Saturday, August 4, 2012

Battle Over Breast-Feeding

Today we have another (literally) sickening installment in the cult of woman-worship.  Personal convenience on the part of the mother is given precedence over the life of the child.  Feminism has gone too far, again.

In an opinion piece from New York Daily News, the understandably anonymous writer suggests, "Feeding formula to a hungry baby is medically necessary whenever a mother wants it."  Nevermind the counsel of actual MDs.  Pediatricians say mothers should breast-feed exclusively for the first six months, except for medical reasons.

But consider the source.  This article comes from the Big rotten Apple, whose crowded conditions are no object for those seeking personal gain.  And child-rearing is only another impediment to corporate success. 

Rather than acknowledging this metropolitan mindset, however, the writer couches his/her arguments in the familiar language of feminism.  There is the suggestion that doctors are "guilt-tripping a woman as she recovers."  Recovers from a car-wreck?  ...a bout with pneumonia?  No, a terrible ordeal that some mothers call the miracle of childbirth.

Perhaps it is not mothers we are talking about.  A female who "gets" pregnant is not necessarily the same thing.  Notwithstanding a host of hormones and archaic expectations that urge the adult to care for someone besides itself, we yeild to the sacred right to "choose" death, or at least disease.

"Babies who are breast-fed are less likely to suffer respiratory infections, earaches, diarrhea and asthma, and mothers who breast-feed decrease chances of developing ovarian or breast cancer."  A stunning admition, from this Op-Ed.  (Emphasis added.)

We return to the over-all tenor: "to fully respect the wishes of mothers — and to apply the rules without lectures or arm-twisting."  Is a twisted arm worse than a malignant womb?  Is the sophisticated debutante opposed to education?  We suppose that lectures are only for scolding children, and no one wants to be put in that position.  Childhood is risky business.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Why Not Attack Fetuses In-Utero?

Ever wonder why the immune system of pregnant women doesn't attack the fetus?  The answer could have profound implications for organ transplants, among other things. 

Researchers at NYU School of Medicine recently made some discoveries in this area. “What we found was completely unexpected at every level,” said professor of pathology, Adrian Erlebacher.  Gratified Creationists cite "The God of Suprises."

Friend or foe--in the womb, who decides?  The "decidua"--a specialized structure encasing the placenta--gracefully hushes antsy "chemokine" genes that normally cry for fighter T cells at the site of inflammation.

Of note to evolutionists, this modification of gene expression is not a hereditable mutation.  No random act of fate, here.  Intelligent, beneficent design, appears again to be at work.  Entropy, on the other hand, may be to blame for degrading this process, and pregnancy complications such as preterm labor, preeclampsia and spontaneous abortion.

(source article)