Partial-birth abortion is a controversial subject in our
society today. The topic of partial-birth abortion can spark heated arguments on
the Senate floor, in the workplace, to the Pro-Life and Pro-Choice groups. I
believe to get a clear understanding of what partial-birth abortion is it should
be seen from the baby’s viewpoint. My name is Baby Jane; I was conceived through a one-night
stand. My mother, who is a very successful businesswoman, started a small
business in lower Manhattan that just recently expanded. My father is someone my
mother knew briefly before my conception.
Before my mother knows I exist, I am already eighteen days
old, my heart is formed, and my eyes are beginning to develop. At two months, my
mother has not seen her menstrual period, and makes an appointment with the
doctor. By this time I am well proportioned, being 1 1/8” long and weighing
1/30th oz. All my organs are present, and my heart is beating sturdily. My
stomach produces digestive juices and my liver is making blood cells, even my
little kidneys begin to function, while my taste buds are being formed.
After my mother discovers she is pregnant, she goes home
despondent. The next few weeks are a whirlwind. She cannot locate my father and
the real problem is her business. What will she do? Who can she trust to run it?
She discusses her situation with close acquaintances. They have many solutions,
but which one is right? The subject of abortion enters the conversation. Would
this be an option?
I am now 4 months old, I have fingerprints, my eyelids and
palms are sensitive to touch, and I can even suck my thumb, and have
fingernails. I can kick, turn my feet, make a fist and even practice breathing.
I can grasp a hand, swim, and turn somersaults. If I were born now I would not
survive.
My mother has kept her monthly doctor appointments. I am 6
months now. Fine hair grows on my eyebrows and head. I have a chance of
surviving at this age.
From the outside it seems that my mother has resolved
her feelings about her pregnancy, but she is taking the advice of a close
acquaintance, and is seeking information about abortion. She finds that there
are many different types of abortions. One is the menstrual extraction method.
This is a very early suction abortion, often done before the pregnancy test is
positive. Another is the suction-aspiration method. In this method, the
abortionist must paralyze the cervical opening and then stretch it to insert a
hollow plastic tube with a knife-like edge on the tip that cuts the placenta
from the inner wall of the uterus. The abortionist then proceeds to suck the
baby’s body into pieces. This suction is 29 times more powerful than a home
vacuum cleaner. Then there is the Dilatation and Curettage (D&C) method.
This procedure is similar to the suction method except the abortionist inserts a
curette, a loop-shaped steel knife, up into the uterus, and cuts the placenta
and baby into pieces and scrapes them out into a basin. Hemorrhaging is usually
profuse.
Because I’m now over 6 months old, the doctor and my mother
choose partial-birth abortion. This is a breech-like delivery. The entire infant
is delivered except the head. Scissors are jammed into the base of the skull,
and a tube is inserted to suck the brains out. The dead infant is pulled out.
The appointment is scheduled and the day is set. I am 6 ½ months. My mother
enters the hospital alone. Where are her acquaintances now? She is taken to her
room, and given medication to ease her nerves. It is time for the abortion. My
mother is prepared and wheeled into the operating room. Labor is induced. Once
her uterus is dilated, the procedure is set into motion. I feel someone grabbing
at my legs with forceps. It is not time for me to enter this world. I can her
their voices. I can just make out my mother’s voice. I scream in my world, I am
not ready. Nevertheless, I am pulled into the birth canal. I am delivered down
to my head. What has happened? Why did they stop? Something is piercing the base
of my skull. The pain is too much for me to bare. I scream and move to avoid the
piercing, however; I am held in place. The person holding me is puncturing my
skull, and opening the hole by opening the scissors. The scissors are removed.
By this time I am losing blood and consciousness, I can barely feel the
insertion of the suction catheter. As my brains are sucked out my last thoughts
are, “Why? Why? Why did my mother allow this to happen to me? Didn’t she love me
as I was being formed in her inward parts, or was I an inconvenience?” These
questions will not be answered now. My skull has collapsed and I am removed
lifeless.
There are no flowers for me, just a cold slab for my little
body to lie on. How could this have been prevented? Not just to me, but the many
other Baby Jane’s and Joes. What laws are there for my life to be preserved?
There are laws to preserve the wildlife and the trees, and there are laws to
save the sparrows, but my life is worth more than many sparrows. I could possess
a hope and a future, nevertheless; the law allows such barbaric crime to be
brought against me. Who will eventually stand for my rights? What government
official or Supreme Court judge will be bold enough to go against the grain, and
stop calling good evil and evil good?
Information from abortionfacts.com