That's an exaggeration, of course, as much genuine expertise goes into
all sorts of good things, from producing food to handling law
enforcement to building airplane engines. But some expertsnotably those
perching and preening in ivory towersare to be followed with care and
even kept at a safe distance, especially if you are a newborn, as
The Catholic Herald reports:
A leading British medical journal has published an article calling
for the introduction of infanticide for social and medical reasons.
The article in the Journal of Medical Ethics, entitled “After-birth abortion: why should the baby live?” states in its abstract:
“After-birth abortion (killing a newborn) should be permissible in all
cases where abortion is, including cases where the newborn is not
disabled.”
The article, written by Alberto Giubilini of the
University of Milan and Francesca Minerva of Melbourne University,
argues that “foetuses and newborns do not have the same moral status as
actual persons” and consequently a law which permits abortion for
certain reasons should permit infanticide on the same grounds.
The full JME article, it appears, is available online. This passage alone should be cause for a pause or three:
The moral status of an infant is equivalent to that of a fetus in the sense that both lack those properties that justify the
attribution of a right to life to an individual.
Both a fetus and a newborn
certainly are human beings and potential persons, but neither is a
‘person’ in the sense of ‘subject
of a moral right to life’. We take
‘person’ to mean an individual who is capable of attributing to her own
existence some
(at least) basic value such that being
deprived of this existence represents a loss to her. This means that
many non-human
animals and mentally retarded human
individuals are persons, but that all the individuals who are not in the
condition of
attributing any value to their own
existence are not persons. Merely being human is not in itself a reason
for ascribing someone
a right to life. Indeed, many humans
are not considered subjects of a right to life: spare embryos where
research on embryo
stem cells is permitted, fetuses where
abortion is permitted, criminals where capital punishment is legal.
A key assumption is that if a fetus can be aborted, then it follows that
an infant can also be killed. That is not, of course, illogical at all,
and those who are pro-lifeincluding Popes Paul VI and Bl. John Paul
IIhave long warned that the clear road from contraceptives to abortion
leads to the deadly highway of infanticide and euthanasia; the latter
wrote the following in 1995, in Evangelium Vitae:
The contemporary scene, moreover, is becoming
even more alarming by reason of the proposals, advanced here and there, to
justify even infanticide, following the same arguments used to justify the
right to abortion. In this way, we revert to a state of barbarism which one
hoped had been left behind forever. ...
But
since the possibilities of prenatal therapy are today still limited, it not
infrequently happens that these techniques are used with a eugenic intention
which accepts selective abortion in order to prevent the birth of children
affected by various types of anomalies. Such an attitude is shameful and
utterly reprehensible, since it presumes to measure the value of a human life
only within the parameters of "normality" and physical well-being,
thus opening the way to legitimizing infanticide and euthanasia as well.
Dr. Francis Beckwith, among others, have taken on the task of addressing
the argument that a human being is not always a "person" in the sense
of "subject of a moral right to life", which Beckwith, the author of
Defending Life: A Moral and Legal Case Against Abortion Choice (Cambridge University Press, 2007), acknowledge as the strongest pro-abortion argument. Beckwith, in a 2007 Ignatius Insight interview, said:
The pro-lifer should
remember that the central issue is, "What is the human community and does the
unborn belong to it?" As my friend Greg Koukl puts it: if the fetus is a
person, none of the popular arguments are relevant; if the fetus is not a
person, then none of the popular arguments is necessary. Pro-lifers make a
mistake by allowing the discussion to drift away from this central question.
Of even more interest, in some ways, has been the reaction of JME to
criticism of the piece. The editor of JME, in responding to strong
criticism, has offered up a mixture of appeals to "academic freedom",
claims to victimhood, demands for openmindedness, stabs at amoral
moralizing, as well as uttering a variation of the standard line: "Hey,
everyone else is doing it; why not us?":
But Julian Savulescu, the editor of the Journal of Medical Ethics,
has defended the publication of the paper on the British Medical Journal
website. He said: “What is disturbing is not the arguments in this
paper nor its publication in an ethics journal. It is the hostile,
abusive, threatening responses that it has elicited. More than ever,
proper academic discussion and freedom are under threat from fanatics
opposed to the very values of a liberal society.”
He continued:
“As Editor of the Journal, I would like to defend its publication. The
arguments presented, in fact, are largely not new and have been
presented repeatedly in the academic literature and public fora by the
most eminent philosophers and bioethicists in the world, including Peter
Singer, Michael Tooley and John Harris in defence of infanticide, which
the authors call after-birth abortion.
“The novel contribution of
this paper is not an argument in favour of infanticide the paper
repeats the arguments made famous by Tooley and Singer but rather
their application in consideration of maternal and family interests. The
paper also draws attention to the fact that infanticide is practised in
the Netherlands.
“Many people will and have disagreed with these
arguments. However, the goal of the Journal of Medical Ethics is not to
present the Truth or promote some one moral view. It is to present well
reasoned argument based on widely accepted premises.”
Because, as we all know, if arguments have been "presented repeatedly in
the academic literature and public fora", they work smashingly in the
real world, when real lives are on the line. Of course, plenty of
counter-arguments have been presented over the years as well, most of
them made by philosophers who are inclined to think that killings
excused by an appeal to "consideration of maternal and family interests"
is hardly different than killings excused by appeals to race, eugenics,
or saving the earth for the next generation of whales and spotted owls.
At least Savulescu is right about one thing: it's fairly clear, just in
reading the reports and his comments, that "the goal of the Journal of
Medical Ethics is not to
present the Truth", as he and his colleagues apparently don't think that
Truth existsjust a bunch of little "truths" that may or may not be
compatible with one another. Which opens the door wide open to a
sophisticated variation of "might makes right"; after all, if there is
no Truth, those with power make the "truth". As the bottom line becomes
thicker and thicker, the line dividing civilization from sophisticated
barbarism becomes thinner and thinner.
Where he is certainly wrong is in insisting that he and the Journal are
not promoting a moral view, because saying you don't have a moral view
is itself a very real and meaningful view of morality. It is a way of
saying that moralityseen as a subjective constructis subservient to
academic fads, political pressures, and utilitarian ends. And the
latter, according to another report, in The Telegraph, is precisely the hook upon which the coat of death is hung:
They also argued that parents should be able to have the baby killed if it
turned out to be disabled without their knowing before birth, for example
citing that “only the 64 per cent of Down’s syndrome cases” in Europe are
diagnosed by prenatal testing.
Once such children were born there was “no choice for the parents but to keep
the child”, they wrote.
“To bring up such children might be an unbearable burden on the family and on
society as a whole, when the state economically provides for their care.”
Those are words to mull over: "when the state economically provides for
their care." The modern state, having flung open the Pandora's box by
tossing aside opposition to and qualms about contraceptives, abortion,
no-fault divorce, and nearly every sort of sexual act and relationship
possible or impossible, now steps in to say, "Hey, kids, we're going to
tidy up now. And here's what you have to do since we paid for the pad,
the pleasure, and the prophylactics." The measure of an "unbearable
burden" is made by technocrats, whose interest in humanity is shaped by
either numbers or materialist ideologies. Bl. John Paul II wrote much
about what happens when democracies embrace a belief in the absolute
autonomy of self, in which " society becomes a mass of individuals
placed side by
side, but without any mutual bonds." In that case, he writes,
The State is no longer the "common home" where all
can live together on the basis of principles of fundamental equality, but is
transformed into a tyrant State, which arrogates to itself the right to dispose
of the life of the weakest and most defenceless members, from the unborn child
to the elderly, in the name of a public interest which is really nothing but
the interest of one part.
All of which is what progressives in the West have been pushing for many
decades. Today, especially in England and parts of Europe but also in
North America, the final vestiges of Christian faith and morality have
been savagely desiccated and often left completely unprotected. As Abp.
Fulton Sheen once wrote, "The future conflict of the world will not be
between Religion and Science, or between 'rugged individualism' and
Socialism, but between a society which is spiritual and a society which
is mechanical, between a society which adores God, and a society which
claims to be God; between a society which absorbs man for secular ends,
and a society which respects personality and uses the secular as a means
to eternal ends." And, in another work: "Never before in the history of
the world was there so much knowledge; and never before so little
coming to the knowledge of the Truth." When a "Journal of Medical
Ethics" has not interest in real medicine and real ethics, it has indeed
lost all interest in Truth, and may as well call itself the "Journal of
Immoral Ethics". Written by "experts", of course.