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March 18-24, 2007 Issue |
Posted 3/13/07 at 8:00 AM
State-Ordered Shots
Relevant
to “Texas Showdown” (Feb. 18):
The
Virginia Legislature has now become the first state governing body to pass a
bill requiring mandatory human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccinations for young
girls. As a Catholic mother and a Catholic physician, I have been following
this issue closely since the vaccine was first approved last summer. I think we
should be very clear that Catholic and other Christian groups do not oppose the
vaccine per se. It is an ethically produced vaccine with the potential for
valuable medical benefits.
Rather,
the opposition is to the state mandate of the vaccine.
This
vaccine will prevent infection with the four subtypes of HPV that cause 99% of
all cervical cancer. It will not prevent infection with the subtypes of HPV
that cause venereal warts. It does not prevent all cervical cancer. It does not
remove the need for regular pap smears. It does not prevent any other sexually
transmitted diseases. It does not prevent pregnancy. Therefore, the only
difference between a woman who has been vaccinated and a woman who has not been
vaccinated is that the vaccinated woman has a greater chance of her pap smear
being normal.
There
is a precedent for vaccinating against a sexually transmitted disease since
many states require vaccination against Hepatitis B.
This
virus is transmitted via blood and bodily fluids. It could pose a risk to
school staff, students or first responders if they were incidentally exposed to
a student’s blood. Unless the school lesson plans have gotten way out of hand,
there is no risk for the incidental transmission of HPV at school.
I
find it interesting that the people of Planned Parenthood, who jealously guard
a woman’s right to an abortion as a private medical decision between a woman
and her doctor, do not afford parents this same right to make a medical
decision for their daughters.
Denise J. Hunnell, M.D.
Fairfax Station, Virginia
Liberal Leanings?
I
picked up a copy of the Register at our church today after Mass. I recognize
that, in comparison to other Catholic papers of similar type, the Register
tends to be more liberal in stance. I read it sometimes, nonetheless. Some of
your articles I have found helpful and informative.
Tonight,
I found myself cutting out a little section on “Rosary Basics” (Feb. 18). I
thought this might be helpful to our 10-year-old son who likes to pray the
family Rosary, but is having still a bit of difficulty with remembering what to
pray on specific beads. It also included the Hail, Holy Queen and the prayer to
recite at the close of the Rosary. I thought he could pin this up in his study
area as an aid to learning.
Then
I noticed that the Creed was nowhere to be found in the instructions.
I’m
writing you because I’ve noticed of late a trend toward questioning points
contained in the Creed. It was expressly omitted from teaching the children in
our Parish School of Religion class where I taught third grade last year. In
our adult religious-education course at our parish, we were instructed that
parts of the Creed were non-essential. We were shocked.
The
magisterium teaches or transmits to the Catholic faithful things necessary to
believe and teach our children. The Apostle’s Creed is one of them.
I
believe this omission in the Register is not accidental. Your argument to me
might be that one doesn’t always have to recite the Creed at the start of the
Rosary. I submit that this piece in the Register is a very subtle device to
re-teach certain Catholic practices, having a more liberal Catholic agenda in
mind.
There
was no excuse for such a vital omission of something that, in itself, expresses
the fullness of our orthodox Catholic faith.
Paula Traverzo
Derby, Kansas
Editor’s note: In explaining how to say the Rosary, we followed Pope John Paul II’s
suggestion in his Apostolic Letter on the Year of the Rosary. The Vatican
reiterated his suggestions on its website, which also teaches the Rosary
without the Creed. To see it, click on any mystery at
vatican.va/special/rosary/documents/misteri_en.html.
Humbling Science
Your
outstanding report “House Champions ‘Kill Bill’ Despite New Findings” (Jan. 21)
recorded yet another breakthrough for non-embryonic stem cells, thanks to the
finding of stem cells in amniotic fluid.
Researchers have been able to
generate tissue for every bodily organ they have tried from amniotic stem
cells. These cells, in contrast to embryonic stem cells, are plentiful and
readily available at birth. There are some 4 million births in the United
States each year and it is estimated that only 100,000 pregnancies would be
needed to provide genetic matches for 99% of the population. If they ever treat
anyone, embryonic stem-cells will require human cloning to treat a large number
of people. Autologous and pregnancy-related stem cells do not.
Another
recent stem cell advance that has received little attention is the knowledge
that a mother transmits stem cells through the placenta to her unborn baby to
help the baby overcome Type 1 Diabetes. These specialized cells are selectively
transmitted only to unborn babies with T1D. This is a truly amazing finding
because it requires a very sophisticated, selective communication between the
bodies of the mother and her baby.
This
finding opens a whole new area for research with many questions to be answered.
How can this knowledge be used to treat disease? Does the transmission of stem
cells occur in the case of other diseases? Can the mother ingest drugs to treat
and prevent fetal problems? Does the baby send stem cells to treat the mother’s
ailments? Since mother and baby have different DNA, why doesn’t the baby’s body
reject the mother’s stem cells?
What
we know about God’s marvelous, intricate and beautiful design for our
procreation and development — including conception, gestation, birth, growth
and maturity — is profoundly humbling.
John Naughton
Silver Spring, Maryland
Aggressively Regressive
Your
article on genetic testing for defective children, “Unfit to Live?” (Feb. 25),
shows that society is moving toward the “Brave New World” envisioned by Aldous
Huxley back in the 1930s. We are regressing to the pagan cultures of ancient
Rome and Sparta, where citizens were judged only by their utility to the state
or tribe.
All
forms of genetic engineering — euthanasia, abortion, cloning and “designer
babies” — are essentially applications of animal-breeding methods and
Darwinian-selection theories to human societies in a quest for perfection and
utility.
Abortion
and euthanasia are the two faces of this quest: They simply erase from life
whatever life is deemed unfit or inconvenient. Throughout the 1930s and the war
years, when eugenic movements were endemic in the Western democracies also,
Popes Pius XI and Pius XII persistently condemned utilitarian theories of human
life. This idea, that only those viewed as productive or useful can live, is
implicit in all forms of eugenics. Pius XII forcibly denounced these theories
and the killing of “life unworthy of life,” those whom the Nazi leader Heinrich
Himmler called “useless eaters.”
The
only real alternative to those theories, which have always been with us in one
guise or another, is charity and brotherly love, the love of God and neighbor:
the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Matt Terranova
Hackensack, New Jersey
To Be Prepared, Be Faithful
I
read with interest your Feb. 25 report about the Canadian medical group’s
proposal to recommend prenatal genetic screening so “women and their families
will have time to prepare, collect information, and to receive balanced health
counseling” (“Unfit to Live?”).
When
I was pregnant with my second son in 1985, I discussed amniocentesis with my
physician, as I had had a younger brother born with Down syndrome. I, too,
thought it would be best to prepare even though I would never consider an
abortion. The doctor’s advice: “Unless you would have an abortion, don’t have
the test. There is a risk of miscarriage.”
My
son was a so-called “10” when born. However, he developed serious psychiatric
symptoms later in life.
The
bottom line: The best family preparation is remaining faithful. One never knows
the future with any certainty. Let God’s will be done; it will be done
regardless.
Patricia Hershwitzky
Las Vegas
Corrections
The
United States has brought Afghanistan its first abortion clinic — but has not
done the same in Iraq, as we erroneously stated in our March 11 editorial “No
Deal, Rudy.” The misstatement appears in print but has been corrected at
NCRegister.com.
Also:
In the photo caption accompanying “An Augustinian Masterpiece in the Malay
Archipelago” (Travel, March 4), we misidentified the contents of the glass case
pictured at San Augustin Church and Museum in The Philippines. The photo shows
not the sarcophagus described in the article (which contains the earthly
remains of the conquistador Miguel Lopez de Legazpi), but rather a
linen-shrouded statue of Jesus on a slab in the borrowed tomb,
pre-Resurrection.
Finally,
in “St. Odd? The Catholics Who Love Dean Koontz” (March 11), we incorrectly
identified bioethicist Wesley Smith as a Catholic.
We
regret the errors.
— Editor
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