baby Type post Author Michael Egnor Date August 12, 2022 CategoriesEthicsMedicineScience Tagged , abortion, American Medical Association, autonomy, Dobbs v. Jackson, doctor, execution, health care, homicide, killing, law, medicine, mother, patients Why Abortion Is Not Health Care Michael Egnor August 12, 2022 Ethics, Medicine, Science 3 Consider that abortion is a procedure in which death is the outcome that defines success. Read More ›
premature baby Type post Author Michael Egnor Date August 2, 2022 CategoriesEthicsMedicineScience Tagged , abortion, abortionists, babies, consent, Dobbs v. Jackson, doctors, execution, fetus, health, heart disease, incompetence, killing, laws, medicine, mothers, negligence, Roe v. Wade, suicide, unborn Will Laws Protecting the Unborn Endanger Mothers? Michael Egnor August 2, 2022 Ethics, Medicine, Science 6 A fallacy used by abortionists and their allies is that doctors will be handicapped by having to comply with the law applicable to the care of their patients. Read More ›
baby Type post Date July 7, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , abortion, Australia, Constitution, Discovery Institute, Dobbs v. Jackson, Europe, human rights, Humanize, media, North America, public policy, Roe v. Wade, Supreme Court, United States, Wesley Smith Where the Abortion Debate Goes from Here Science & Culture July 7, 2022 Bioethics, Medicine 2 On a new podcast, host Wesley Smith and guest Catherine Glenn Foster discuss the Dobbs decision. Read More ›
Supreme Court Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date June 25, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , abortion, activists, assisted suicide, Constitution, courts, Dobbs v. Jackson, Due Process Clause, euthanasia, history, hubris, law, Supreme Court How Euthanasia Activists Laid the Groundwork for Overturning Roe Wesley J. Smith June 25, 2022 Bioethics, Medicine 4 Back in the ’90s, the assisted-suicide movement tried to convince the Supreme Court to impose a Roe–style decision for their cause. Read More ›