Our admissions director at the college is also about 11 weeks pregnant. She's having a bad time, and came to work over the weekend dragging an IV to keep her hydrated and fed. Even though she feels ill most of the time, she smiles when she speaks of "the baby," and says, dreamily, "It will all be worth it."
Notice: both babies (embryos, fetuses, buns in the oven, etc.) are babies. Not just to their mothers, but to everyone around them--including the doctors. Both young mothers have endured unpleasantness. Pregnancy is neither easy nor romantic.
That got me thinking. Last week the Obama/McCain town hall debate asked when a child was entitled to full rights. McCain answered definitively, "at conception." Obama waffled and said something about that being above his pay grade. For someone who wishes to be the most powerful person in the world, he should know that there will be no one above his pay grade, so it is his duty to make up his mind. I fear what he was trying to avoid saying was that human rights are to be reserved for the convenient, the wanted, and the perfect. To acknowledge that view would be to acknowledge that he doesn't really believe in human rights at all, if the one needing the rights would cost time or money. To Obama, "All men are created equal," but apparently there is debate either about what constitutes a human, or when, exactly, creation of said human has reached enough maturity to be deemed complete. Such uncertainty about definitions ultimately leads to no definition at all. The age at which one becomes eligible for rights could be redefined at will, so any given characteristic could mean that one was not really human. Such was the logic that allowed the Holocaust.
Obama needs to go hear a few ultrasounds.
Here's to welcoming new babies--born and unborn!
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