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‘Born-Alive’ bill’s failure represents a sad fate for living, breathing infants | Christine Flowers

We are talking about babies here, whole and separate entities who are both legal persons as well as U.S. citizens under the 14th Amendment.

In this Friday, Jan. 18, 2019 file photo, anti-abortion activists protest outside of the U.S. Supreme Court, during the March for Life in Washington. President Trump's call for a ban on late-term abortions is unlikely to prevail in Congress, but Republican legislators in several states are pushing ahead with tough anti-abortion bills of their own that they hope can pass muster with the reconfigured U.S. Supreme Court.
In this Friday, Jan. 18, 2019 file photo, anti-abortion activists protest outside of the U.S. Supreme Court, during the March for Life in Washington. President Trump's call for a ban on late-term abortions is unlikely to prevail in Congress, but Republican legislators in several states are pushing ahead with tough anti-abortion bills of their own that they hope can pass muster with the reconfigured U.S. Supreme Court.Read moreJose Luis Magana / AP

It seems that everyone has an opinion about the fact that 44 Senate Democrats voted against the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act this week. I certainly do. I’m sure you do, too.

My social media has been filled with sound and fury in support of the bill, but it amounted to nothing, because the bill was defeated on Tuesday.

Regardless, I want to discuss what actually happened when abortion supporters opposed the lowest hanging fruit on the tree of common decency: giving aid to an ailing child who miraculously beat the odds and survived an abortion.

Let’s start with the text of the legislation, which garnered the support of three Democrats: Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Doug Jones of Alabama, and Pennsylvania’s own Robert Casey. The words of the bill would have simply reaffirmed that a child born in this country is entitled to legal protections as a “person:”

1. If an abortion results in the live birth of an infant, the infant is a legal person for all purposes under the laws of the United States, and entitled to all the protections of such laws.

2. Any infant born alive after an abortion or within a hospital, clinic, or other facility has the same claim to the protection of the law that would arise for any newborn, or for any person who comes to a hospital, clinic, or other facility for screening and treatment or otherwise becomes a patient within its care.

This is the relevant portion of the bill, the section that defines “person” for legal and medical purposes. We are no longer in that dense, verbal forest of abortion politics, where the question of when does a fetus become a baby weighs on our consciences and taxes our common sense. This legislation presumes that there is a “born child,” one that has exited the womb and can no longer be considered a part of the mother’s body.

We are talking about babies here, whole and separate entities who are both legal persons as well as U.S. citizens under the 14th Amendment.

This failed bill is not about abortion, because the legislation in question presumed that a child was already here, having passed through the birth canal and into the waiting world. This was about recognizing the rights of infants who had survived abortions and were no less human than children born to mothers who wanted them.

And even here, the strongest supporters of a woman’s right to choose insisted on ignoring the humanity of the infant. The words of the bill would have simply required that a child who survived an abortion be given the most efficient, lifesaving care available. If the child died despite all of medicine’s best efforts, it would have at least been given a fighting chance at life, as promised in the Declaration of Independence.

Opponents of the bill pushed back and raised the specter of a “nonviable” child being resuscitated and brought back from the brink of death, only to live a life of misery. They pushed back against the suggestion that they were anti-baby, and deflected attention from their political solidarity as Democrats by reminding us all that Republicans put kids in cages. They pushed back with the suggestion that this bill violated the mandate in Roe v. Wade, overturning a woman’s desire to terminate a pregnancy by administering care to the accidental, unwanted child.

Years ago, Hillary and Bill Clinton addressed the difficult moral questions raised by abortion in their now-famous slogan of “safe, legal, and rare.” Today’s abortion advocates seem to have abandoned that last point, demonstrating a desire to extend a woman’s right to choose even beyond her own body. The tentacles of Roe are long.

There are a lot of things that I could say about the defeat of this simple, self-evident law. But I think that my friend Helene said it best:

“I am a nurse, and also have a business which serves the special-needs population. This is not just a slippery slope, this is a bloody slide into hell.”