It
was recently announced that medical researchers are trying
to learn how to maintain the viability of ovaries taken from
female fetuses destroyed in late term abortions. The purpose
of these macabre experiments: to determine whether aborted
babies could someday become sources for eggs for use in treating
infertile women. If researchers succeed it could lead to the
surrealistic outcome of baby girls who were never born becoming
mothers.
Here’s the story. Scientists in Israel and the Netherlands
have successfully kept the ovarian follicles of female fetuses
destroyed in second and third trimester abortions alive for
several weeks. They then experimented on these immature ovarian
tissues with chemicals to determine whether they could induce
them to develop mature eggs that could be harvested. The researchers
announced that they are encouraged by their early efforts,
although they admit that they have a long way to go before
the ovaries of late term fetuses could be transformed into
so many human egg farms.
We should all be shocked by this turn of events—regardless
of our individual beliefs about the propriety of abortion.
It is all so dehumanizing. If this research succeeds, we will
face the prospect of late term abortion becoming seen as a
potential boon to society. It could also provide an excuse
for permitting the use of partial birth abortion—known
medically as dilation and extraction—since that procedure
leaves the destroyed fetus largely intact.
It is disturbing to contemplate, I know. But we must face
the prospect that this research could result in the late term
abortion of female fetuses becoming the first step in a supply
chain geared toward providing human eggs to the medical marketplace.
Before you dismiss me as an alarmist, please consider these
facts: It is currently illegal to sell fetal body parts but
a few years ago Congressional hearings disclosed that a black
market had formed in which for-profit companies sold organs,
spinal columns, and other tissues taken from aborted fetuses.
I have seen the price lists!
Given that some people will do anything if the price is right,
and given that we have entered a cultural milieu in which
some accept the notion that unwanted human life can be treated
as a mere natural resource, might we one day not be willing
to use the ovaries from aborted fetuses as sources of eggs?
Adding
to this worry is the prospect that human cloning might one
day become a source for tissues to be used in medical treatments:
A process known as “therapeutic cloning.” In therapeutic
cloning, a cloned embryo would be made of each patient to
be treated, a process that requires the use of human eggs.
After one week of development, the cloned human embryo would
be dissected for its embryonic stem cells, which would be
grown in culture and eventually injected into the patient
in the hope that they morph into tissues that could rebuild
diseased or injured organs or other tissues.
According to the National Academy of Sciences, there are more
than one hundred million patients with degenerative conditions
in the United States alone who could potentially benefit from
therapeutic cloning. Thus, if therapeutic cloning ever were
perfected—admittedly a big if—the demand for human
eggs could skyrocket since tens of millions of them would
be needed for use in the therapeutic cloning process. Considering
that college girls can already sell their eggs for $5000 or
more per donation for use in fertility treatments, if therapeutic
cloning becomes a widely available medical treatment, there
might be no upper limit to the price that the unscrupulous
could charge for eggs derived and developed from aborted fetuses.
With this story, we face the very real possibility that late
term abortion could one day become the foundation for a thriving
market in human eggs. The time is coming—and I fear
it is coming soon—when society will have to decide whether
we are willing to permit such crass exploitation of human
life. |
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