QR Code Brings Face of Unborn to Unsure Pregnant Women

ChelseaPro Life, UltrasoundLeave a Comment

Brilliant! This is what I love to see – pro-lifers embracing new technology and using it to help save lives.
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The tech-savvy folks at Cleveland Right to Life (CRtL) have developed a QR Code that can be put on business cards and other literature they give out to women considering abortion and, when scanned using a smart phone, will provide a three-minute video that shows 3D and 4D ultrasound images of a developing child from 8 to 34 weeks.

“Imagine sitting in the waiting room of an abortion clinic and being able to see 3D and 4D ultrasound images of an unborn child through literature provided by a sidewalk counselor,” said Molly Smith, president of Cleveland Right to Life. “Statistics show that many women considering an abortion who see an ultrasound choose life.”

truthbooth.pngThe video that plays is the same one available through CRtL’s educational program Truth Booth International. The Truth Booth is an unmanned kiosk that shows ultrasound images of the child in the womb in public venues throughout the United States and Canada. These awesome people have made the QR code image available for free downloading. The QR code can be printed on the back of business cards or on any counseling literature.

What an awesome new tool for sidewalk counselors! Good for CRtL for picking up on this growing tech trend that I’ve noticed being used by more and more businesses.

Click here to view the video online.
Click here to download the QR code for your pro-life literature.

Lord, That I May Have the Courage and Trust of a Martyr

ChelseaPro Life1 Comment

One of the things I’ve noticed about Pensacola since I moved down here is that it has a rather large vietnamese population. This weekend, I was informed that this is due, in large part, to the fact that Eglin AFB was a refugee center at the end of the Vietnam War. I also learned that Fr. Dominic, the pastor of my (as yet still unofficial) new parish, is one of those refugees. He escaped after being imprisoned for studying to be a Catholic priest. He finished his studies here in the US and was ordained in our diocese sometime in the 80s.

martyrs.pngAlong with Saturday’s feast of the First Martyrs of the See of Rome, it helped give me a little perspective on what we’ve been dealing with here lately. It’s still wrong and must be fought, but I’m thankful that for now we’re only concerned about possibly being taxed for practicing our faith instead of imprisoned or killed and I pray that I will have the courage and trust of a martyr if it should ever come to that.

Speaking of martyrs. For the past 14 days, Catholics and non-Catholics alike have been participating in the “Fortnight for Freedom,” a special period of prayer, study, catechesis, and public action with an emphasis on religious liberty. We started this Fortnight on the feast day of two holy men who stood out in history as examples of grace a time when the Church was being challenged by government. The witness of Saints like Thomas More and John Fisher remain strong because when the government challenged their faith they did not back down. They continued to live it with courage and conviction, even when it separated them from their family and sent them to their death. This is because they believed and trusted in a power greater than themselves and the State. It mattered not whether they were successful in changing the course of English rule, only that they remained faithful.

As I said, things here in the West are not (yet) as bad as they were in ancient Rome or 16th century England (or other places in the world right now), but, as she did then, the Church today needs people who are willing to make sacrifices so that the truth of the Gospel can be heard, our culture challenged, and our world transformed.

Over at Integrated Catholic Life, Deacon Mike Bickerstaff has some good suggestions for what Catholics should do the remainder of this political season. I especially like numbers 1, 2 and 5:

1. First and foremost, be at peace; God remains in control. Remain in His love. Be joyful and faithful ambassadors for Christ.
2. Pray daily for your own conversion, for moral truth to guide our nation and its leaders, and for the courage and wisdom you need to properly engage in the political process.
3. Do not forget or be confused about the HHS Mandate. This court decision did not address the question of religious liberty. That will come after the lawsuits seeking to overturn that particular regulation make their way through the court system and are decided by the Supreme Court at a later date. Remain vigilant and prayerful.
4. Become better educated… about the grave issues that confront us and the moral obligations upon us as Catholics.
5. Share your knowledge with others and inspire them to become involved. Become passionate but not mean-spirited. Shed light, not heat on the issues.
6. Let your political leaders and candidates know what you expect of them. Hold them accountable. Vote in November, guided by a conscience formed by Catholic Moral and Social Teaching.

I want to reiterate the importance of the first part of #2, praying for your own conversion. To quote Mahatma Gandhi, we need to “be the change (we) want to see in the world.” The only way to achieve real, lasting change is to take our own conversion seriously, first. When we seek first for ourselves the interior peace of the Gospels then we can more effectively communicate that peace to others.

Most of the things on Deacon Bickerstaff’s list are things we should do, not just during this political season, but always in our daily lives. After reflecting on the example of St. Thomas More in his book Render Unto Caesar, Archbishop Chaput writes:

God may not call us to by martyrs in blood, but he certainly does call us to be martyrs of the daily kind – the kind who live lives with courage and Catholic conviction; the kind who demand personal integrity and good public policy from our political leaders.

God, grant me the courage and trust to be such a martyr!

Other Court Cases to Keep an Eye On

ChelseaEmbryonic Stem Cell Research, Gene Patenting2 Comments

While the country continues to processes yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling and what it all means, Rebecca Taylor reminds us of another court battle we should keep and eye on:
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The ACLU and the Association for Molecular Pathology have sued Myriad Genetics and the U.S. Patent Office over Myriad’s patent on the BRCA I and II genes. The initial ruling, issued by Judge Sweet, was that DNA isolated from its natural environment cannot be patented because it is a product of nature which is accordance with patent law.

Of course Myriad appealed the ruling. Then a higher court that deals with patent cases overturned Judge Sweet’s ruling saying that DNA isolated from the body to be tested was remarkably different that the DNA found in the body. I found this decision ludicrous. I have isolated DNA from thousands of patients and never once did I think it didn’t contain the same information as DNA inside their bodies. If I did think that isolated DNA was so different from DNA inside the body that it was a patentable invention, I wouldn’t bother testing it.

This case then went to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court has rightfully overturned the stupid decision that human DNA outside the body was remarkably different than inside the body and sent the case back down to the lower court to be reconsidered. The high Court cited another ruling that they made earlier that laws of nature are unpatentable.

This is good news. One step closer to making the patenting of our genes invalid. Now let’s hope that the lower court gets the decision right this time

Please, read more for some background on gene patenting and why you should care about this case.

The legal battle over federally funded embryonic stem cell research is also still ongoing. You can read some background on it here. Oral arguments for the plaintiffs in the current appeals case were heard in April. It’s predicted that a ruling will come sometime this fall and that, no matter the outcome, it will ultimately also end up before the Supreme Court.

As I said in January, the outcome of this lawsuit is significant because here in the United States there are absolutely no laws limiting any kind of research involving the creation, use and destruction of human embryos (including human and human/animal hybrid cloning). The only thing we have in terms of protecting human embryos from exploitation at the hands of researchers is the Dicky Amendment prohibiting the Federal Government from paying for such research. Surely, we can at least keep that up.

All Things Are Passing

ChelseaHealth Care, HHS Mandate, Hope2 Comments

Just a reminder:

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Yes, today’s Supreme Court ruling was a major disappointment (to say the very least). And, yes, we must continue to fight for life and liberty here on earth. But, let’s also remember to keep our eye on the real hope that springs eternal: For here we have no lasting city, but we seek the one that is to come.

Not that anyone’s forgotten this or anything. But emotions are (understandably) running high right now, so I thought I’d throw it out there, just in case.

TOB Tuesday: Scared of Sex

ChelseaSex, Sexuality, TOB TuesdayLeave a Comment

Last week, Trista from Not a Minx, a Moron or a Parasite, wrote a brave and brutally honest guest post for the Real Catholic Love and Sex blog about the anxiety she sometimes had when she thought about her potential wedding night.
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My thoughts were jumbled and erratic: Couldn’t there be another way to produce offspring? I asked God. Are you sure this is it? Why is this act the full gift of self?? It’s so vulnerable, Lord, and so…foreign. I’m not sure I can do this. I’m shy. It seems so overwhelming to go in the span of hours from chastity meaning clothes-on-careful-kissing to chastity meaning here-i-am-fully-naked-when-i-haven’t-worn-less-than-a-once-piece-bathing-suit-in-public-in-five-years-and-am-having-sex. Plus, my boyfriend has had past partners, all of whom, I’m convinced, looked like Victoria Secret models and had Cosmo memorized. I can’t compete. I don’t want to compete. I’m terrified. Is an abstinent marriage a possibility? I don’t know what to do during sex, and I’m not coordinated, and I really don’t want to be embarrassed. It seems rife for humiliation. And, Lord, whenever I bring this topic up, everyone looks at me like I have three heads. I’m a freak. Alone in this matter. No one has ever been overwhelmed by the thought of it? Maybe I am not called to marriage. Maybe this is not for me.

I had to laugh out loud when I first read Trista’s post because I have had very similar thoughts myself and wondered if I was alone and weird for having thought them.

Like Trista, my image of sex has been tainted by popular culture (and, unlike Trista, past experience). I know I don’t want what the world has to offer, but, despite what I’ve learned about Theology of the Body since first hearing about it seven years ago, it’s still hard for me to imagine sex being, of all things, holy, even within marriage.

Anyway. Go read the rest of Trista’s lovely post in which she goes on to talk about asking St. Gianna for help getting over her fear and offers some advice for those of us who also need courage.

Sorry, Cryokids, This is The New Normal. “Get Over It.”

ChelseaEgg Harvesting, IVF, Pro Life, Reproductive Technology, Sperm Donation1 Comment

In Must Not See TV news, NBC’s latest attempt at humor this fall will be The New Normal, a 30 minute sitcom about a young, single mother who agrees to become a gay couple’s surrogate mother.
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In the trailer for The New Normal, there is a scene in which the gay couple is speaking to someone from a fertility clinic who tells them:

Click through our egg donor file, find your match, and then implant it in a surrogate. She’s just like an easy bake oven, except with no legal rights to the cupcake.

I get it. It’s a (failed) attempt at humor. But, wow. And you thought ‘gestational carrier’ was offensive.

Surrogacy and egg and sperm donation are certainly the new normal in Hollywood — for gay and straight couples alike — and they’re quickly becoming much more mainstream throughout the West.

While everyone’s hearts bleed for infertile and gay couples, the sympathy’s not always there for the children upset about having half their identity deliberately withheld from them. In fact, some say they’re often met with open hostility and ridicule.

Thousands of donor conceived people have a deep longing to know where they came from, who they look like, whether they have any biological siblings and sometimes even why they’ve developed some genetic disease. Many of them are speaking out about being unfairly stripped of their right to a connection to their biological roots.

alana2.jpgIn the documentary Anonymous Father’s Day, featuring many donor-conceived people explaining what it’s like to have half your identity deliberately withheld from you, Alana Steward, founder of the Anonymous Us Project, said that while promoting her campaign she is often met with vitrol from people who tell her to “just get over it.”

“I thought it would be so easy to arrive, state the obvious that children need their fathers, and everyone would be like, oh my God, thank you for reminding us!,” she said. “But there is a huge monster of money and people desperate for children, who don’t want me to make it harder for them to buy and sell children.”

She’s not alone. Barry Stevens, one of 500-1,000 half-siblings fathered by a fertility clinic owner in the U.K., said that he has been told that people shouldn’t question their conception because they wouldn’t be alive otherwise.

“If that were true, then anyone who is the product of a rape would have to endorse rape,” he said. “It’s quite possible to be grateful for your life and question aspects of your conception.”

Well said.

Jennifer Lahl, producer of both Anonymous Father’s Day and Eggsploitation, a documentary all about how the fertility industry exploits women, told LifeSiteNews that in the work she’s been doing promoting these two films, she has also noticed that the donor children don’t get as much sympathy:

“When I show ‘Eggsploitation,’ there’s an overwhelming, oh my gosh this is horrible, we shouldn’t do this to young women versus, when I show ‘Anonymous Father’s Day,’ it’s like, well, so what? We’ve all had bad upbringing experiences.”

Alana says that the gay and lesbian community is one of the biggest hurdles these donor conceived children face along with “older couples with money.” Clearly Hollywood is not helping matters much, either. The New Normal is far from the first production promoting third party reproduction. Who can forget those comedy masterpieces The Backup Plan, Baby Mama, The Switch. Then there was the critically acclaimed The Kids are Alright (if that’s not a direct slap in the face to these kids, I don’t know what is), which was nominated for four Academy Awards, including Best Picture.

In the past, I’ve been criticized as being “too harsh” for saying that third party reproduction is about fulfilling the selfish desires of adults who rarely, if ever, think about what is good and right for the children. But, based on what we’ve seen over the years, I still say that’s pretty accurate. Not only are more and more donor conceived children speaking out, but research is now showing that children conceived via IVF have a greater risk of developing birth defects.

Artificial insemination and IVF are among some of the technological developments of the twentieth century that came faster than humanity could process their implications and discern their right use — or whether they should be used at all. Just because we can do something, doesn’t mean that we should. And when I look at what assisted reproductive technology has wrought — children and adults confused about their identity, women abused, astronomical numbers of lives lost and perpetually frozen — it’s hard not to see the wisdom of the Popes and Catholic bishops who have also been ridiculed over the years who warned against the use of this technology from the beginning.

I am not unsympathetic to the heartache of those who legitimately feel the pain of infertility (neither is the Catholic Church), I just believe that the right of children to be conceived by an act of love between a mother and father and born to parents who are known to them takes precedence over someone’s “right” to have a child at any and all cost. Because, well, no such right exists. Children are a gift, not a right and certainly not a commodity.

Couples who want to share their love with another human being do not need to resort to manufacturing children in petri dishes or getting shot up with a stranger’s sperm. Naturally, adoption is always a loving option. There is also good, effective fertility care available that respects both the rights of children as well as the dignity of the female body. Unlike IVF, this exciting and expanding new area of medicine identifies and treats the underlying causes of both male and female infertility as well the problem of recurrent miscarriage.

Do It for the Children!

ChelseaPro Life, Women4 Comments

Wow. These ‘mommy wars’ just don’t stop. Hot on the heals of this article, which I wrote about earlier today, Cherie Blair, wife of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, said in a speech recently that every mother should work outside the home – for the good of the children:
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“Every woman needs to be self-sufficient and in that way you really don’t have a choice – for your own satisfaction; you hear these yummy mummies talk about being the best possible mother and they put all their effort into their children. I also want to be the best possible mother, but I know that my job as a mother includes bringing my children up so actually they can live without me.”

Ok, this time I’m reminded of something from Chesterton:

I do not deny that women have been wronged and even tortured; but I doubt if they were ever tortured so much as they are now by the absurd modern attempt to make them domestic empresses and competitive clerks at the same time.” (What’s Wrong With the World, p. 148)

That might be a bit of an overstatement, but not by much. Perhaps Mrs. Blair hasn’t heard, but despite 40 years of feminism and an ever-increasing number of women working outside the home, women today are more unhappy than ever. For the good of children, you say? Hmm…how does that phrase go? If momma aint happy…

Look, everyone here really needs to get a grip. Parenting is not a one-size fits all vocation. Except for the fact that we know children thrive best when they have both a mother and a father, there is no standard for how that should work. Every family needs to decide for themselves what’s important to them, what they think is best for their children and what they can afford to do based on their own circumstances.

Not all stay at home moms are your stereotypical “yummy mummys”. Most of the ones I know work hard everyday, and their husbands are not financially wealthy by any stretch of the imagination. Many stay home because it actually saves the family money – on day care/school costs, etc… – more than a double income would, and/or they make sacrifices – a smaller house, no brand new cars, video games, etc… – because it’s just that important to them. And that is great and it works out well for many, many families.

And then you have the mothers who work outside the house, whether by choice or necessity, and there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that, either. My sisters and I actually had it both ways growing up. Both my parents worked outside the home up until I was in middle school (maybe a freshman in high school) when my mom quit her job.

As long as the kids are being cared for and no one’s being neglected or abused, who cares which parents are working or not (let’s not forget the SAH dads!)?

How Modern Feminists Acknowledge the Superiority of Men

ChelseaWomen3 Comments



Well, this is maddening, and yet, at the same time I wonder if it’s even worth it to take this woman seriously as she just sounds bitter and stupid:
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I have to admit that when I meet a woman who I know is a graduate of, say, Princeton — one who has read The Second Sex and therefore ought to know better — but is still a full-time wife, I feel betrayed. I’m not much of a moralist — I have absolutely no right to be — but in the interest of doing what’s right both for me personally and for women generally, I have been strict with myself about earning my keep. For the longest time I would not date anyone who would now be called a one-percenter because money and power are such a potent combination, and if I am going to be bossed around, I don’t want that to be the reason. When it’s come up, I have chosen not to get married. Over and over again, I have opted for my integrity and independence over what was easy or obvious. And I am happy. I don’t want everyone to live like me, but I do expect educated and able-bodied women to be holding their own in the world of work.

Her whole diatribe reminds me of something Dr. Alice Von Hildebrand said in her book The Privilege of Being a Woman:

Unwittingly, the feminists acknowledge the superiority of the male sex by wishing to become like men. They foolishly want to alter inequality rather than to achieve truth or justice. Femininity is a linchpin of human life; once it is uprooted, the consequences are disastrous.

You see, the problem with radical feminists like Ms. Wurtzel is not so much that they hate men, but that they hate women or, at least they dislike the chief feminine characteristics. That women have been mistreated and considered less than men throughout history cannot be denied. But the modern feminist response has not been one that, I think, has been a great benefit to women or society as a whole. Instead of building women up, their goal seems to be the destruction of authentic woman-hood altogether.

I mean, can someone please explain to me why it is a “war on women” to not want to provide them with something that suppresses the very thing which makes one a woman? Should it not rather be the other way around — that convincing women that they need this kind of poison is the real war on women (a phrase I’m starting to get equally as sick of hearing)?

And then there’s this: Women are more unhappy, despite 40 years of feminism.

workingsucks.pngI am by no means saying women should never work. But, when young women are encouraged to think about their future and what they want to do with their life, being a wife and mother is never anywhere near the top of the list (neither, it goes without saying, is dedicating one’s life to Christ as a consecrated religious).

Quoting MJ, whose video “Careers vs. Baby Making” I posted here a few weeks ago, “If you’re not a bulldog about your career and that’s not your thing, it’s almost like you’re marginalized.” Indeed. Which reminds me…

This weekend, my local paper highlighted all of the Pensacola area’s high school valedictorians. Out of 15 valedictorians, 11 of them were female. When asked to complete the sentence “in ten years I expect to…” ten of them answered that they wanted to be finishing grad school and starting various careers (lawyer, doctor, physical therapist, orthodontist, etc…) with no mention of marriage or children. One girl, however, actually said that she wanted to “be married and starting a family. I really have no idea what career field I want to go into yet.” Ick! Splitter! What a waste of brains, amiright?

I do have to say, though, I agree with Wurtzel’s final point (which I’ve expressed here before) – while parenting certainly involves a lot of hard work, being a mother, or a father, for that matter, is not a “job.” It is much, much more than that. It’s a vocation. It’s who someone is. They don’t get paid for it and there’s certainly no “quitting time.”

Also recommended: The Bride Who Was Groomed for a Career.

Comfort in Our Weakness

ChelseaPro Life1 Comment

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Andrea Solario, Madonna With the Green Cushion

This picture reminds me of something I heard a priest say once: “may the humanity of Christ give us comfort in our weaknesses.”

Related: Divine Drool and the Art of Baby Worship

The Brutal Reality of China’s One Child Policy

ChelseaAbortion1 Comment

Feng Jianmei, was beaten and dragged into a vehicle by a group of family planning officials while her husband was at work. When the officials asked for money for fines from Feng’s family and did not receive the funds, they forcibly aborted Feng’s second child at seven months. The picture says it all:

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In case you forgot, China is the largest foreign holder of our government’s debt. If this isn’t cause for national outrage, I don’t know what is. Click here to learn more about another woman and unborn child in danger of the same fate and what you can do to (try to) help.

Meanwhile, here in America we have adopted our own, voluntary one-child policy over the years.