. Within only a few years, traditional marriage has been hollowed out of any meaning whatsoever. It all started with divorce legislation, which the LGBT lobby canvassed for so eagerly. At least they knew what they were after. Those of us who warned that this would lead to gay marriage, abortion and euthanasia were ridiculed and shouted down.

Monogamous marriage between one man and one woman is the bedrock on which a civic society is built. Marriage and the traditional family will be undermined if homosexual partnerships are given the same legal ranking. What is the purpose of further weakening an institution that is already in a state of crisis?

This government, which came to power on a platform of transparency and democratic participation, has imposed one law after another without the least consideration of grass roots’ concerns. Unfortunately, certain politicians say one thing when they are in Opposition and do the contrary once in power.

The recipe is easy. If there is no popular demand for your agenda, do things incrementally. Thanks to their parliamentary majority and the reluctance of the Opposition to defend core values, the government has introduced gay adoption, changed laws outlawing vilification of religion, allowed the introduction of abortifacients under the guise of emergency contraceptives and now is further promoting the gender ideology agenda.

The root cause of this cultural change runs deep and is reflected in the fall of our country’s birth rate, the increase of broken marriages, coha­bitation, children born out of wedlock and a rise in the incidence of sexually transmitted diseases.

Sadly, heterosexuals have themselves to blame for this sad state of affairs. The consequences of widespread contraception has now come to fruition. The breaking of the link between the unitive and life-giving aspects of sex has led to the miserable state we are in.

Sound families are the only bastion against a totalitarian State 

Until 1930, every Christian denomination was unanimous in its condemnation of contraception. One only needs to the mention the following stark warnings from non-Catholic sources:

US President Theodore Roosevelt had said: “Contraception is the one sin for which the penalty is national death, race death; a sin for which there is no atonement.”

Sigmund Freud had commented: “The abandonment of the reproductive function is the common feature of all perversions.”

Ghandi had also cautioned: “Moral results can only be produced by moral restraints… if contraceptive methods become the order of the day, nothing but moral degradation can be the result.”

However, one of the strongest condemnations for contraception came from the editorial of the March 22, 1931, edition of the Washington Post, entitled ‘Forgetting Religion’: “Contraception would sound the death knell of marriage as a holy institution by establishing degrading practices which would en­courage indiscriminate immorality. The suggestion that the use of legalised contraceptives would be ‘careful and restrained’ is preposterous.”

As predicted, contraception has led to sexual immorality, broken relationships and abortion.

Locally, the dismal statistics say it all. Now, 30 per cent of children are born out of wedlock, with two-thirds having unknown fathers. Meanwhile, sexually transmitted diseases are on the rise while the birth rate plummets.

Yet it never fails to amaze me how the strident feminists who are so vociferous in condemning rape and domestic violence seem so indifferent to a culture that has reduced women to a being treated as men’s toys, where pornography is promoted and so-called gentlemen’s clubs sprout like mushrooms.

Amazingly, we have politicians who proudly announce that “contraception should be made widely available”. They fit the definition of being fanatics, namely, when in the wrong they redouble their efforts.

Will we take a stand to defend the lives of infants before birth, to support traditional or natural families, to welcome procreation within marriage, to oppose the latest demands of feminists and the LGBT lobby and to defend orthodox Christian sexual values and behaviour?

Sound families are the only bastion against a totalitarian State. Time will tell whether we will have the courage to put a stop to these corrosive, State-imposed policies.

Dr. Klaus Vella Bardon is deputy chairman of Life Network Foundation Malta.

 

The Dictatorship of the Wealthy Donor

The Dutch ‘Safe Abortion Initiative’ aims to donate €600 million worth of abortion services to people in Africa and other parts of the developing world.

Has anyone bothered to ask the Africans?

Press release by Life Network Foundation Malta in response to the recent press conference by Minister Dalli and Prof Serracino Inglott hosting Prof Philippe Bouchard

Part of a famous quote states “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.” Unfortunately, in Malta, this is the case in the discussion of the Morning After Pill (MAP).

Yesterday, at a press conference, French endocrinology professor Philippe Bouchard stressed that there is no scientific evidence that the MAP has any impact on implantation. He did not make any distinction between different pills available let alone their different modes of action but just spouted out words without backing up what he was saying.

Prof. Bouchard, or those promoting him, forgot to include a disclosure in his introduction, i.e. that Prof. Bouchard has a conflict of Interest in this discussion.

Prof. Bouchard is a scientist who works for, or is engaged by, pharmaceutical companies including HRA Pharma. The relationship between HRA Pharma and Bouchard goes back to 1980. He gets consulting and research fees from HRA Pharma and others. Isn’t it a strange coincidence that HRA Pharma is the producer of MAP and that he is in fact lobbying in favour of their products overseas?

Prof. Bouchard has also been a ‘Senior Consultant to The Population Council, New York since 1986. The Population Council offers policymakers and healthcare providers the evidence they need to help communities implement safer abortion and post abortion care practices. The Population Council is pro-abortion. How can anyone in favour of aborting a child be trusted to speak in favour of protection of embryonic human beings?

The introduction of the Morning After Pill in Malta came about as a result of a campaign of misinformation. How can MAP be about self-care when it can kill an embryo? As a prolife foundation with no pecuniary interests other than to be a voice for the pre born child, Life Network Foundation invites Prof. Bouchard and Prof. Serracino Inglott to be truthful to the scientific action of the MAP. Women taking these pills deserve to be fully informed about their possible abortifacient effects.

The Chamber of Pharmacists has a right to insist on conscientious objection and also to refrain from referring to another pharmacy stocking the MAP.

Life Network Foundation Malta notes that the recommendations presented by Parliament through the Joint Health, Social Affairs and Family Affairs committee regarding the licensing of the Morning After Pill in Malta, have acknowledged not only that different types of MAP have different modes of action, but also that there are those that operate by the prevention of implantation of the embryo, thus achieving their goal by an abortifacient process.

Dr Miriam Sciberras

Chairman Life Network Foundation Malta

23.02.2017

Ref: http://www.popcouncil.org/research/safe-abortion-and-postabortion-care

Ref: http://www.fertstert.org/article/S0015-0282(11)02466-6/abstract