March of Dimes Exposé
Exposing the Hidden Link
(Reprinted with permission
from "Lifelines,
newspaper of the Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation")
For years the March of Dimes (MOD) has been boycotted by pro-life
groups for its involvement in the abortion industry. Unfortunately,
many well-meaning pro-life citizens continue to support MOD,
not knowing one of the group's methods of preventing what it
calls "Birth Defects" is to promote abortion.
MOD was one of the major forces behind the development and widespread
use of amniocentesis in the second trimester of pregnancy. Amniocentesis
is a test commonly used to determine if an unborn child has a
congenital abnormality, knowledge of which can facilitate the
decision to abort "defective" children.
Pat Robertson of CBN and the Christian Coalition asked those
with this philosophy, "Would we have been better off if
there had never been a Helen Keller or Beethoven or Einstein
-- all of whom had "birth defects?"
Henry Foster, who was rejected by the Senate as President Clinton's
nominee for Surgeon General, served on the March of Dimes' Medical
Service Advisory committee. While on the committee, Foster admitted
doing nearly 700 abortions following the results of amniocentesis,.
Foster also defended fetoscopic prenatal research as "clearly
therapeutic" since "it was done for the same reason
that we do amniocentesis, to decide whether or not the pregnancy
should continue, and to provide a therapeutic abortion."
Dr. David Nathan, Professor of Pediatrics at Harvard University,
MOD grantee, and National MOD adviser, explained that one particularly
elaborate international prenatal testing arrangement involving
scientists in London, New Haven, and Boston was done in order
that "knowledge go on, vital clinical testing go on, and
when necessary, abortions go on."
In a letter to Congress in 1978, MOD president Charles Massey
wrote in favor of legislation to fund this genetic screening.
Massey notes, "The financial cost of treating and institutionalizing
our severely affected survivors is staggering; we cannot begin
to measure the cost."
MOD has given several grants for developing tests that can detect
abnormalities in the first trimester. Prostaglandin abortionists
Dr. Maurice J. Mahoney of Yale received $35,000 for research
on chorionic villi sampling and for developing a prenatal diagnostic
technique that would permit the first-trimester abortion of affected
pre-born children. From 1989 to 1990, MOD gave $50,000 to Dr.
Haig H. Kazazian of Johns Hopkins University, a staunch advocate
of eugenic abortion, to perfect methods to detect, early in pregnancy,
disorders such as beta-thalassemia, hemophilia A, Duchenne muscular
dystrophy, and cystic fibrosis - none of which is treatable in
the womb.
MOD has also funded fetal experimentation and fetal tissue use
for more than two decades. In the early 1970's, MOD gave $19,000
to Dr. John F.S. Crocker of Dalhousie University in Halifax,
Nova Scotia, to study congenital kidney abnormalities. This study
involved "60 pairs of embryonic kidneys . . . obtained from
human therapeutic abortions after five to twelve weeks gestation."
In 1973-74, MOD gave $9,420 for appallingly grotesque fetal
brain metabolism studies in Helsinki, Finland on living, human
babies aborted by hysterotomy and still attached by the umbilical
cord to the mother. The babies were then decapitated and their
heads were mounted on perfusion equipment. Arthur A. Galloway,
MOD Vice President for Development, defended this research, saying
it was "done legally and ethically" under Finnish law;
that "the investigators did not participate in the decision
to terminate pregnancy;" and "they were concerned with
the ethics of discarding such fetal issue without seeking to
find ways to improve the life and health of live born premature
infants."
In the 1970's, a MOD grant was awarded to Dr. A. de la Chapelle
of the University of Helsinki for research on maternal and fetal
blood cells to detect genetic conditions early in pregnancy.
Some cell sources for the experiment were obtained "by open-heart
puncture of 10 week fetuses that had been aborted for various
reasons, not connected with fetal diseases." (Healthy babies)
MOD published Strategies in Genetic Counseling: Reproductive
Genetics and New Age Technologies in 1990. The book states the
March of Dimes' viewpoint that, "There is no substitution
for a constitutional right to abortion which protects our fundamental
rights." Fortunately, pro-life leaders say, many Americans
still recognize the fact that pre-born children, perfect and
imperfect, are among those with fundamental rights to be protected.
Thankfully, there is a pro-life alternative for those wishing
to support prenatal research. Those wishing to support life-supporting-birth
defect prevention research may send donations to the Michael
Fund, a pro-life genetic research foundation seeking to protect
both unborn children with defects and children and adults with
defects.
Because Down Syndrome babies are often among those innocent
babies killed by abortion, the Michael Fund places special emphasis
on Down Syndrome research. Columnist Rich Hinshaw says, "It
is one of the triumphs of modern society that the life of the
average person with Down Syndrome has become strikingly normal
- except that, unlike normal people, people with Down Syndrome
have been targeted for elimination." For an up-to-date packet
about the organization and documentation of the pro-abortion
aspects of MOD please call 412-823-6380 or write:
The Michael
Fund
500 A Garden City Drive
Pittsburgh, PA 15146
www.michaelfund.org
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