The bottom of the slippery slope
By Wes Pruden
PrudenPolitics.com
We’ve
finally located the terminus of the slippery slope.
It’s on a side street in Philadelphia, in a modest
three-story red-brick building, where a painted sign
advertises dental, family planning, family practice,
gynecological and physical therapy services. This is
under an illustration of two happy parents, swinging
a small child between them.
But
there are no happy children within these walls. This
is an abortion clinic made infamous by a doctor on
trial for his life, charged with killing seven
infants who survived abortions, and a woman who died
during “the procedure.” The State of Pennsylvania
wants to execute Dr. Kermit Gosnell for the crimes,
if crimes they were. But it might not be so easy for
the state. The law, as muddled abortion law makes
clear, “is a ass.”
By
the findings adduced in grand jury testimony, Kermit
Gosnell stands convicted of monsterhood. He treated
his patients badly and routinely killed live infants
who to his great inconvenience survived their trip
down the birth canal. “These killings,” the grand
jury said, “became so routine that no one could put
an exact number on them.” Most of the women are
black, as the doctor is, and this is why the
mainstream media ignored the trial until pressured
to take notice.
Dr.
Gosnell, finding humor in his grisly work, seemed to
have aspired to be a stand-up comic. One witness
said he joked after one abortion that the baby, at
19 inches in length and weighing six pounds, was so
big he could “walk me to the bus stop.” When the
survivor of another abortion writhed in pain as the
doctor pressed a pair of scissors around his neck,
preparing the snip his spinal column, the doctor
joked: “That’s what you call a chicken with its head
cut off.”
Another witness told how Dr. Gosnell put another
survivor on a countertop to die while he attended
the mother. He waited 20 minutes for the child to
die, but after flailing its arms about but refusing
to die, the doctor directed an assistant to “slit
its neck.” She did and the child finally expired.
Dr.
Gosnell is not typical of doctors who perform
abortions; he was one of the rare ones who performed
late-term abortions. His clinic is not typical,
either. Patients lay in examining rooms reeking of
cat droppings and splattered with blood from
previous “procedures.” When the cops raided the
clinic, they found the remains of 45 infants stored
in “bags, milk jugs, orange juice cartons, even in
cat-food containers.” The grand jury indictment said
some fetuses were frozen in an office refrigerator
and the doctor kept “rows of jars” filled with
severed baby feet.
But
as monstrous as he is, under the law as written and
laid down by the Supreme Court he might not be a
criminal. “Dr. Gosnell,” writes Jon A. Shields, an
associate professor of government at Claremont
McKenna College, in the Weekly Standard magazine,
“fits the profile of a sociopathic killer. But
unlike most such deviants, Gosnell could argue that
he acted within his constitutional rights.”
This
is where the slippery slope has brought us. Under
Roe v. Wade, Doe v. Bolton and the Supreme Court
decisions that followed from it, doctors have an
unbounded right to perform abortions until the
moment of birth. The states can write exceptions,
even banning third-trimester abortions, but
exceptions must be allowed for the health of the
mother, considering “all factors – physical,
emotional, psychological, familial and the woman’s
age – relevant to the well-being of the patient.”
The decision goes to the doctor. Under Doe v.
Bolton, the Supreme Court decreed that determining
the necessity of an abortion is a “professional
judgment” the “physician will be called on to make
routinely.”
Prof.
Shields thinks that the doctor, vile though he may
be, is probably guilty under the law only of two
relatively minor offenses. State law requires a
second medical opinion for a third-term abortion and
Dr. Gosnell did not get one. State law further
requires that a doctor must try to save an infant
who survives an abortion, and Dr. Gosnell did not do
that, either. Given the permissive attitude toward
abortion – even the president of the United States
smiles on them, and as a state senator in Illinois,
Barack Obama declined to vote for legislation
protecting an infant who survives an abortion –
executing Dr. Gosnell is not likely. Given the law
as decreed by judges, he may beat the rap.
Kermit Gosnell (photo by Philadelphia Police Dept.)
The
horror of the Gosnell clinic is not what the
justices of the Supreme Court thought they were
protecting in 1973, nor would even Planned
Parenthood make the Philadelphia sociopath their
poster boy for abortion rights. Nevertheless, here
we are. Nobody has enjoyed the slide down the slope.
Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington
Times.