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What My Dad Knew That President Obama Doesnt
BY Robert Brennan
April 26-May 2, 2009 Issue |
Posted 4/17/09 at 11:17 AM
By now, any
engaged pro-life Catholic worth his rosary beads has read and reread the
astonishing and sickening story of an abortion clinic danse
macabre in Florida where a “failed” abortion produced a perfectly
live and healthy baby. The owner of the “clinic” apparently took it upon
herself to rectify this medical mishap by severing the baby’s umbilical chord
without tying it off first and allowed the little girl to die alone inside the
confines of a biohazard plastic bag.
On
March 3, 2009, the owner was formally charged with two felonies; practicing
medicine without a license, a turn of language George Orwell would have
appreciated, and tampering with evidence — that’s the legal term for tossing a
dying baby into a dumpster.
You
can now go back to your lunch.
The
story speaks volumes to the schizophrenic nature of trying to codify
infanticide. If the lazy and or incompetent abortion doctor had shown up in
time, the baby would have been killed the medically and legally approved way
and we would have never heard about the story — and the clinic’s owner wouldn’t
be facing legal and civil penalties of any sort.
But
because the child was murdered while being completely outside the geography of
its mother, the brutish and barbaric nature of the clinic owner’s act is seen
in the light of day.
Our new president has made
protecting this “right” to kill children a high priority of his new
administration and backed up his campaign rhetoric with his left hand by
signing away the Mexico City Policy stipulations that the former administration
adhered to.
But
the Florida story reminded me of a lot of things, and, strangely, it reminded
me of my dad, a rat, and a lost baby. Okay, stay with me. That kind of sounded
like a Dr. Seuss story for the chemically dependant, but allow me to
illuminate.
Way back in time when we were young
and nine of my dad’s 10 children were still living under the same roof (our
sister Kathy was married by now and officially “out of the house”), we had a
little problem with rats. Now, as my wonderful Southern Baptist grandmother
would tell us, “There’s nothing shameful in getting rats; only in keeping
them.”
Needless
to say, we launched a full-scale war against these creepy rodents one fateful
summer.
We
used traps and poison to great effect.
But
catching these little beasties was almost as bad as hearing them scamper in the
attic at night.
One
hot summer night, with our mom and dad out on their weekly shopping night
“date,” we all heard a loud “snap” coming from the side porch. Our oldest
brother, Roger, a man in his late 20s at the time, led us all out to see the
trap that had sprung: It was the biggest rat I had ever seen, and the trap
hadn’t killed him.
It
writhed and hissed and gave us all a collective case of the willies.
Even
Roger was afraid to go near it. He skittishly scooped up the rat, with trap
attached, with a flathead shovel, trying to maintain as much distance between
him and the trapped rat as possible.
The rest of us maintained a
demilitarized zone directly behind Roger. I’ll always remember the sound the
rat made as it slid off the shovel into the bottom of a trash can like some
kind of Edgar Allan Poe motif. We then did the only sensible thing: put the lid
on the trash can, weighed it down with a brick, and waited for our dad to come
home.
When
he did and learned of the prey we had captured but not dispatched out on the
side porch, our dad calmly went out to the back yard, found a 2 x 4, and with a
couple of quick and violent thrusts, chalked one up for the humans.
He
knew what to do. I don’t think he relished having to do this to the rat, but
rats carry nasty diseases, and he was well within the parameters of the “Just
War” theory to do what he did.
Many
years before, my dad was in a very different situation.
He
was in a hospital where my mother had just delivered an extremely premature
child; some would call it a fetus, and some would call it a baby.
This
little one was maybe slightly younger than the child in Florida. But this one
was taken from my mother and father according to God’s timetable.
Even
by the infinitely more life-friendly standards of the 1950s, the baby was still
deemed too small and unsubstantial to warrant anything more than a sanitized
disposal at the hands of hospital staff. No funeral Mass; no blessing; nothing.
But that wasn’t good enough for my
father.
He
searched throughout the hospital until he found, of all things, a shoebox; he
placed this child in the shoebox, and then, with the help of his brother, a
priest, arranged for the baby’s inclusion into the grave of his deceased
mother. He knew what to do.
President
Obama doesn’t know what my dad knew.
By
virtue of his intimate association with so-called abortion-rights groups, he is
now the national pro-abortionist in chief and leads a charge where many babies,
like the little girl in that abortion clinic in Florida, die as violently as
that poor old rat did that summer so long ago.
The
settings are different. The abortion clinic is clean and sanitary; the bottom
of a trash can is not. But the result is the same — and a baby is not a rat.
Of
course, my father did not have the benefit of an Ivy League education. My dad
didn’t know that according to an organization like PETA that rat had every much
a right to life as he did, and according to NARAL (National Abortion Rights
Action League) and its most prominent and powerful advocate in the White House,
the baby in that clinic in Florida did not.
Some
day, I pray, President Obama will learn what my dad knew.
Robert
Brennan writes
from Los
Angeles.
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