Friday, March 16, 2012

What's Missing in Judy Brown on IVF





What's troubling about the below article by Judy Brown is the failure to do what she complains the IVF people fail to do: to go to the root of the problem, i.e. explain exactly what is wrong with IVF in itself. 
   
Her quote from the pope is, of course, correct, in that the only locus for the procreation of the human person is the conjugal union in matrimony. But Judy sails right by the need for an explanation of this and moves into the area which she highlights: the destruction of unwanted "extras." She doesn't miss the point - precisely by quoting Benedict XVI -  but she doesn't make it either. The mysterious reason for the intrinsic evil of IVF is the separation of love making and life giving. This is what has never been understood in HV since 1967, and this is another case of not tackling it head on. It is immensely easy and evident that killing the innocent human person is evil. It is less evident that human life - as image of the Trinitarian Persons - must be engendered by a relationship of love. There is nothing in Greek philosophy that demands this, basically because Greek philosophy comes from the bottom up, and Christian thought on this comes from the "top" down. Hence, we need the anthropology that is Christian, that is based on the reality of Christ, natural Son of the Father and engendered by the Father. The Catholic teaching on contraception and IVF originate from a source that is outside creation and has entered it with the Incarnation. It is eminently rational but not reducible to reason alone. A cultural and epistemology sea-change - undertaken continuously by Benedict and especially now with this forthcoming "Year of Faith" -  would be necessary to understand this. Then it will take courage to confront not only a reductive positivism but also the ensconced Greek scholastic mind. Everyone wants to play safe and no one wants to take it on, not even Judy.


IVF's Barren Wasteland

Wednesday, March 14, 2012
By Judie Brown
American Life League

Every time the subject of human personhood is raised, somebody immediately argues that legal recognition of personhood would mean an end to in vitro fertilization (IVF). It is true that any procedure that has as a byproduct the killing of human beings prior to birth would be outlawed­and that includes IVF. But few want to admit this fact. Apparently it’s unpopular to be truthful.

Most recently in Mississippi, for example, a news story claims that pro-life groups want to collect signatures for a yet unwritten personhood ballot initiative for the 2013 election. The report claims that the personhood folks are working on changing some of the language that concerned voters during last year’s voting, and that “certain fertility procedures” would be outlawed if this were to pass. How only certain ones would be illegal, I do not know, but something is amiss.

IVF is an unethical practice that not only causes the deaths of preborn babies in the earliest stages of their lives, but is also based on deception. IVF opponents like Thomas Hilgers, M.D. point out, that “IVF approaches the evaluation of treatment by skipping over the diseases…they don’t look for root causes.” And why should they? There is big money in IVF; it is an industry that is fundamentally committed not to helping couples resolve their infertility by seeking to understand the disease that may be causing it and treating that disease, but rather to tampering with the procreative process through artificial means.

Hilgers, who is a specialist in treating infertility, prefers to cure the problem so that couples can bear children naturally. His teaching staff, all experts in NaProTechnology (natural procreative technology), have trained physicians all across America and in other nations as well. NaProTechnology respects each and every human person.

Addressing this subject, Pope Benedict XVI recently said, “The pursuit of a diagnosis and of a therapy represents the most scientifically correct approach to the question of infertility, but also that which is most respectful of the integral humanity of the subjects involved. In fact, the union of the man and woman in that community of life that is matrimony constitutes the only dignified ‘place’ in which a new human being, which is always a gift, may be called into existence.”

Why? Because mankind procreates, animals reproduce! Processes such as IVF reduce human procreation to an artificial mechanical function.

The intrinsic human rights inherent in every human individual can only be validated when every aspect of human personhood is explained and clarified. This includes accurately illustrating ethical differences in infertility treatments. When such subjects are avoided or are not addressed in ways that make the problematic nature of technologies like IVF clear, confusion persists. It is literally impossible for those who favor IVF to understand why their position is in error when those who know are unwilling to address the subject clearly and with compassion. Everyone has a right to hear all the facts all the time.

In the dearth of evidence damning IVF comes a story of a couple who went through numerous IVF cycles before finally achieving a successful pregnancy. When they wanted to have another baby, they went back to IVF. Yet this time, they were in for a surprise when the doctor told them they were expecting triplets! But, according to the expectant father, three was just too many and his wife insisted, despite his pleadings, on a “selective reduction”­which resulted in two of their three preborn children being killed prior to birth. He relates,

We were told, point-blank, by the doctor who would do the procedure that they would inject potassium chloride into the placenta to stop the hearts. We were told, point-blank, that it was painless. Even then, I knew I was being lied to, but given the choice presented, I agreed anyway. My mantra became “Save one, or save none.”

Tragic? Of course it is. Avoidable? Yes, but not in a culture that places a premium on technological advancement while ignoring ethical, moral solutions to human problems like infertility.

Given the stakes in our quest for cultural recognition of intrinsic human rights for every human being from his biological beginning until his death, it would behoove each person engaged in this struggle to be clear, forthright, and consistent. Otherwise the scope of the barren wasteland will increase as the dehumanization of man escalates.

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