Saturday, July 1, 2017

Doctor: Insurance Wouldn’t Pay for My Patients’ Treatments, But Would Cover Assisted Suicide (Insurance Co. Have Always Been Harbingers of Death)

Doctor: Insurance Wouldn’t Pay for My Patients’ Treatments, But Would Cover Assisted Suicide

 NATIONAL   KELSEY HARKNESS   JUN 30, 2017   |   10:24AM    WASHINGTON, DC
Dr. Brian Callister, a physician in Reno, Nevada, says two recent patients both needed life-saving treatments. “Not palliative care, not hospice, these would have been curative procedures,” Callister recalls.
One patient was from California and the other was from Oregon, both states that passed physician-assisted suicide laws. Instead of offering to pay for their treatments, Callister says, the insurance medical directors in both states offered to cover his patients’ assisted suicide.
Watch the video to hear more about these cases, and why Callister, who says he’s taken care of “somewhere in four figures worth of terminally ill patients,” now opposes assisted suicide.
LifeNews Note: Kelsey Harkness writes for The Daily Signal, where this column originally appeared.


Ben Shapiro Condemns Women Who Celebrate Their Abortions: They’re “Heroes” to Liberals (They are Murders of The Innocent Souls Unborn) Carl

Ben Shapiro Condemns Women Who Celebrate Their Abortions: They’re “Heroes” to Liberals

 NATIONAL   MICAIAH BILGER   JUN 30, 2017   |   8:54AM    MILWAUKEE, WI
Ben Shapiro is famous for his quick, straight-forward and logical responses to arguments by the political left.
A hugely popular speaker on college campuses, Shapiro hosts “The Ben Shapiro Show,” the top conservative podcast in the United States, runs the Daily Wire and is a best-selling author of several books. He has faced numerous hostile audiences on college campuses across the nation.
On Thursday, he walked pro-life advocates at the National Right to Life Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin through his responses to some of the top pro-abortion arguments of the day.
“Gone are the days when the left used to talk about safe, legal and rare abortions,” Shapiro said. Now, they treat abortion as “something virtuous and strong.”
He brought up the “Shout Your Abortion” campaign and a poem by Leyla Josephine about her abortion as a teenager. It reads, in part: “But I would have supported her right to choose. … I would have died for that right, just like she died for mine. I’m sorry but you came at the wrong time. I am not ashamed. I am not ashamed. I am not ashamed.”
He responded, “To the left, she is a hero, a hero for exercising her right to murder her child in the womb.”
Shapiro urged people to speak out boldly against abortion. He called the legalized destruction of human life “the greatest moral divide we’ve seen since World War II” and “too many people are standing on the wrong side.”
One of the most common arguments for abortion is that “it” (the unborn baby) is not a human, Shapiro said; some people think of the unborn baby as nothing more than a polyp or an appendage of the woman’s body.
Biologically, however, the unborn baby is a human being from the moment of conception. Shapiro pointed out that the political left likes to call itself the party of science and would celebrate if a single-cell organism was found on Mars, but they refuse to accept the science that a child in the womb is a living human being. He pointed to facts about the heartbeat beginning by 18 days and the unique DNA that is in place beginning at conception.
But sometimes even biological facts will not satisfy some abortion advocates. Shapiro said some will argue that if an unborn baby cannot survive without the mother, it is not a person and does not deserve rights. In response, Shapiro pointed out that his own two children, both under age 4, are dependent on him and his wife; they could not survive on their own either.
He said viability arguments, whether about a child’s ability to survive on his/her own or brain function or rationality, do not justify abortion because each one also could apply to people outside the womb.
Another argument he addressed is responsibility. Some argue that women have abortions out of a sense of responsibility because they cannot raise a child properly. This, too, is a poor argument for killing unborn babies, Shapiro said.
“There are plenty of children with bad parents, and I don’t think the solution is to kill the children,” he said. Later, he continued, “… if you want to talk about responsibility in pregnancy, the responsibility would be to have sex within the confines of marriage.”
Some argue that abortion makes life better for women or that they need it to succeed. Shapiro said this argument supposedly is about empowering women, but it really should be insulting to them.
“Pregnancy is hard work, but it’s also a superpower,” because it is something only women can do, Shapiro said.
But instead of treating pregnancy as a power that only women possess, a thing to be celebrated, our pro-abortion society says it’s something that should be discarded, he continued.
They seem to think that “men, because we don’t have babies, somehow we are free to fly like eagles and go to the office,” Shapiro said. “There’s a reason we call it work, gang.”
Shapiro walked the pro-life crowd through a variety of arguments about abortion, and he based his arguments on science and logic, rather than religious values. He said abortion activists are all too eager to dismiss any argument based on religious grounds. However, he also said that many scientific advancements and reasoning came about as a result of Judaeo-Christian teachings about the world.
He said abortion is a “great evil” in society today and linked it to paganism. He said he believes God will bring about justice for unborn babies, and he urged pro-life advocates to continue to fight for that justice.


Mother Jailed for Assault After Drug Overdose Caused Her to Deliver Baby Two Months Premature (As She Deserved. Laws Need to Be Updated)

Mother Jailed for Assault After Drug Overdose Caused Her to Deliver Baby Two Months Premature

 STATE   MICAIAH BILGER   JUN 30, 2017   |   8:22AM    HARRISBURG, PA
A Pennsylvania mother is facing criminal charges for allegedly injuring her unborn baby girl during a heroine overdose – a case that is drawing attention to the need for protections for unborn babies.
The Daily Mail reports Kasey Dischman, 30, of East Butler, Pennsylvania, allegedly overdosed on heroine on June 23 and then gave birth to a premature baby girl.
Authorities charged Dischman with aggravated assault of an unborn child, arguing that her overdose caused her unborn daughter to be born prematurely, CBS News in Pittsburgh reports.
State police said Dischman’s baby girl is not doing well in the hospital and may not survive. Reports do not indicate how far along in the pregnancy she was. According to authorities, doctors performed an emergency C-section in an attempt to save the baby’s life, meaning that the pregnancy likely was 24 weeks or later.
“Should the baby not survive, and we’ve talked to the [district attorney], he’s leaning towards filing the criminal homicide charge,” Lt. Eric Hermick, of Pennsylvania State Police told CBS.
Here’s more from the report:
Dischman told police she found the stamp bag of heroin under her couch before she injected herself with it in the bathroom, the criminal complaint said. She also said she had just gotten out of jail days prior for retail theft, and this was the first she had used the drug since getting out.
Dischman’s boyfriend, 36-year-old Andrew Lucas, who is the father of the child, will also be charged. Police say he allegedly lied about what happened to Dischman when police arrived at the home. He claimed she had a seizure disorder.
Treatment for the overdose could have been administered quicker had he disclosed that information initially.
Pennsylvania is one of many states that recognize that unborn babies also can be victims of crimes. These laws protect unborn babies from violence but make exceptions for abortions. Abortion activists often balk at such laws because the legislation recognizes that unborn babies are valuable human beings who deserve to be protected and, in doing so, help the public recognize the truth about abortion.
In June, New Hampshire became the 39th state to pass a law to recognize unborn babies as second victims of violent crimes against them and their mothers, including murder, manslaughter and negligent homicide.
Yet, a few states still do not provide justice for unborn babies in any circumstance. In 2015, Colorado lawmakers rejected such a bill, despite a horrifying act of violence against an unborn baby in their state.
The bill was prompted by a gruesome crime involving Dynel Catrece Lane, who was convicted for attacking a pregnant woman and cutting her 7-month-old unborn baby from her womb. In this unbelievable act of violence, the baby died but the mother, Michelle Wilkins, survived.
In 2016, a judge sentenced Lane to 100 years of prison for assaulting and attempting to murder Wilkins, but Lane did not face any punishment for Wilkins’ unborn daughter’s death.


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