A Baby By Any Other Name

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cattyfan

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A Baby By Any Other Name​

Less than a week before Christmas this past year, the world was horrified by news out of Skidmore, Missouri. The details of the murder of young, pregnant, newlywed Bobbie Jo Stinnett were gruesome with the most shocking piece of the story being that the perpetrator had viciously cut Stinnett’s near full-term child from her body. From the moment the reports began I was riveted, wondering if the child would be recovered alive and contemplating who would commit such a cold, calculated, and cruel crime.

As with most kidnapping cases, it was difficult for the police, but this case had an added complication. The sheriff initially could not issue an Amber Alert (the national report of a missing child) for the baby because no one was able to give a physical description of her since the murderer was the only one who had actually seen the newborn. Nodaway County Sheriff, Ben Espey, was quoted in local reports as saying, “I'm a little disappointed that it happened like it did. All of us standing here feel like this is a baby, even though it was taken a month premature, we had a live baby. I feel like that should justify an Amber Alert.” Espey stated it took more than nine hours after the initial discovery of Stinnett’s homicide and her missing infant to convince the authorities involved that this child deserved to be recognized and to get the Amber Alert released across the country.
As coverage continued, I became distracted as I noticed that a strange evolution of terminology had taken place. When the sheriff conducted his first press conference, he was definite and adamant in referring to the missing “baby.” He stated they were searching for an “infant.” But when the media in St. Louis began broadcasting their reports and the story was fed to the national news outlets, it wasn’t a child who had been ripped from her mother…it was a “fetus.” I compared the headlines from Skidmore’s area newspaper, The St. Joseph News-Press, to those of AP, CNN, and UPI. Within Nodaway County the articles were titled “Baby Taken, Slain Mother Found,” “Woman Slain, Unborn Baby Taken,” and, “Amber Alert Issued, Infant Alive, Cut From Slain Mother’s Womb.” Nationally the stories read “Woman Charged in Grisly Theft of Fetus,” “Amber Alert Issued After Fetus Taken from Slain Woman's Body,” “Site of Fetus-Snatching has Seen Trouble Before” (from AP,) “Amber Alert for 8-month Fetus” (from UPI,) and “U.S. Alert for Stolen Fetus” (from CNN.) I watched the network news and observed Dan Rather, Peter Jennings, and the rest of the anchors intone how a mother had been killed and her “fetus” stolen.

I considered this change in wording and wondered how it had come about. “Fetus” is an accurate word, the literal translation being “little one.” The child certainly qualified, but the word “fetus” carries with it a more clinical and detached sound as most Americans don’t normally converse in Latin and you aren’t likely to hear of a pregnant woman’s family and friends throwing her a “fetus shower.” By using a medical term, the media had effectively distanced the country ever so slightly from the emotions involved in witnessing the terrible act of slicing an infant from her mother’s body. That seemed an odd choice: to make the child for whom authorities were frantically searching less human…less real…just plain less.

Checking the international news I discovered something startling. The rest of the world was referring to her as a “baby.” Their headlines said “Missouri Woman Kills Pregnant Woman, Steals Baby out of Womb” (from Japan News Today,) “Woman Charged over Child Cut from Womb Horror” (from Scotland News,) “Horror in American Heartland - Baby Torn From Womb: Woman Confesses to Killing ( Nigeria, Africa & World News,) and “Woman Charged in Case of Infant Torn from Slain Mother's Womb” (from Turkish Press.) The foreign reporters would have received their initial leads and details from American national media and those would have used the term “fetus.” Yet the over-seas press changed the word to the more compassionate “baby” or “infant,” reflecting the more caring and careful wording as the original “rural” newspaper coverage of the St. Joseph News-Press.

I began wondering why there was such a difference in the reporting, and being who I am, I asked a newsperson with whom I correspond on-line what her theory was. She replied it was “because the fetus hadn’t been born.” Pardon me? I argued the child most certainly was born, albeit not naturally. In essence the murderer had delivered the baby via a crude caesarean section, and if that didn’t qualify as “born,” then thousands of individuals in the world who were brought forth in a similar fashion were going to be very surprised that they weren’t classified as full-fledged people. She had no response for this and opted not to discuss it further.

By Sunday all media outlets were reporting the “baby” had been returned to her father and was doing well. Somehow, miraculously, this child who “hadn’t really been born” had transitioned to being a person. No explanation was given as to how this amazing change from “fetus” had taken place.

Part of the reason for the change may be connected to the charges made against the woman, Lisa Montgomery, who was arrested for this hideous crime: “kidnapping resulting in murder.” Examine the progression of the reports. When the story had originally been reported, CBS News had distinctly used the word “stolen,” a term normally applied to simple property. Now that the “fetus” had been returned to her loving family and the wording universally changed to “baby,” “stolen” had to be switched to “kidnapped.” It’s still troubling that when the national media began their coverage the infant had been objectified as though she were inanimate. Imagine the outcry of the public, however, if the justice system had followed suit and leveled charges commensurate to only having taken a thing, not a person. Regardless of what the reporters may want to believe, in this country and (as shown by the headlines) around the world, most people agree the perpetrator had taken an infant.

This is not the only recent example of the media diminishing the importance of life. Further disturbing is a new article published in the February 2005 Consumer Reports. Varying types of birth control are discussed, and included, as though it’s no different from any other method, is abortion as described by Planned Parenthood. “Women having an abortion in the U.S. can choose one of two methods: the so-called abortion pill or a surgical procedure," After a discussion of the abortion drug RU-486, the piece goes on to describe methods of surgical abortions. "Vacuum aspiration, also known as suction curettage, is the standard surgical abortion method in the U.S. for pregnancies in the first trimester, when 88 percent of legal abortions take place," the report states. "The cervix is enlarged to a diameter of about a half-inch, either by use of dilating rods or the drug misoprostol. The uterine contents are sucked out using a manual or electrical pump while the woman is under local anesthesia.”

Uterine contents? Not fetus…not even embryo, zygote, or the former favorite Planned Parenthood “description,” blob of cells. The baby has now been reduced to “uterine contents.” It’s alarming that a magazine which has been relied on for its non-biased perspective in reviewing available goods and services willingly publishes and, in doing so, supports the idea that before birth, children are “uterine contents.” Equally disgusting is the idea that abortion is viewed by some as “just another form of birth control,” instead of a medical process or invasive surgical procedure carrying significant risks to the mother and ending the life of the child.

One wonders how much further the terminology for “baby” will degenerate, as the words used to refer to humans in the womb become increasingly distanced from humanity and become less and less recognizable as describing even a remote form of life.

“The word of the Lord came to me, saying, ‘Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart; I appointed you as a prophet to the nations.’” (Jeremiah 1:5 NIV)

I’m fairly certain God wasn’t referring to mere “uterine contents.”

--Berta Collins Eddy
copyright Almost Normal Publications 2005
 
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Crow

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People love euphymisms and renaming things to make them sound different than what they are. "Uterine contents"......."the peculiar institution......the final solution." Makes it sound so much less evil to kill babies, doesn't it, when they're just "uterine contents?
 

Poly

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Isn't every human being a result of "uterine contents"?

Judge: Why did you kill "so and so"?
Murderer: Why not? She was simply "uterine contents".
Judge: Well, you have a point there.

:rolleyes:
 

Turbo

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Originally posted by Zakath

But not all "uterine contents" result in a viable baby...
And most people don't live to be ninety years old. Should laws therefore be passed to allow me to kill my ninety-year-old grandmother?
 
C

cattyfan

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quote
Originally posted by Zakath

But not all "uterine contents" result in a viable baby...

Originally posted by Turbo

And most people don't live to be ninety years old. Should laws therefore be passed to allow me to kill my ninety-year-old grandmother?


additionally, Planned Parenthood was not referring to procedures to remove something that isn't a viable baby...their description of the procedure was for your every day, run-of-the-mill abortion of a baby..."uterine contents."

let's try to respond to actual context, shall we? (instead of trying to obscure their intent of removing the humanity from the words used to refer to the child.)
 

Zakath

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Originally posted by Turbo

And most people don't live to be ninety years old. Should laws therefore be passed to allow me to kill my ninety-year-old grandmother?
Why would you want to kill your relatives just because they are old, Turbo? Isn't such a thing against your moral principles?
 

Zakath

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Originally posted by cattyfan

additionally, Planned Parenthood was not referring to procedures to remove something that isn't a viable baby...their description of the procedure was for your every day, run-of-the-mill abortion of a baby..."uterine contents."
Well, the folks at PP don't believe that the pre-born are "babies" anymore than you believe that the photos of polypoids I linked to weren't human beings.

let's try to respond to actual context, shall we? (instead of trying to obscure their intent of removing the humanity from the words used to refer to the child.)
I was responding to the term "uterine contents". In the real world, about one out of four "uterine contents" abort spontaneously without human intervention.
 

Turbo

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Originally posted by Zakath

Why would you want to kill your relatives just because they are old, Turbo?
I didn't say I did. I asked if I should have the right to choose. And you dodged the question.
 

Turbo

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Originally posted by Zakath

I was responding to the term "uterine contents". In the real world, about one out of four "uterine contents" abort spontaneously without human intervention.
So what?

A lot of people die of cancer. Does that make it OK to rip cancer patients limb from limb, in your view (assuming it were made legal)?
 
C

cattyfan

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Originally posted by Zakath

I was responding to the term "uterine contents". In the real world, about one out of four "uterine contents" abort spontaneously without human intervention.

you're being a jackass, Zakath. The term "uterine contents" is used in context as part of the description of the surgical abortion, not as a description of a miscarriage (spontaneous abortion,) and it is a further effort to dehumanize a baby.

You can pretend we're taking about something else all you want, or try to derail the conversation...it doesn't change the point of the above column or of this thread.
 

Turbo

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Pointing out that some unborn babies die of natural causes is Zakath's favorite way to try to justify slaughtering the unborn.
 

Lighthouse

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At least granite is still anti-abortion. There's more hope for him than for this clown.
 

Granite

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Originally posted by lighthouse

At least granite is still anti-abortion. There's more hope for him than for this clown.

I'll take that back-handed compliment, thank you.:chuckle:
 

Zakath

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Originally posted by cattyfan

you're being a jackass, Zakath.

And you're playing the arrogant prig... :D

Satisfied... :rolleyes:


The term "uterine contents" is used in context as part of the description of the surgical abortion, not as a description of a miscarriage (spontaneous abortion,) and it is a further effort to dehumanize a baby.
As I pointed out before, it's likely that 1 in 4 of those surgical abortions is only removing uterine contents that would not have survived to term anyway.

Secondly, I never claimed that no uterine contents were potentially babies, merely that some fair percentage were not.

You can pretend we're taking about something else all you want, or try to derail the conversation...it doesn't change the point of the above column or of this thread.
That wasn't my intent.
 

Lighthouse

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Originally posted by granite1010

I'll take that back-handed compliment, thank you.:chuckle:
Nothing back-handed about it. That was a genuine compliment.
 

Zakath

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Originally posted by Turbo

Pointing out that some unborn babies die of natural causes is Zakath's favorite way to try to justify slaughtering the unborn.
Hardly. Just presenting an alternative view about CF's fixation on the term "uterine contents".

The Jews of Joshua's day seemed quite happy at serving their deity by slaughtering pregnant women (and their unborn children) along with the men and children of the cities they conquered... all in the name of your god.

I am not pro-abortion. :rolleyes:
 

Granite

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Originally posted by Zakath

Hardly. Just presenting an alternative view about CF's fixation on the term "uterine contents".

The Jews of Joshua's day seemed quite happy at serving their deity by slaughtering pregnant women (and their unborn children) along with the men and children of the cities they conquered... all in the name of your god.

I am not pro-abortion. :rolleyes:

I seem to recall a Hebrew ballad fantasizing about bashed-in Babylonian babies...:think:
 
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