[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 58 (Thursday, April 25, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H2345-H2347]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ATROCITIES OF ABORTION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 3, 2013, the Chair recognizes the
[[Page H2346]]
gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Franks) for 30 minutes.
Mr. FRANKS. Thank you, Madam Speaker.
Madam Speaker, there was a time when the rules of Congress forbid
anyone to petition this Congress against slavery. For some inexplicable
reason, once in a while, it seems mankind becomes completely blind to a
monstrosity. History is replete with such examples. It seems we are
never quite so eloquent as we are when we decry the crimes of the past
generation, and yet we seem as staggeringly blind as some of our most
sightless predecessors when it comes to facing and rejecting atrocities
in our own time.
Whether it was slavery, the Nazi Holocaust, or the many human
genocides across history, the patterns were the same. Innocent human
beings, children of God all, were systematically dehumanized and then
subjected to the most horrifying inhumanity. All the while, human
society as a whole hardened their hearts and turned away.
But, Madam Speaker, truth and time travel on the same road. And
although it was often agonizingly slow, the truth of these tragic
inhumanities in our past began to dawn on people of reason and good
will. Their hearts first and then their minds began to change.
I've often asked myself: What was it that changed their minds? What
changed the minds of those who had previously embraced an invincible
ignorance to hide from themselves the horror of what was happening to
their innocent fellow human beings?
Madam Speaker, if I only really knew or if I knew how to express it
because, you see, today such a conundrum looms before humanity once
again, those most glaring examples of which are things like the trial
in Philadelphia of Dr. Kermit Gosnell. In the words of the grand jury
report, Gosnell had a simple solution for unwanted babies. He killed
them. He didn't call it that, Madam Speaker. He called it ``ensuring
fetal demise.'' The way he ensured fetal demise was by sticking
scissors in the back of the baby's neck and cutting the spinal cord. He
called it ``snipping.'' Over the years there were hundreds of
``snippings.''
When authorities entered the clinic of Dr. Gosnell, they found a
torture chamber for little babies that I do not have the words or the
stomach to adequately describe. Suffice it to say that Dr. Gosnell ran
a systematic practice in his late-term abortion clinic to cut the
spines of those babies who had survived his attempt to abort them.
Every American with the slightest shred of compassion for the
innocent should learn the truth of this case for themselves, Madam
Speaker, because perhaps the greatest tragedy of all surrounding this
case is that it is not as rare as those in the media would try to
convince us.
Six months after the Supreme Court legalized abortion on demand in
the United States, Dr. Peter A.J. Adam, an associate professor of
pediatrics at Case Western University, reported to the American
Pediatric Research Society concerning research he and associates had
conducted on 12 babies up to 20 weeks old who had been born alive from
hysterotomy abortion. These men decapitated these little babies and
cannulated the internal carotid arteries. They then kept these little
heads alive with heart-lung machines in order to study them. Like the
victims of Dr. Gosnell, their spines had been completely sliced through
and the painful agony that they were feeling is beyond our imagination,
Madam Speaker.
Americans were outraged when they learned that the Russians had kept
the heads of dogs alive in the 1950s. Yet, when asked, Peter Adams
responded to the criticism of keeping these little human heads alive.
He responded by saying:
Our society has declared the fetus dead and abrogated its
rights. I don't see any ethical problem. Whose rights are we
going to protect once we've decided the fetus won't live?
In another case, Madam Speaker, Dr. Abu Hayat, the Manhattan
abortionist who severed the arm of a baby girl later born alive, is
reportedly the first physician in the United States to be jailed for an
illegal third-trimester abortion since the infamous 1973 Roe v. Wade
decision.
Sixty-three-year-old Abu Hayat was convicted of having knowingly
performed an abortion on Rosa Rodriguez in October of 1991. The 7- to
8-month-old baby girl she carried, baby Ana Rosa Rodriguez, was born
the next day, but one of her arms was missing at the shoulder because
of Dr. Hayat's botched abortion. Hayat was also convicted of assault on
the woman because, in the middle of the abortion, he stopped to demand
an additional $500. When the woman's husband couldn't come up with the
additional money, she was sent home semiconscious and still bleeding.
Madam Speaker, my heart goes out to those like Rosa Rodriguez, and
especially to her, who sooner or later had to face the question from
her baby daughter, Mommy, where is my arm? Oh, Madam Speaker, it
beggars human imagination to try to take in the crushing emotional
burden that the abortion industry in this country has heaped upon so
many American mothers.
Madam Speaker, I will not expound upon the cases of abortionist Dr.
Scott Ricke or abortionist Gordon Goei or Malvin Roy Weisberg in the
infamous Weisberg incident in Woodland Hills, California. However, I
will tell you, Madam Speaker, that they involved thousands of unborn
children, many of them in their third trimester, in what can be
described as a torturous and mass desecration of innocent unborn
babies.
Would it be too much to hope for, Madam Speaker, that Members of this
body and Americans in general might research these tragedies for
themselves, given the cataclysmic implications for any society who
turns a blind eye to such atrocities against the most innocent and
helpless of its members?
{time} 1740
If our society is to survive with our humanity intact, our moral
impulse toward our fellow human beings must first survive. Madam
Speaker, that is why it is so important for people to see for
themselves the inhumanity of what is being done to these little
victims. Maybe it would not change everyone's mind, but it has changed
many minds. One such example gained a lot of media coverage.
Abby Johnson spent 9 years working at a Texas Planned Parenthood
clinic--first as a volunteer and then as clinic director. At one point,
she was asked to assist during a routine abortion procedure. Amazingly,
this was the first time in those 9 years that Abby had actually watched
on an ultrasound an abortion being performed. She recounts holding the
transducer over the mother's midsection and observing the display of
the baby's movements on the screen. She then watched as the abortion
proceeded and as the unborn baby attempted unsuccessfully to escape the
probe.
She said:
I could see the whole profile of the baby. I could see the
probe. I could see the baby try to move away from the probe,
and I just thought: What am I doing? Then I thought: never
again.
Two weeks later, looking out the clinic window and seeing two members
of Coalition for Life standing outside, praying, Johnson walked out of
the clinic and joined them, and she has never looked back.
Then there was the case of Brenda Shafer, a nurse who was so
radically pro-abortion that she told her teenage daughters that they
would be forced to have an abortion if they ever got pregnant; but only
3 days of working in an abortion clinic was more than she could handle.
She speaks of going in on her third and final day and watching as the
doctor performed three partial-birth abortions, including one procedure
on a 6-month-old baby boy with Down syndrome. She watched as the little
boy's arms and legs were delivered, his little fingers clasping and
unclasping, his feet kicking before the vacuum tube was inserted into
the baby's head. He went completely limp--only to be discarded as if he
were nothing more than a rag.
Brenda said:
I have been a nurse for a long time, and I have seen a lot
of death--people maimed in auto accidents, gunshot wounds,
you name it--and I have seen surgical procedures of every
sort; but in all of my professional years, I had never
witnessed anything like this. For a long time, sometimes
still, I had nightmares about what I saw in the clinic that
day.
Former abortion provider Nita Whitten tells a similarly gut-wrenching
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story of a young teenage girl who was pressured by her mother to have
an abortion. The doctors had inserted what is called a ``laminaria'' to
allow the abortion to be performed. Nita describes the young girl going
into the bathroom and screaming at the top of her lungs for her mother,
screaming over and over ``It's a baby. It's a baby'' after she saw the
baby that was aborted in the toilet.
For this little girl, who will forever be scarred by what she saw,
there was no debate about whether her baby was just a blob of tissue.
Unlike the ostensibly educated abortionists, this girl realized
intuitively what science has long argued: conception creates a
genetically unique human life--a baby.
All of these people shared a common thread when they were confronted
with the brutality and the reality of abortion. They could no longer
deny the truth that abortion is the murder of a defenseless child. It's
easy for those of us who are far removed from the actual abortion
clinics--those who do not have to confront the unspeakable pain caused
within the doors of those clinics every day--to idealize and justify
abortion on demand.
They tell themselves that they are really fighting for women. They
convince themselves that that little flicker they see on the ultrasound
screen, as the baby is savagely torn apart in his own mother's womb, is
not the tiny beating heart of another living being. They lie to
themselves year after year, ignoring the truth that every 5-year-old
child knows instinctively. They desensitize themselves to the horrors
and the reality until the violent destruction of a defenseless baby is
viewed as if it were nothing more than having one's tonsils removed.
Indeed, this is the hope and the goal of monsters like Kermit Gosnell
or Abu Hayat or Scott Ricke or Gordon Goei or Malvin Weisberg, just to
name a few.
When Abby Johnson, Brenda Shafer, Nita Whitten, and so many others
like them saw what abortion really was, they changed their minds. I
would never suggest that I clearly know what sparked the change in
their hearts, but I am convinced that it is the same spark in the human
soul that has turned the tide of blood and tragedy and hatred and
inhumanity throughout history. And, Madam Speaker, I am also convinced
that it is mankind's only hope.
With that, I yield back the balance of my time.
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