Thursday 5 January 2012

Today's must-read pro-life news-stories, Thu 5 Jan

Lord Falconer
Top stories:

Assisted suicide report from Falconer's stacked commission is worthless says SPUC
The report by Lord Falconer's self-styled commission on assisted suicide, funded by pro-death activists, amounts to a renewed attack on the legal status of disabled and elderly people. The commission has been widely discredited as stacked with supporters of assisted suicide. Paul Tully of SPUC Pro-Life said: "Lord Falconer's cooking-up of a dodgy dossier via a stacked panel shows the lengths to which the assisted suicide lobby will go. They seek to create a two-tier system: people who deserve a right to life, and those who maybe don't." [SPUC, 4 January]

SPUC launches campaign against gay marriage
SPUC has launched a campaign against the Westminster government's proposals for same-sex marriage. SPUC has published a position paper on same-sex marriage following a resolution by SPUC's Council last month. SPUC has also made available a background paper to be read in conjunction with the position paper and which provides some additional references and reflections. Same-sex marriage represents an attempt to redefine marriage, thus undermining marriage. This undermining lessens the protection for unborn children which true marriage provides. [SPUC, 3 January]

UK abortions to reduce multiple births on the rise
Abortions of twins in the UK have risen since 2006, official statistics show. In 2010, 85 women aborted at least one unborn child while going on give birth to another baby, up from 59 in 2006. [Telegraph, 28 December] Anthony Ozimic of SPUC commented: “There are a number of factors which may be responsible for this rise. There may be pressure from doctors on women to abort babies deemed as ‘surplus’, whether conceived through IVF or naturally following fertility treatment. Doctors may also be influencing women to abort with the reason that disability in a child or complications for the mother are more likely in multiple pregnancies than in single pregnancies. Another reason may be the practice of sex-selective abortion among some ethnic groups. Whatever the causes of the rise, it nonetheless reveals the reality of eugenics in modern British medicine, in which some innocent human beings are deemed too inconvenient to be allowed to live.”

Other stories:

Embryology
Euthanasia
Sexual ethics
General
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