The state of Michigan is the center of the American
auto industry. The state of Florida is the center of the American
juice industry. The state of Texas is the center of the American oil
industry. What state is the center of the American abortion
industry?
If I were asked the question a few years ago, my answer would be
immediate: New York. The abortion policies of the state of New York
are almost as extreme as those of the Republic of China. A woman in
New York can receive a legal abortion, at taxpayer expense, for any
reason, by any method, at any time during the nine
months of a pregnancy.
Oddly enough, my answer would have been wrong. New York is not
the center of the American abortion industry. Nor is California, New
Jersey, Maryland, Illinois, or any other left-leaning state with a
highly concentrated urban population.
The center of the American abortion industry is the state of
Kansas. This comes as a surprise to many, since Kansans tend to be
simple, down-to-earth, conservative people—the
kind that one would least expect to find inside the walls of an
abortion clinic.
Of all the states in this country, why Kansas? What makes Kansas
special when it comes to abortion? The answer is simple: Kansas is
home to George Tiller,
the most prolific late-term abortionist in the entire western world.
Since 1973, George Tiller—or "Dr. Tiller", as he likes to call
himself—has performed thousands upon thousands of late-term
abortions. He is renowned among the pro-choice community for his
impeccable record of safety: unlike some abortionists, he has yet to
kill a woman in the process of terminating a pregnancy. His apparent
skill as an abortion practitioner has won him numerous awards,
including the National Abortion Federation's highest honor, the
Christopher Tietze Humanitarian Award.
Among pro-life advocates, he is famous for the cruelty with which
he treats the unborn. No case illustrates the extent of this cruelty
better than the
tragedy of Baby Sarah Brown, one of his many victims. In
1993, a pregnant teenager and her parents traveled 900 miles to
Tiller's office in Kansas to receive an elective late-term abortion.
Tiller began the abortion by
injecting a poisonous syringe through the pregnant teenager's uterus
and into the upper left side of the unborn baby's face. He then
instructed the teenager to return the next day for the completion of
the abortion.
To everyone's dismay, the baby
did not die during the intervening hours. After the teenager began to
complain of serious abdominal pains, her parents rushed her to a local
hospital where the baby was eventually born—alive. The
delivery room staff felt that life-support would be futile, so they
wrapped the baby in a bassinet without attendance. The teenager and
her parents quickly left the scene.
Even without medical care, the
baby remained alive. After many hours had passed, the delivery room
staff decided to give her treatment. Miraculously, she managed to
survive through the entire ordeal. "Sarah", as her adoptive parents
later named her, lived until the age of 5, when she succumbed to the
developmental harm done to her body during the abortion. The KCl
solution that had been injected into the side of her face had left her
permanently blind and brain damaged.
Prior to the abortion,
Sarah was a perfectly normal baby. The relevant medical
records indicate that she had no disabilities or deformities. If
Tiller hadn't attempted to poison her, she would be a healthy 9 year
old girl with an entire life ahead of her. Instead, she is in a
grave.
One would think that Tiller's experience with Sarah would be
sufficient to turn his heart away from the evil of abortion. But the
experience hasn't changed him in the slightest. To this day, he
continues his lucrative career as a late-term practitioner.
When confronted with stories like the story of Sarah Brown,
pro-choice advocates usually insist that late-term abortions only
occur in extreme, life-threatening circumstances. Until recently,
this claim was an easy claim to make. For the most part, objective
data on late-term abortion have been hard to come by. The abortion
industry consistently refuses to disclose statistical information on
the topic.
In the middle of 1998, the state of Kansas instituted a mandatory
reporting policy that required Tiller to submit information about the
abortions that he performs. The Kansas Department of Health and
Environmental Statistics has recently
published
this information.
The information sends a clear message: the majority of late-term
abortions are purely elective. They typically involve healthy
babies and healthy mothers. If you are inclined to disagree, or if
you have a hard time believing that mainstream abortion practitioners
would be willing to kill babies that are months from being born, then
I ask that you continue reading. You will be amazed—and hopefully
outraged—when you see the data for yourself.
Before evaluating the data, let me first provide some background
information on Kansas Law and on other topics that are pertinent to
Tiller's practices.
Kansas Statutes partial-birth abortion restrictions,
65-6721:
(a) No person shall perform or induce a partial birth abortion
on a viable fetus unless such person is a physician and has a
documented referral from another physician not legally or
financially affiliated with the physician performing or inducing
the abortion and both physicians determine: (1) The abortion is
necessary to preserve the life of the pregnant woman; or (2) a
continuation of the pregnancy will cause a substantial and
irreversible impairment of a major physical or mental
function of the pregnant woman. |
Kansas Statutes post-viability abortion restrictions,
65-6703:
(a) No person shall perform or induce an abortion when the fetus
is viable unless such person is a physician and has a documented
referral from another physician not legally or financially
affiliated with the physician performing or inducing the
abortion and both physicians determine that: (1) The abortion is
necessary to preserve the life of the pregnant woman; or (2) a
continuation of the pregnancy will cause a substantial and
irreversible impairment of a major bodily function of the
pregnant woman. |
The "health" exceptions built into these statutes make them
absolutely meaningless. They haven't restricted a single late-term
abortion. All that Tiller has to do to keep his atrocities within the
boundaries set by the Kansas Legislature is find one pro-choice
psychologist in the United States willing to claim that late-term
abortion is necessary to preserve a woman's mental health. If he can
do that, he can do whatever he wants. It certainly doesn't seem like
a very daunting task, does it?
Since the concept of "health"—especially the concept of "mental
health"—has no established legal meaning, virtually every late-term
abortion that Tiller performs, no matter how abusive, remains legally
invincible. If he wanted to, he could exact a partial birth abortion
on a healthy, 40 week old fetus. He would get off scot-free. Sadly
enough, prosecutors would be powerless to convict him of wrongdoing.
As long as he manages to find a mental health professional willing to
vouch for his actions, there isn't really any basis for
conviction.
What about the babies? What are their "health" situations going
into these abortions? Those who defend late-term abortion often claim
that its occurrence is limited to situations where the fetus is
horribly deformed.
Here are the results of a
study that Tiller presented in Australia:
"[Dr. George Tiller] presented the results of a study involving
2750 women aged between 10 and 45 who underwent abortions between
1994-97. The average gestational age was 27 weeks. The vast majority-2051-were
performed because of either maternal health problems, with the
remaining 699 abortions performed because of foetal
abnormality." (Julie Ann Davies, "Abortionist Backs Sex
Selection", The Age: 15 Nov 1999, Internet Edition)
Fetal abnormality, as it is used in this context, can include
things like down's syndrome, hydrocephalus, cystic fibrosis, and other
disabilities that are problematic, but not incompatible with
meaningful life. Still, 3 out of 4 of the babies that were evaluated
in the study were not abnormal.
This statistic is further confirmed in the
Executive Summary for Fetal Indication Termination contained
on Tiller's website. He claims that from January of 1989 to May of
2001 he aborted roughly 2,009 post-15 week fetuses for reasons of
fetal abnormality. This means that, on average, only 167 of
the post 15-week fetuses that he aborted each year were abnormal. As
the data he provided to the state of Kansas indicates (with links
below), he aborts roughly 600 post 22-week fetuses each
year. Do the math.
Abortion advocates often deflect negative attention by insisting
that late-term abortions are in the best interests of the babies that
are aborted. They claim that if the babies are not "terminated", they
will live lives scarred by illness. The truth is that the vast
majority of the babies condemned to death by late-term abortion are
healthy and capable of living meaningful lives.
There also exists a common misconception that late-term abortions
are limited to medical emergencies. Nothing could be further from the
truth. From 1998 until 2000, only one out of the 1168
abortions that Tiller performed after viability was done during a
medical emergency. Upwards of 97% of his late-term patients weren't
even from Kansas—they flew in from other states to have abortions that
they had scheduled in advance.
The
procedure that Tiller tends to prefer is called digoxin
induction—a drawn-out, two to three day process in which the
attending abortionist poisons the unborn baby with chemicals and then
removes it by inducing labor. Clearly, this is not the kind of
treatment that a competent obstetrician would administer during a
medical emergency. If a woman in the final months of a wanted
pregnancy found herself in a medical emergency that required a
c-section or a labor induction, the last thing that she would
want would be for her doctors to intentionally kill the baby with a
fatal poison. What would be the point?
It is inconceivable that the poisoning of a viable unborn baby
before an induction could be necessary to avert physical health
damage to a pregnant woman. The death of a baby doesn't cure any
physical illnesses. What, then, are the "health" problems that
are leading to these abortions? Again, the answer lies in the
nebulous concept of mental health—a loophole that has been
tailor made to legalize elective abortion throughout the nine months
of a pregnancy. The argument put forth by the abortion industry is
that unwanted babies, if they are allowed to live, pose a threat to
the psychological well-being of the mothers who will have to raise
them. Consequently, they must die.
Let there be no confusion: the motivation behind these abortions is
not the termination of an unwanted pregnancy. Once pregnancy has
reached viability, doctors can perform abortion without
engaging in an act of killing. The motivation behind these abortions
is the destruction of an unwanted fetus, the elimination of an
unwanted child. Tiller himself seems willing to concede the
point. From his own
mouth, "it is unplanned and unwanted motherhood that
shipwrecks women's lives, not unplanned pregnancy." (George R.
Tiller, Victory Rally and Declaration of Reproductive
Independence, Wichita, Kansas, July 13, 2001)
Now, to the data:
From July 1998, when reporting began, until December 1998, Tiller
performed 227 abortions after 22 weeks. 91 of these abortions
were performed after the baby had reached viability. For each
abortion, he was asked to indicate whether the abortion was necessary
to save the life of the mother. In each case, his answer was no.
During the same period, Tiller performed 58 "partial birth"
abortions. All of these abortions were done on babies that had
reached viability. Tiller was again asked to indicate, for each
"partial birth" abortion (PBA), whether the procedure was done to
preserve the physical health or the mental health of his
patient. As expected, the answer given every time was mental
health. Not one of his "partial birth" abortions was done for
physical health reasons.
For verification and more information, scroll to pages 10-13 of the
following PDF file:
Here is data on the age groups of the women who had late-term
abortions at Tiller's clinic in 1998 and the procedures used:
| Age of patient |
PBA* |
Digoxin/Induction |
|
under 15 |
2 |
28 |
| 15-19 |
21 |
158 |
| 20-24 |
10 |
98 |
| 25-29 |
9 |
81 |
| 30-34 |
12 |
56 |
| 35-39 |
4 |
27 |
| 40-44 |
0 |
11 |
*All PBA's were done on viable babies
From January of 1999 to December 1999, Tiller performed 574
abortions after 22 weeks. 302 of these abortions were performed
on viable babies. All of the abortions were done for "health"
reasons; not one was done to preserve the life of the mother.
During the same period, Tiller performed 182 abortions with
the PBA method. Every single one of these abortions was performed
after viability. As in the previous year, he was asked to
indicate, for each patient , whether the procedure was done to protect
the patient's physical health or the patient's mental
health. His answer in every case was mental health.
Ultimately, in the 9 month period from January 1999 to September
1999, Tiller averaged 5 post-viable partial birth abortions
per week. On average, he killed a viable unborn baby with partial
birth abortion every day that he went to work. For verification and
more information, scroll to pages 10-13 of the following PDF file:
Here is data on the age groups of the women who had late-term
abortions at Tiller's clinic in 1999 and the procedures used:
| Age of Patient |
PBA* |
Digoxin/Induction |
|
under 15 |
4 |
24 |
| 15-19 |
55 |
134 |
| 20-24 |
26 |
79 |
| 25-29 |
38 |
44 |
| 30-34 |
32 |
47 |
| 35-39 |
22 |
22 |
| 40-44 |
4 |
14 |
*All of the PBA's were done on viable babies
In the middle of 1999, Tiller came under
fire for the numer of "partial birth" abortions that he was
performing. So, in October of that year, he decided to stop using the
procedure. In its place, he began to rely exclusively on the "digoxin
induction" procedure.
His casual disposal of "partial birth" abortion should
serve as a crucial lesson to those who are pro-life. Recent
legislation that purports to ban the procedure serves no purpose. If
"partial birth" abortion is banned, late-term practitioners like
Tiller will simply revert to different procedures. The viable babies
that need to be protected from the madness of late-term abortion will
end up just as dead. To make serious strides towards protecting the
unborn and the partially-born, we need to ban all elective
late-term abortions, not just those that involve gruesome or
superficially repulsive procedures.
His tendencies should also serve as a lesson to those
who are pro-choice. If the leaders of the pro-choice movement were
correct in arguing that partial birth abortion can be necessary to
preserve a woman's health, then how does George Tiller—America's most
active and sought-after late-term abortionist—manage to get by without
using it? Ultimately the truth affirmed in Tiller's policies
is that "partial birth" abortion doesn't serve any legitimate medical
purposes. It is nothing more than a fancy way to kill a baby.
From January of 2000 to December 2000, Tiller
performed 639 abortions after 22 weeks. 380 of these abortions
were done on viable babies. That computes to roughly 7
post-viable abortions per week. As before, all of the
abortions were done for "health" reasons. Not one was done to
preserve the life of the mother. For verification and more
information, scroll to pages 10-13 of the following PDF file:
Here are the age groups of the women who had late-term
abortions at Tiller's clinic in 2000 and the procedure used:
|
Age of Patient |
Digoxin/Induction |
|
Under 15 |
29 |
|
15-19 |
178 |
|
20-24 |
155 |
|
25-29 |
95 |
|
35-39 |
58 |
|
40-44 |
18 |
|
45+ |
1 |
From January of 2001 to December 2001, Tiller
performed 635 abortions after 22 weeks. 395 of these abortions
were done on viable babies. As usual, all of the abortions
were done for "health" reasons. Not one was done to preserve
the life of the mother.
For verification and more information, scroll to pages
10-13 of the following PDF file:
When considering the statistics on post-viability
abortion, it is important to remember that they deal with "viability"
as it is defined by an abortionist who is definitely no friend of
unborn children. George Tiller is well-known for putting the unborn
at a disadvantage when making determinations about their chances of
survival outside the womb. His own former employee has testified to
his deceptive tactics:
|
"Tiller [would determine the baby’s] BPD (biparietal
diameter), which is a measurement of the babies head. Tiller
gave me this simple explanation of what a BPD is: at this
certain angle, the baby’s head is roughly egg shaped. The
ordinary method of measurement is to go from the top of the egg
to the bottom of the egg. That is the widest point of the angle.
But Tiller said he goes from side to side on the egg and gets a
much narrower measurement. He does not keep the photos in the
medical records and he disposes of the babies, so there is no
way to go back and see what he has done." |
She was viciously attacked by the abortion industry,
but, as the statistics verify, her statements were very close to the
truth:
| "I was there for about seven months, which is a
fairly representative amount of time. In over 95% of
these babies, perhaps more, there was nothing wrong at all.
Nothing. And these were third trimester abortions." |
Additionally, it is important to remember that these
statistics only deal with one provider in one state.
There are many other providers across the country that practice
late-term abortion. God only knows what their numbers are.
Abortion advocates often claim that Roe v. Wade was a
compromise. Gee, what a wonderful compromise! As a result of Roe and
its progeny, states are essentially powerless to prevent the kinds of
abuses that are taking place in Wichita.
In hospitals around the United States, "wanted" babies
are being given the best medical care in the entire world.
Meanwhile, "unwanted" babies of the same age are being poisoned,
dismembered, decapitated, and trashed. Is that fair? Is that just?
Even more disturbing is the fact that Tiller is
performing these late-term abortions for dubious "mental health"
reasons. He is killing babies that his clients—many of them
teenagers—have felt move in their wombs for months. What could be
worse for a teenager's "mental health" than to spend the rest of her
life with the after thought that she chose to have her baby
killed in a grisly late-term abortion? How could a twisted experience
like that help the mental outlook of a teenager?
The United States Congress and the legislature of
Kansas must act and act quickly. Each day that goes by means
another dead baby.
Note: this essay is
reprinted with permission by Brian D. Parks. No Fear Media, and
AbortionTV assume no responsibility for the content and or accuracy of
the information contained herein.