Monday, April 14, 2014

Is the SC decision on RH a win-win thing?

Lest anyone think the “RH war” is over, dig deep behind the headlines for the truth that will keep us pro-lifers vigilant.
The news give the impression that pro-RH camp has won—what with purple clad advocates on a major daily’s front page already looking triumphant on the day the Supreme Court (SC) was yet to deliberate on the matter, and again advocates in Senate dressed in purple later giving victory interviews on television and congratulating the SC for its decision!  Of course, that is how the spin-doctors of the RH Machinery would have the public believe: that pro-RH has won and pro-life has lost.
But wait—prolife advocates are also saying the SC decision is a victory for prolife as well because the SC struck out provisions which in the first place we were all objecting to.  But the “red army” is hardly given as much space in mainstream media as the “purple army”, thus, people who just see the headlines or watch tv news would tend to believe RH indeed won.
Then there’s the voluble Senadora Miriam issuing a statement and appearing on tv saying the SC decision is a “triumph of reason over superstition” and unwittingly contradicting herself by insisting on a “motion for reconsideration on the eight provisions of the RH law which were struck down”. 
There is yet another cause for rejoicing by pro-lifers—the SC decision of April 8, 2014 in the consolidated cases of James Imbong et al vs. Hon. Ochoa, et al, where the Supreme Court categorically pronounces that “the moment of conception is reckoned from fertilization.”
In Decision, pp 47-48, the Supreme Court states:  “In all, whether it be taken from a plain meaning, or understood under medical parlance, and more importantly, following the intention of the Framers of the Constitution, the undeniable conclusion is that a zygote is a human organism and that the life of a new human being commences at a scientifically well-defined moment of conception, that is, upon fertilization.
“The Court cannot subscribe to the theory advocated by Hon. Lagman that life begins at implantation. This theory of implantation as the beginning of life is devoid of any legal or scientific mooring. It does not pertain to the beginning of life but to the viability of the fetus. The fertilized ovum/zygote is not an inanimate object—it is a living human being complete with DNA and 46 chromosomes.”
To arrive at this decision, the Court relied on the long-established standard medical authority—the second edition of Human Embryology & Teratology, by Ronan O'Rahilly and Fabiola Muller, (New York: Wiley-Liss, 1996, pp. 8, 29).
The Court further says, “Implantation has been conceptualized only for convenience by those who had population control in mind. To adopt it would constitute textual infidelity not only to the RH Law but also to the Constitution.”
Now, why is this particular decision not in the news?  If Hon. Lagman and company have a strong conviction that life begins at implantation, shouldn’t they now be making noise in media about what is stated on pp. 47-48 of the Decision?  Scour the dailies, the tv channels, even Google and other search engines, and you won’t find a single news item on that war-changing matter.  It spells a huge defeat for RH advocates because then it would render illegal all contraceptives that prevent implantation, because they would be exposed for what they are: abortifacients.
Quite logically, RH supporters wouldn’t want that publicized, to keep the public (especially women and girls) ignorant, so that in the implementation of the RH law the population controllers could still do as they want.  And they intend to do that.  After all, they still have their ace card—sex education—to push their agenda; it’s their main avenue now towards poisoning the minds of the young.
Physician Dr. Miriam Grossman in her book You're Teaching My Child What? exposes today’s sex education programs as being based “not on science but on liberal lies and politically correct propaganda that promote the illusion that children can be sexually free without risk.”  A blurb about the book says: As a psychiatrist and expert on sexual education, Dr. Grossman cites example after example of schools and organizations whitewashing —or omitting altogether —crucial information that doesn't fit in with their population control agenda. Instead, sex educators only tell teens the “facts of life” that promote acceptance, sexual exploration, and experimentation. What sex educators call an education, scientists would call a scam.  Sex educators won’t tell girls their bodies are biologically and chemically more susceptible to STDs; they will only say 3 million girls have a sexually transmitted infection.  Educators say it’s natural for children to “explore” their sexuality from a young age and only they can decide when it’s right to have sex—the real truth is neurobiologists say teen brains are not developed to fully reason and weigh consequences, especially in “the heat of the moment”.  Teens are told condoms, vaccines and yearly testing provide adequate protection, without being told that studies now show condoms are no match for herpes, HPV and gonorrhea.
See, the war isn’t over.  Only the battleground has changed.  And that’s the truth.

Kiko and Lean

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