Thursday, May 31, 2012

40 Million Abortions of Female Babies in China

Chinese girls adopted by families in Iceland
 From Susan B. Anthony List founder Marjorie Dannenfelser, we have the following commentary on the horrific outcome of  the Chinese government's one-child policy assault against China's families: 40 million female children have been killed in the womb as the result of sex-selective abortions.


When Chinese human rights activist Chen Guangcheng and his family arrived in Greenwich Village from Beijing, Chai Ling was among the crowd cheering their arrival. In many ways, Chen was following in Chai's footsteps.
A political generation ago, Chai was deemed an enemy of the state for her participation in the student demonstrations in Tiananmen Square, where a papier-mache Statue of Liberty was the students' chosen symbol. Chai escaped to the West in search of freedom, and her journey has been every bit as epic as the story of Chen and his family.
Chai has lived the nightmares that Chen has sacrificed so much, as a writer and scholar, to document for the world to see. Last September, Chai testified before a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on the three coerced abortions she endured years ago under China's draconian one-child policy. Chai told the members of Congress of the 400,000,000 people killed under the law -- among them 40,000,000 girls killed in the womb solely because of their sex.
As the Chen drama unfolded in the past few weeks, Chai testified twice more before the House, recounting the fate of Deng Lourong, of Anhui province, the second daughter of parents who bore her in defiance of the one-child policy. Chinese officials demolished the family home and seized Deng's parents' belongings for their "crime." When Deng's mother bore another daughter two years after Deng's birth, the mother of three disappeared, oddly, just two days later.
From that point on, Deng's life was thrown into chaos, as she was sent to live with her grandmother (her father had fled from pursuing state family planning officials), subjected to a rape at age 12 that went virtually unpunished by authorities, and was ultimately sold as a child bride to a much older man. This entire tragedy and many like it are made possible by the one-child policy.
Then there is the story of Ma Jihong. As Chai recounted, "Last October, officials dragged Ma into a van when she was heavily pregnant with her third child. She died during the forced abortion procedure, and her family did not know for hours afterward. Her husband and two surviving daughters have no real recourse to take."
Chen's contribution to fighting these enormities was unprecedented. He detailed the impact of the one-child policy by annotating the cases of 130,000 women who had undergone forced abortions and sterilizations and filing a class-action lawsuit on their behalf. Chen's lawsuit and activism riled the communist government and led to his imprisonment and home detention. It must have especially galled them that his lawsuit could appeal not only to the most basic standards of human rights but also to Chinese law, which, though honored in massive breach, outlaws sex-selection abortion.
Now that Chen is in the United States, one of the ironies that grows sharper is the fact that he has entered a nation where sex-selection abortion is legally permitted in all but a few states. Chai has gone on to found the group All Girls Allowed to inform Americans about this worldwide phenomenon and its vast social implications.
The American people are receptive. A poll completed last week for the Charlotte Lozier Institute, the education and research arm of Susan B. Anthony List, found that 77 percent of U.S. adults, and fully 80 percent of women, would support a law to make sex-selection abortion illegal in the United States.
Is sex-selection abortion happening in the United States? A 2008 study by Douglas Almond and Lena Edlund at Columbia University and published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences says yes, especially among ethnic subgroups with a history of strong son-preference.
Now that Chen and his family are safely on our shores, we could choose no better way to honor him than to adopt measures to end coercive and sex-selection abortions -- everywhere. Lady Liberty's light will shine ever more brightly when we do.

40 Million Abortions of Female Babies in China

Chinese girls adopted by families in Iceland
 From Susan B. Anthony List founder Marjorie Dannenfelser, we have the following commentary on the horrific outcome of  the Chinese government's one-child policy assault against China's families: 40 million female children have been killed in the womb as the result of sex-selective abortions.


When Chinese human rights activist Chen Guangcheng and his family arrived in Greenwich Village from Beijing, Chai Ling was among the crowd cheering their arrival. In many ways, Chen was following in Chai's footsteps.
A political generation ago, Chai was deemed an enemy of the state for her participation in the student demonstrations in Tiananmen Square, where a papier-mache Statue of Liberty was the students' chosen symbol. Chai escaped to the West in search of freedom, and her journey has been every bit as epic as the story of Chen and his family.
Chai has lived the nightmares that Chen has sacrificed so much, as a writer and scholar, to document for the world to see. Last September, Chai testified before a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on the three coerced abortions she endured years ago under China's draconian one-child policy. Chai told the members of Congress of the 400,000,000 people killed under the law -- among them 40,000,000 girls killed in the womb solely because of their sex.
As the Chen drama unfolded in the past few weeks, Chai testified twice more before the House, recounting the fate of Deng Lourong, of Anhui province, the second daughter of parents who bore her in defiance of the one-child policy. Chinese officials demolished the family home and seized Deng's parents' belongings for their "crime." When Deng's mother bore another daughter two years after Deng's birth, the mother of three disappeared, oddly, just two days later.
From that point on, Deng's life was thrown into chaos, as she was sent to live with her grandmother (her father had fled from pursuing state family planning officials), subjected to a rape at age 12 that went virtually unpunished by authorities, and was ultimately sold as a child bride to a much older man. This entire tragedy and many like it are made possible by the one-child policy.
Then there is the story of Ma Jihong. As Chai recounted, "Last October, officials dragged Ma into a van when she was heavily pregnant with her third child. She died during the forced abortion procedure, and her family did not know for hours afterward. Her husband and two surviving daughters have no real recourse to take."
Chen's contribution to fighting these enormities was unprecedented. He detailed the impact of the one-child policy by annotating the cases of 130,000 women who had undergone forced abortions and sterilizations and filing a class-action lawsuit on their behalf. Chen's lawsuit and activism riled the communist government and led to his imprisonment and home detention. It must have especially galled them that his lawsuit could appeal not only to the most basic standards of human rights but also to Chinese law, which, though honored in massive breach, outlaws sex-selection abortion.
Now that Chen is in the United States, one of the ironies that grows sharper is the fact that he has entered a nation where sex-selection abortion is legally permitted in all but a few states. Chai has gone on to found the group All Girls Allowed to inform Americans about this worldwide phenomenon and its vast social implications.
The American people are receptive. A poll completed last week for the Charlotte Lozier Institute, the education and research arm of Susan B. Anthony List, found that 77 percent of U.S. adults, and fully 80 percent of women, would support a law to make sex-selection abortion illegal in the United States.
Is sex-selection abortion happening in the United States? A 2008 study by Douglas Almond and Lena Edlund at Columbia University and published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences says yes, especially among ethnic subgroups with a history of strong son-preference.
Now that Chen and his family are safely on our shores, we could choose no better way to honor him than to adopt measures to end coercive and sex-selection abortions -- everywhere. Lady Liberty's light will shine ever more brightly when we do.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

A New Pope in the White House?



 Lynn Hardaway, a member of the Lynden Board of Human Life, and a nurse for over forty years, and her husband, an adjunct professor at a Christian university in Seattle, write a spirited commentary published today on the Real Clear Religion web site. the couple remind Americans that "We believe in rendering unto America the things that rightfully belong to America. We refuse to render to an unlawful mandate the things that belong to God."

Of the recent HHS mandate, they write: "Catholics were, in effect, commanded to obey a new 'pope' in the White House. All religious enterprises except 'houses of worship' were treated as channels of a new, secular welfare system. The authors and social engineers of the draconian, unconstitutional 'health care' act ignored the First Amendment, and, peremptorily launched a culture war on all religious entities. The president and his secretary of Health and Human Services felt inspired to tell religious schools, hospitals, charities, and social services organizations that they were not religious institutions at all but appendages of secular government."

The Hardaways add: "Religion involves far more than private worship within the walls of a church on Sunday (or a synagogue or mosque on Sabbath). Religion encompasses a total life lived seven days a week. It permeates both private and public life. Christian teachers in a Christian school teach all students -- believers and non-believers -- as a ministry for God to the world. Christian nurses and doctors serve the sick for the same reason and motivation. The same sense of calling motivates many Jewish and Islamic enterprises."

Read their entire article here.