Another
Abortion Challenge Launched in Dixie
State lawmakers considering affirming 'personhood' of unborn
Atlanta, January 13, 2007 ~ A new bill introduced in the Georgia
Legislature would ban abortions, declaring that "a fetus is
a person for all purposes under the laws of this state from the
moment of conception" and setting up what could be a direct
challenge to Roe v. Wade.
The plan by Rep. Bobby Franklin and several other lawmakers notes
that the state's duty is to protect life "from the moment of
conception" and cites the 1973 Supreme Court opinion that
created the "right" to abortions itself in proposing
its downfall.
Steve Lefemine, who works with the Columbia Christians for Life
in nearby South Carolina, said the Georgia plan is a solid attack
on the abortion industry, because it uses the concepts
established in Roe.
That opinion, he said, affirms that "if" the personhood
of the unborn is established, then "of course" the pro-abortion
arguments fail.
The new plan in
Georgia does exactly that.
"Georgia Constitution, at Article I, Section I, Paragraph II,
provides: 'Protection to person and property is the paramount
duty of government and shall be impartial and complete. No person
shall be denied the equal protection of the laws,'" the
legislation states. "Because a fetus is a person,
constitutional protection attaches at the moment of conception."
The exact Roe text states: "Texas argues that the fetus is a
'person' within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth
Amendment
If this suggestion of personhood is established,
the pro-abortion case, of course, collapses, for the fetus' right
to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th]
Amendment."
Blackmun went on to write that Texas was urging that the fetus is
entitled to14th Amendment protection, but that created a dilemma,
because Texas had an exception in the abortion ban. "But if
the fetus is a person who is not to be deprived of life without
due process of law, and if the mother's condition is the sole
determinant, does not the Texas exception appear to be out of
line with the Amendment's command?" he wrote.
Lefemine said last year, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, South Carolina,
North Dakota and Georgia had proposals for bills banning all
abortions, Alabama, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri. Tennessee and
South Dakota had plans that allowed "life of the mother"
exceptions, and Indiana had a proposal to ban abortions except
for rape, incest and life of the mother.
Kevin Harris, a lobbyist for the Georgia Right to Life
organization, said that the plan is very similar to last year's
ban on abortions in the state of South Dakota, except that that
law allowed for an exception for the life of the mother.
In that state, lawmakers aiming to challenge Roe approved the ban
and the governor signed it. However, a petition funded by
national abortion interests brought the ban to a vote of the
residents, and a multi-million dollar advertising campaign
convinced them it was too restrictive.
"Only this would not allow the voters to make that decision,"
Harris said. "If the legislature approves it and the
governor signs it it's the law." He said the issue had been
proposed for only hours before it had started rallying both pro-life
and abortion industry forces.
"Chairman Franklin is a well-respected leader of the pro-life
movement," Harris said. "We want to restore full legal
protection from conception to natural death." He said pro-life
supporters also were considering whether a constitutional
amendment also would be needed to accomplish such a ban.
Blackmun also had noted in 1973 that "when those trained in
the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology
are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this
point in the development of man's knowledge, is not in a position
to speculate as to the answer [to the question of when life
begins."
The proposed law, however, answers that: "The General
Assembly knows the answer to that difficult question, and that
answer is life begins at the moment of conception."
The legislation also specifically cites the "three decades"
since Roe that have revealed the injury to women who have
abortions, including studies that show 96 percent of those who
have had abortions feel their abortion "had taken a human
life."
LeFemine noted the many states that had various abortion ban
proposals on their agendas during the 2006 legislative season,
and he expects more and more to follow, and to focus more and
more on affirmations of the personhood of the unborn.
"That's the formula," he said. "I'm very pleased
to see this vision grow."
A Georgia House committee heard testimony on the proposal from
Franklin and others, including Sandra Cano, the "Doe"
of the Supreme Court case Doe v. Bolton, a decision issued at the
same time as Roe. While Roe created the right to abortion, the
Doe opinion created the right to late-term abortions.
Georgia's proposed law states that it is to "make certain
findings of fact; to define certain terms; to provide that any
abortion shall be unlawful
"
CFPA: Most Christian churches say that life begins at conception. Science tells us that life begins at conception. Will anyone argue that the life of a plant begins at germination? Isn't conception the germination of that seed (egg) which is in the mother's womb? We pray to God that this concept of personhood spreads to every state in the Union and the abomination of abortion finally ends.
Created: 13 Jan 2007