By Catholic League president Bill Donohue
Two years ago, a jury awarded $58 million in damages to ten
plaintiffs after finding that the Phoenix-based Biological Resource Center had
deceived families into donating the body of a deceased family member. The
families thought the body would be used for medical research. Instead, the
bodies were dismembered and sold for profit.
FBI agents raided the facility in 2014 and found chopped up
bodies in buckets, including feet, shoulders, legs, and spines. Freezers were
packed with penises. They even found a torso with a different head sewn on,
reminiscent of "Frankenstein." The owner of the human chop shop,
Stephen Gore, was convicted of deceiving the families who donated the body; he
also broke the law by deceiving the buyers who were sold body parts with
infectious diseases.
How could something like this happen? It's actually not
hard to understand. When we objectify human beings, treating them as inanimate
objects, such practices logically follow.
The Catholic Church has a long and proud record of opposing
attempts to dehumanize men, women, and children, ranging from denouncing pagan
practices such as infanticide to Nazi eugenics. Their latest salvo is a shot at
the Biden administration for lifting limits on human fetal research that were
placed by the Trump administration.
Archbishop Joseph Naumann, chairman of the bishops'
conference on Pro-Life Activities, released a statement on April 21 that was
superb. "The bodies of children killed by abortion deserve the same
respect as that of any other person. Our government has no right to treat
innocent abortion victims as a commodity that can be scavenged for body parts
to be used for research. It is unethical to promote and subsidize research that
can lead to legitimizing the violence of abortion."
White House press secretary Jan Psaki was asked about this
statement on April 27. She said the White House "respectfully
disagrees," explaining that "it's important to invest in science
and look for opportunities to cure diseases."
As expected, Psaki never acknowledged the humanity of the
unborn child. She can't. If she did, the Biden administration's extreme
pro-abortion agenda would implode.
It's easy to ignore the humanity of the unborn if we call
fetal tissue "material." That was the choice of words selected by
Planned Parenthood in the 1970s. In the 1980s, Newsweek described the
dismembered body of an unborn baby extracted in a D&E abortion as
"fetal material being pulled from a woman's vagina." In the same
decade, Rachel Conrad Wahlberg, an abortion-rights advocate, contended that the
unborn do not have an independent existence. Referring to the pregnant woman,
she said, "It is hers. It is her possession (italic in
the original)."
The same mindset marked the Dred Scott decision
that legalized slavery. In the Supreme Court decision of 1857, the court
affirmed public opinion by noting that black people were "articles of
property and merchandise." Nearly 400 blacks were used as guinea pigs in
the infamous Tuskegee experiment that began in 1932. For 40 years, rural
sharecroppers who took part in the experiment never knew they had syphilis, nor
were treated for it. They were not seen as human beings with rights equal to
that of others.
After World War I, prisoners in San Quentin received
transplanted sex organs from rams, goats, and boors. Tuberculosis treatments
were tested on other prisoners. Inmates of Stateville Correctional Center in
Illinois were exposed to malaria in the hope that a cure could be found. The
drug companies had a field day experimenting on the incarcerated, and did so
without controversy right up until the 1970s.
Not only were prisoners seen as subhuman, so were mentally
retarded children. From the mid-1950s to 1970, those housed at Willowbrook
State School in Staten Island, New York were infected with hepatitis so that
doctors could track the spread of the viral infection. More than 700 children
were infected to see how they responded to a drug treatment.
After what Jews went through at the hands of Nazi physician
Josef Mengele—he performed painful and often deadly experiments on twins—it led
to the establishment of the Nuremberg Code, a guideline for conducting research
on humans. The first stricture insists that the subject must provide consent
before the research can begin.
A child in his mother's womb can never give consent.
Archbishop Naumann got it right when he said "it is
deeply offensive to millions of Americans for our tax dollars to be used for
research that collaborates with an industry built on the taking of innocent
lives." Worse, this morally indefensible decision was rendered by our
"devout Catholic" president.
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