No evidence Omicron BA.5 is more infectious than measles or is ‘the most infectious virus known’ – Dunya News

No evidence Omicron BA.5 is more infectious than measles or is 'the most infectious virus known'

No evidence Omicron BA.5 is more infectious than measles or is 'the most infectious virus known'

17 July,2022 10:29 am

(Reuters) - Scientists say there is no evidence that the BA.5 version of the Omicron coronavirus variant is more transmissible than measles, or that it has a basic reproduction number, or R-naught (R0), of 18.6, which would be greater than that of measles. While BA.5 appears to be spreading faster than other Omicrons still circulating, experts say that BA.5 is unlikely to be one of the most infectious viruses known to man, as some have claimed.

Calculations recently published online (here) and (here) suggested that the R0 of BA.5 is 18.6, which would be nearly six times that of the original strain of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that emerged in 2019 and was estimated to have an R0 of about 3.0 to 3.3.

Basic reproduction number, or R0, is an estimate of the "number of secondary cases generated by a typical infectious individual when the rest of the population is susceptible (ie, at the start of a novel outbreak)" (here).

The calculation that BA.5 has an R0 of 18.6 was made by the articles author Adrian Esterman, a professor of biostatistics and epidemiology based in Australia (here), who implies that BA.5 has displaced measles -- with its R0 of 18 -- as the virus with the highest known basic reproduction rate, writing: "This is similar to measles, which until now was our most infectious viral disease."

The claim made its way into online articles (here) , (here), and has been repeated and shared more than 20,000 times on Twitter.

In sharing Estermans result, one Twitter user remarked, "The latest Covid subvariants have an Ro value of 18.6. If you think its over, guess again" (here) and another said, "The Omicron variants #BA4 #BA5 have an R0 of 18.6. In 2020, the R0 was around 1-3 or 4 at its worst. #COVID19 is now the most infectious disease in human history. Buckle up. This is it." (here).

But many Twitter users, including professional biostatisticians and epidemiologists, questioned the result and how it was calculated. "This statement about R0 is almost certainly incorrect and very frustrating to see going viral" (here), said one.

Another said, "Strikes me that there is some misunderstanding about the relationship between R0, growth advantage, and R_eff - and a bit of gen time as well" (here).

A third said, "Still seeing claims that latest COVID variants have R0 (i.e. R in fully susceptible population) of almost 20. But the same logic would lead to (incorrect) conclusion that seasonal flu has an R0 in the hundreds, if not thousands" (here).

More examples can be seen (here) , (here) and (here).

Estermans calculation is based on multiplying two very different types of measurement, scientists said. One is a context-dependent comparison -- BA.5s growth advantage over the BA.2 version of Omicron, or BA.2s growth advantage over BA.1 -- while the other is a more intrinsic property of the virus and how it would behave on a theoretical level playing field.

In his article, Esterman states the R0 for BA.1, the first version of Omicron to spread globally, is 9.5, citing a review of mostly South African studies (here) done soon after Omicrons emergence in that country. In addition to R0, the authors of that study calculated an average effective reproduction rate (R_eff) of 3.4.

Effective reproduction rate is "the expected number of new infections caused by an infectious individual in a population where some individuals may no longer be susceptible," and is considered a better reflection of how fast an epidemic will actually grow in a real setting (here) and (here).

Esterman then writes, "BA.2, which is the dominant subvariant in Australia at the moment, is 1.4 times more transmissible than BA.1, and so has an R0 of about 13.3." He further adds, "a pre-print publication from South Africa suggests BA.4/5 has a growth advantage over BA.2 similar to the growth advantage of BA.2 over BA.1. That would give it an R0 of 18.6," citing an analysis (here) from the period when BA.4 and BA.5 infections were rising in South Africa while BA.2 infections slowed.

Natalie Dean, an associate professor of biostatistics and bioinformatics, and of epidemiology at the Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University, tweeted about the result, "Just because something has a 50% *growth advantage* in a population does not mean it is 50% more *transmissible.* Some (or most) of that growth advantage may come from immune evasion." (here)

"So if each new variant has a 50% growth advantage, it does not mean that R0 keeps increasing by 50%. And while new variants are more transmissible, R0 is not up to 18 (measles territory). The reality is that R0 is tricky to apply to our current situation. Interpret with care!" (here)

Multiple factors can give one variant an advantage over another, Dean told Reuters. They include a change in the virus that makes it inherently more transmissible, but another is that it can evade recognition by the immune system in people who have been exposed to previous variants or to vaccines based on older versions of the virus.

The R0 is just focused on the transmissibility part, but unless you untangle the two, you cant tell how much of the advantage is due to [immune evasion], she explained. With the assorted Omicron lineages, a large chunk of the advantage they have relative to one another and to previous variants comes from immune evasion, she said.

You dont even need an increase in transmissibility to explain the advantage, Dean noted. But in multiplying R0 by relative growth advantage, at each step, youre attributing those advantages [only] to increased transmissibility.

It would be difficult to calculate a true R0 for BA.5 now because the world has such mixed levels of exposure and vaccination, Dean said. If you put BA.5 and the Wuhan strain in the same population, we dont know what would happen. BA.5 might do better, but not six times as much.

VERDICT

False. The basic reproduction number of the BA.5 Omicron variant was miscalculated as 18.6, scientists say, and therefore it is not greater than that of measles, and BA.5 is not the most infectious viral disease known.

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No evidence Omicron BA.5 is more infectious than measles or is 'the most infectious virus known' - Dunya News

How the right waged a 100-year war to conquer America and why it’s winning – Salon

In two blockbuster decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court throttled the power of government to regulate pollution (West Virginia v. EPA) and expanded the power of government to regulate women's reproductive lives (Dobbs v. Jackson). There is no contradiction in these two decisions. They continue a hundred years of right-wing support for private enterprise and control over women's autonomy.

The American right has held together as a political movement through its core commitment to conserving what it views as traditional Christian values and private enterprise. American conservative politics is not about limited government, states' rights, individual freedom or free markets. These are all dispensable ideas that the right has adjusted and readjusted to protect core principles. Conservatives have built their own versions of big government and carved out innumerable exceptions to free markets for tariffs, business subsidies, friendly regulations and pro-business interventions abroad. They have backed individual choice and states' rights, for example, on racial issues, but not on alcohol and drug use, pornography, contraception, abortion and same-sex marriage. In defense of core objectives, conservatives shifted from being isolationists before Pearl Harbor to aggressive warriors against communism and terrorism. They have abandoned protectionism for free trade, public education for private school vouchers, and deficit control for "supply-side" tax cuts.

Control over women's allegedly dangerous sexuality and autonomy grounds the moral appeal of conservative politics. In this view, a morally-ordered society requires a morally-ordered family, with clear lines of divinely ordained masculine authority and the containment within it of women's erotic allure. Salacious, non-motherly displays of female bodies, sex education in schools, abortion rights, easy divorces and the tolerance of homosexuality and other forms of "deviance" undercut the reproduction and orderly progress of civilization. Feminist demands since the 1920s to upset manly and womanly distinctions and erode patriarchy, through the right's lens, de-feminizes women and feminizes men, opening the family and the nation to conquest (rape) and subversion (seduction). The history of failed civilizations, conservative physicianArabella Kenealywrote in 1922, "shows one striking feature as having been common to most of these great decadences. In nearly every case, the dominance and [sexual] license of their women were conspicuous."

Conservative politics has had an enduring appeal to Americans seeking the clarity and comfort of absolute moral codes, clear standards of right and wrong, swift and certain penalties for transgressors and established lines of authority in public and family life. Ultimately conservatives have engaged in a struggle for control over American public life against a liberal tradition they have seen as not just wrong on issues, but sinful, un-American and corrosive of the institutions and traditions that made the nation great. To achieve their ambitious aims, conservatives had to stay disciplined, mobilize their resources and wage total war against liberals, with unconditional surrender as the only acceptable result.

During the 1920s, conservatives pioneered their programs for enforcing their vision of traditional values and protecting private enterprise, which endure today. Efforts to uphold the traditional family and control the licentiousness of women emerged in the 1920s, not just through the prohibition of alcohol but in lesser-known campaigns against sexual "deviance," "smut" and drugs, and in defense of conservative motherhood. In 1925, British historianA.F. Pollardcited the U.S. as "the rising hope of stern and unbending Tories." American laws, he said, "were not so much a means of change as a method of putting on record moral aspirations, a liturgy rather than legislation; and the statutebook was less the fiat of the State than a book of common prayer."

The erotically charged society of the 1920s led to fears that Americans, especially the young, were falling victim to deviant sexuality, such as oral sex and homosexuality, and to the scourge of venereal disease. After World War I,however, efforts to prevent venereal disease through education and the administration of chemical prophylaxis gave way to moral uplift and law enforcement. For moral reformers of the 1920s, preventative measures only encouraged prostitution and promiscuity.

Conservative answers to venereal disease involved the restoration of the supposed moral integrity of society and the rigorous prosecution of prostitutes and other sex offenders. Congress failed to renew wartime appropriations for controlling venereal disease, and state censorship boards banned as obscene sex-education films and other forms of anti-venereal propaganda. In 1926, the federal government eliminated federal aid to the states to prevent venereal disease, while state appropriations for this purpose declined.

After World War I, the Catholic Church crusaded worldwide for moral renewal. In 1920,Pope Benedict XVwarned that atrocities of war had led to "the diminution of conjugal fidelity and the diminution of respect for constituted authority. Licentious habits followed, even among young women." In 1930, his successorPope Pius XIissued 12 rules designed to assure that "feminine garb be based on modesty and their ornament be a defense of virtue." Catholic authorities joined by evangelical white Protestants promoted in the 1920s the censorship of books, plays, movies and artwork that displayed obscenity, nudity, drinking, sex outside of wedlock, suggestive dancing, drug use, homosexuality, prostitution and love between people of different races.

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In the 1920s, conservatives backed the closing of America's public drug treatment clinics and, as they did with venereal disease, adopted a moral and law enforcement approach to narcotics. Addicts had no recourse other than illegal sources of supply. For moral reformers, drug and alcohol use undermined the family and threatened the purity of American women. Even more than drink, however, enslavement to narcotics was understood to undercut discipline, self-mastery and the free will needed to follow a godly life.Richard P. Hobson, head of the International Narcotic Education Association, charged that civilization was "in the midst of a life and death struggle with the deadliest foe that has ever menaced its future." Narcotics threatened "the perpetuation of civilization, the destiny of the world, and the future of the human race." In 1929, Congress began the national war on drugs by establishing a Federal Bureau of Narcotics to enforce the drug laws.

Conservative women drew on a maternalist ideology that affirmed inherent differences between the sexes and women's unique role in rearing children as healthy, moral and productive citizens. Conservative maternalists urged women of the New Era not to slip the bonds of men and custom but to reclaim their motherly responsibilities to rear courageous sons and domesticated daughters. They opposed reforms that confused sex roles, weakened families or substituted state paternalism for parental responsibility.

Conservative women warned against radicals who would rip children from the home and rear them in nurseries run by the state. The radicals would end sexual restraint and manly competition. They would feminize men and coerce women into "unnatural" masculine roles through forced work and conscription. Conservative women found dangerous sex-role reversals in women who embraced the unisex hedonism of the times: short skirts and bathing suits, bobbed hair, drinking, smoking, vigorous sports, necking and petting, and sensual music and dancing. Patriotic mothers would uphold family morals and shun the competitive male spheres of business, politics and war. Like women of Sparta, they would raise patriotic sons ready to risk their lives for the common defense. This view of women and their place in society was represented in such 1920s organizations as the Women's Auxiliary of the Ku Klux Klan, the Daughters of the American Revolution, the General Federation of Women's Clubs, the American Legion Auxiliary and the Daughters of 1812.

Women of the right mobilized against the first federal welfare measure, the Sheppard Towner Bill of 1921, which provided aid to the states for the health care of mothers and infants. They argued that the law would weaken families, undercut traditional values and advance paternalistic government. In the Sheppard-Towner fight, wrote editor Mary Kilbreth of the conservative publication Woman Patriot, "we have with us as allies the Constitution, and all the institutions on which 'Western civilization is based.'"

The right's pro-business policies included the anti-government initiatives of deregulation and tax cuts. Yet they also turned to government for protective tariffs, support for foreign trade and investment, controls over strikes and labor organizing, and pro-business regulations. Our goal is "putting government behind rather than in business,"Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hooversaid in 1924. In 1926, under Hoover's guidance, the Republican Congress stabilized the struggling airline and railroad industries with the Air Commerce Act and the Railway Act. On the seas, Congress extended subsidies to shipbuilders and operators in the Merchant Marine Act of 1928. To impose order on the broadcast spectrum, Congress established a Federal Radio Commission in 1927 and let broadcasters keep or sell their existing frequencies and block competitors from sharing airtime. Republican presidents appointed pro-business jurists to regulatory agencies and the federal courts.

Support for profit-seeking enterprise may contradict the right's emphasis on moral probity. However, conservatives linked private enterprise to stable, traditional families that nurtured the virtues of thrift, sobriety, self-reliance, honor and diligence. Even as Americans evolved from savers and craftsmen to producers and consumers, conservatives sustained the linkage between family virtue and enterprise. "The whole fabric of Business rests upon these moral forces," wrote journalistEdward Bokin 1926. Cultural warfare, in turn, gave the right a mass base and a passion that economic conservatism lacks. By uniting traditional Christian values and enterprise, conservatives claim to have protected Americans' pocketbooks and saved their souls.

Cultural and business conservatism converged forcefully again when the right regrouped in the 1970s. Conservatives then put a positive spin on their cultural prohibitionism. They weren't just against sinners and feminists; they were the "pro-family" and "pro-life" champions of wholesome "family values." Still, defense of the family meant battling the Equal Rights Amendment, abortion, pornography, gay rights and gun control. Phyllis Schlafly, the prime mover of the pro-family agenda, described "the family as the basic unit of society, with certain rights and responsibilities, including the right to insist that the schools permit voluntary prayer and teach the 'fourth 'R' (right and wrong) according to the precepts of the Holy Scriptures." At a well-attended "Pro-Family Rally" that upstaged the feminist 1977 "International Year of the Woman" gathering in Houston, she warned that feminists were "going to drive the homemaker out of the home. They want to relieve mothers of the menial task of taking care of their babies. They want to put them in the coal mines and have them digging ditches." The ERA would "only benefit homosexuals. The American women do not want ERA, abortion, lesbian rights, and they do not want childcare in the hands of government."

In 1971, corporate lawyer Lewis Powell issued a call to arms by conservatives shortly before his appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court. The "Powell Memo"guided the rebuilding of business conservatism and the presidency of Ronald Reagan. He warned that new regulations that cut across industry to limit pollution, control energy production, advance minority and consumer rights and protect worker health and safety threatened the survival of private enterprise. Powell insisted that conservatives, aided by the financial might of business, should not have "the slightest hesitation to press vigorously in all political arenas for support of the enterprise system. Nor should there be reluctance to penalize politically those who oppose it." Conservatives must aggressively capture the centers of power that shaped policy and public opinion: the political parties, the academy, the media, the courts and popular culture.

Consistent with the reformulation of cultural issues, conservatives in the 1970s put a positive spin on their pro-business policies, labeling them "supply-side economics." Entrepreneurs would create a new era of American abundance if they were free to innovate without penalty or control. They would produce enough goods and services to cure inflation, accelerate government revenue growth and reduce the deficit. Supply-side advocates promised that their bonanza to business would flow down or "trickle down," as critics charged to the lower strata because employment and wages would boom.

After his transformation election in 1980, President Ronald Reagan turned the supply-side dream into reality. His conservative economic policies rested on reducing tax liabilities for corporations and the wealthy, relieving businesses of civil rights, environmental, and economic regulations, cutting social spending and curbing the power of labor unions. It was a blueprint that the right would follow through today.

The history of the modern American conservative movement demonstrates that the Dobbs and EPA decisions are not aberrations. In fact, they realize priorities that the right has pursued since the 1920s. The only change is a right-wing grip on the Supreme Court that is unprecedented in modern American history. The court will likely extend its curtailment of air pollution regulation to water pollution in the upcoming case ofSackett v. EPA. And despite surface disagreement from other justices, it is also likely to follow Justice Clarence Thomas' call for reconsidering the rights to contraception, private sexual encounters and same-sex marriage. Given the right's quest for absolute power, it would not be surprising if the court then grants state legislatures controlled by Republicans in key swing states exclusive control over federal elections.

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on the far right's assault on America

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How the right waged a 100-year war to conquer America and why it's winning - Salon

Regulating domestic surrogacy in Ireland: Is the process too perilous for intended parents? – BioNews

25 April 2022

Assistant Professor at the National University of Ireland, Galway

The Health (Assisted Human Reproduction) Bill 2022 was published in March 2022, and is currently being considered by the Irish Parliament. Part seven provides for the regulation of altruistic, domestic surrogacy arrangements. However, it does little to encourage intended parents to enter into such arrangements, because it proposes a complex, hybrid pre and post-birth model for regulating domestic surrogacy.

The Bill provides for the setting up of an Assisted Human Reproduction Regulatory Authority (AHRRA) that must, among its many functions, approve the parties' surrogacy agreement before any treatment in a clinic will be permitted. However, despite all parties having received implications counselling and independent legal advice regarding the agreement by this time, the AHRRA's pre-conception 'approval' of their agreement will be limited to the approval of treatment, not legal parentage of the surrogate-born child.

The Bill provides that the gestational surrogate will be the child's legal mother at birth (the Bill only proposes to regulate gestational surrogacy). The intended parents can only apply to the court seeking a parental order transferring legal parentage from the surrogate a minimum of 28 days after the birth of the child. The surrogate must consent to this transfer of parental rights or she will remain the child's legal mother, and there appears to be nothing that the intended parents can do about this. Part seven makes it clear that the surrogate's consent can only be dispensed with by the court if she is either deceased or cannot be located.

This requirement around consent is a retrograde step when compared to the original draft of the Bill that was published as far back as 2017. In the General Scheme of the Assisted Human Reproduction Bill 2017, it was provided that the court could waive the requirement for the surrogate's consent to a parental order 'for any other reason the court considers to be relevant' which, if it had been retained in the current Bill, would at least have offered a potential life-line to intended parents who might find themselves in a predicament where the surrogate refuses to consent to a parental order. Indeed, one wonders whether this provision was intentionally removed from the Bill to make domestic surrogacy as perilous an undertaking as possible for Irish intended parents.

The Bill was drafted by the Department of Health and, as regards surrogacy, little has changed from the provisions in the General Scheme in 2017. This is surprising when one considers developments that took place in the interim period between the General Scheme and the Bill. In 2019, the two Law Commissions in the UK published a Consultation Paper proposing a move away from the 'Post-Birth Parental Order' model for regulating domestic surrogacy arrangements in that jurisdiction to a 'Pre-Conception Approval' model for determining legal parentage in favour of intended parents at birth.

However, it is clear from the above discussion that the post-birth aspects of the regulatory model proposed in the Irish Bill mirror unsatisfactory aspects of the current UK model, particularly in the area of post-birth consent. In 2020, Professor Conor O'Mahony, Ireland's special rapporteur on child protection, submitted 'A Review of Children's Rights and Best Interests in the context of Donor-Assisted Human Reproduction and Surrogacy in Irish Law', which also proposed a pre-conception approval model for determining legal parentage in cases of domestic surrogacy in Ireland.

It is worth noting that a pre-conception model for approving legal parentage of the surrogate-born child in favour of the intended parents might not only encourage them to avail of domestic surrogacy rather than going abroad, but it would also establish the child's right to family life with its intended parents immediately at birth. Further, this would not conflict with the surrogate's right to manage her pregnancy the same as any other woman because legal parentage would only arise in favour of the intended parents by operation of law at birth.

Nonetheless, the Bill does not allow for this approach intended parents will have to soldier on after their agreement is approved by the AHRRA in the hope that the surrogate will be willing to consent to the transfer of legal parentage to them by a court after she gives birth. While evidence indicates that the vast majority of surrogates do not view themselves as the mother of the child they have gestated for the intended parents, this is likely to be of little comfort to intended parents when deciding whether or not to embark on a pathway to parenting that involves substantial emotional investment, some financial investment, various pre and post-birth legal and administrative processes, and a degree of risk regarding the ultimate legal parentage of the surrogate-born child.

It is unclear why the State is wedded to the post-birth parental order model for regulating legal parentage in the context of domestic surrogacy. It is certainly not required by the Constitution or case law from the Irish superior courts, because in 2014 the Supreme Court made it clear that the regulation of surrogacy arrangements is a complex matter of social and public policy to be dealt with by the Irish Parliament, and that the principle of 'mater semper certa est (motherhood is certain)' is not part of the common law of Ireland.

Nonetheless, it is possible that a further, significant development influenced the State's decision the report of the United Nations (UN) 'Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children'. In her report in 2018, the then UN Special Rapporteur advised nations that 'to prevent the sale of children in the context of altruistic surrogacy' and avoid a breach of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child 'Optional Protocol on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography', the surrogate must 'retain parentage and parental responsibility at birth', and be under no legal obligation to transfer the child.

According to the UN Special Rapporteur, the surrogate's choice after the birth to transfer the child to the intending parents must be a gratuitous act, based on her own post-birth intentions, rather than on any legal or contractual obligation. Indeed, this might be the reason the Bill provides that the surrogate's post-birth consent can only be dispensed with by a court in the two abovementioned, extreme circumstances. If so, then the Bill is according too much weight to international law to the detriment of the constitutional rights of the child.

Indeed, Ireland has not yet even ratified the Optional Protocol on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography. However, children's rights are expressly protected in Article 42A of the Irish Constitution. Thus, it is imperative that a child-centred reason for waiving the need for the surrogate's consent to a parental order should be provided in the Bill.

In the context of an adoption, Section 31 of the Adoption Act 2010, as amended, allows the High Court to dispense with the need for the natural mother's consent where she fails, neglects or refuses to give her consent to the making of an adoption order. However, before doing so the High Court must have regard to 'the rights, whether under the Constitution or otherwise, of the persons concerned (including the natural and imprescriptible rights of the child)' under Article 42A.

One such 'natural and imprescriptible' constitutional right of a surrogate-born child might surely be a right to the enjoyment of family life with its intended parents, at least one of whom will be genetically related to the child according to the Bill, and both of whom are responsible for its birth by initiating the surrogacy arrangement? If legislation can allow a natural mother's consent to an adoption to be dispensed with in the manner above, surely it should similarly allow a gestational surrogate's consent to possibly be dispensed with on the same grounds?

In its current form, the approach to domestic surrogacy in the Health (Assisted Human Reproduction) Bill 2022 is restrictive and risk-laden, and thus unlikely to encourage many intended parents to avail themselves of surrogacy in Ireland. Many will most likely continue to go to commercial surrogacy jurisdictions where their legal parentage can be recognised at birth. In that regard, it should be noted that while the Bill contains no provisions on recognising the parentage of children born via international surrogacy, a parliamentary committee is currently exploring options for legislating in this area.

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Regulating domestic surrogacy in Ireland: Is the process too perilous for intended parents? - BioNews

Deves said surrogacy is reproductive prostitution and violates human rights – Sydney Morning Herald

In another tweet, from September, Deves replied to journalist Georgie Dent, who had quoted an opinion piece published in the Herald and The Age accusing Morrison of an act of chutzpah for reserving the keynote address at the National Womens Safety Summit.

Maybe he [Morrison] identifies as a woman? Deves quipped.

Deleted tweets from the account of Liberal candidate for Warringah, Katherine Deves.Credit:Internet

The NSW Liberal Party was contacted for comment. Deves has previously issued apologies for the language she has used in conducting her campaign, as well as for any hurt caused, though she did not resile from her beliefs.

Morrison was not asked directly about Deves surrogacy comments at his daily election campaign press conference on Thursday but continued to defend her and said he had spoken to her earlier with words of encouragement.

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Katherine is campaigning and Ive been in contact with Katherine again today encouraging her, Morrison said.

He also denied leaking a text message from NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet expressing support for Deves, suggesting it could have been leaked by one of the close colleagues he had spoken with about the matter.

When I was speaking to some close colleagues in the Liberal Party on the weekend, they asked me whether Dom had been in contact, and I simply said that he had, Morrison said on Thursday.

I hadnt shared any text messages or anything like that, I just said he had been in contact. We didnt and they didnt [leak the message].

Deves was the prime ministers hand-picked candidate for the seat amid an internal Liberal stalemate over candidate preselections in NSW. Nominations closed on Thursday, with Deves now certain to appear on the ballot paper.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg was asked about some of Deves recently-revealed comments while he was campaigning with Liberal MP Trent Zimmerman.

There is a legitimate discussion that has been had by the community about participation in sport, having a level playing field, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said. But as for [Deves] comments, they were inappropriate, insensitive, unacceptable.

She cancelled a scheduled appearance at a community forum in Manly on Tuesday night where she was due to appear alongside other candidates including incumbent MP Zali Steggall.

It followed days of coverage of Deves comments about transgender issues in tweets and videos, including calling LGBTQ initiative Wear It Purple Day a grooming tactic, saying trans children were surgically mutilated and speculating Canadian actor Elliot Page was paid to come out as transgender.

Original post:
Deves said surrogacy is reproductive prostitution and violates human rights - Sydney Morning Herald

PINNACLE FERTILITY JOINS NATIONAL INFERTILITY AWARENESS WEEK TO RAISE AWARENESS AND EMPOWER THE INFERTILITY COMMUNITY – PR Newswire

"Infertility impacts 1 in 8 couples in the US. The chances that you know someone experiencing challenges on their journey to parenthood are pretty high. Yet the stigmatism surrounding it is still pervasive. Many of our patients struggle with this grief and isolation while navigating a complex journey. By promoting awareness and support, we are helping our communities feel empowered during this monumental, yet sometimes difficult life experience," shares Andrew Mintz, CEO of Pinnacle Fertility.

Throughout NIAW, Pinnacle Fertility and its network of clinics will be taking part in NIAW activities to increase awareness of infertility, break down stigmas and improve support for the infertility community. Physicians from each fertility practice within the Pinnacle network including Advanced Fertility Care, California Fertility Partners, Dominion Fertility, Institute for Human Reproduction, ORM Fertility, Reproductive Gynecology & Infertility, and Santa Monica Fertility are speaking up to support those struggling by sharing what #InfertilityStrong means to them via personal videos. Pinnacle's network will also be engaging on social media lifting up voices from the family building community and sharing how #WeCanAll raise awareness and support the infertility community. Pinnacle Fertility clinic team members will wear orange on Wednesday, April 27th as part of NIAW's #WearOrange campaign to spark more conversations about the disease that impacts 6.7 million people in the US each year.

Infertility Facts

1 in 8 couples (or 12% of married women) has trouble getting pregnant or sustaining a pregnancy. (2006-2010 National Survey of Family Growth, CDC)

7.4 million women (or 11.9% of women) have received infertility services in their lifetime. (2006-2010 National Survey of Family Growth, CDC)

Approximately one-third of infertility is attributed to the female partner, one-third is attributed to the male partner, and one-third is caused by a combination of problems in both partners or is unexplained. (www.asrm.org)

A couple ages 29-33 with a normal functioning reproductive system has only a 20-25% chance of conceiving in any given month. (National Women's Health Resource Center)

After six months of trying, 60% of couples will conceive without medical assistance. (Infertility As A Covered Benefit, William M. Mercer, 1997)

About Pinnacle FertilityPinnacle Fertility is the nation's fastest-growing physician-centric fertility care platform, supporting high-performing fertility clinics and comprehensive fertility service providers nationwide. Under a united mission of fulfilling dreams by building families, Pinnacle clinics offer innovative technology and processes, compassionate patient care, and comprehensive fertility treatment services, ensuring families receive a high-touch experience on their path to parenthood.

For more information about Pinnacle Fertility, visitpinnaclefertility.com

Contact: Walt Conrad [emailprotected]

SOURCE Pinnacle Fertility

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PINNACLE FERTILITY JOINS NATIONAL INFERTILITY AWARENESS WEEK TO RAISE AWARENESS AND EMPOWER THE INFERTILITY COMMUNITY - PR Newswire

Fantasies of Whiteness – Architecture – E-Flux

At the inauguration of the First Brazilian Congress of Eugenics in July of 1929, the physician and anthropologist Edgar Roquette-Pinto addressed an audience preoccupied with the question of how a country as vast as Brazil could best increase and improve its population. To accomplish this, Roquette-Pinto exalted eugenia as the new science that, together with medicine and hygiene, would guarantee the efficiency and perfection of the race. With the following words, the Brazilian scientist underscored a positivist agenda that brought architecture to the very core of the eugenicsthe so-called science of race improvementmovement: It is critical to emphasize that the influence [on our race] does not stem from the natural environment but rather from the artificial environment, created by man. With these opening remarks to the Congress, Roquette-Pinto called attention to the crucial role that the man-made environment plays in the amelioration of what he called the biological patrimony of Brazils diverse population. In his invitation to social engineering, Roquette Pinto pointed to the environmental-genetic collusion that they hoped would bring with it the very possibility of progress.

This story begins at a critical global moment in which medical scientific discourses, first articulated in France, crossed the ocean and became intertwined with discourses of architecture, landscape, urban planning, and aesthetics in early twentieth century Brazil. At the epicenter of this ideological encounter were two influential global movements, hygienics and eugenics, which became the dual vehicles for bringing architecture into active dialogue with social engineering. Conceived as a comprehensive program of reform for reconstituting and reorganizing human life, hygienics prescribed the control of human behavior, the abatement of harmful bacteria and diseases, the supply of clean water and air, and the provision of open space. And eugenics, the social and biological movement that strove for nothing less than the improvement of the human race, instrumentalized heredity and the environment. The form of eugenics adopted in France, and then in Brazil, was based on French naturalist Jean Baptiste Lamarcks theory of the inheritance of acquired characteristics, wherein evolution was driven by adaptation to environmental changes, in contrast to Mendelian eugenics, which viewed evolution as impervious to the environment and driven solely by genetics. In fact, French ideas and practices of eugenics took root well before Francis Galton coined the very term eugenics (from the Greek , meaning well-born) in 1883 to define the modern science that deals with all influences that improve the inborn qualities of a race; also with those that develop them to the utmost advantage. Fueled by increasingly urgent fears of degeneration, French physicians visualized medicine as the very apparatus capable of regulating reproduction and disciplining society.

In modern Brazil, a region so culturally and scientifically influenced by France, and where medicine and the built environment were targeted as primary mechanisms of un-underdeveloping the population, it is no surprise that Lamarckian eugenics acted as a pervasive agent of modernity. The medicalization of bodies and spaces led to a normative program in which determinismof race, gender, and the environmentcontributed to the implementation of a system of exclusion that was legitimized by science and materialized by architecture. The simultaneous construction of a white heterosexual society as the normal and desirable one, and of a healthy and modern environment that would contribute to this normalization, consolidated the clinical agenda of architectural modernism. Although this strategy was central to modernism at large, a specific transatlantic and interdisciplinary network of global actors, scientific theories, and spatial practices placed architecture at the center of the eugenics agenda of white supremacy.

Influenced by the power of medical science and architectures instrumentalization of natureeverything from the sun to the wind and the treesin the reimagining of society, hygienic and eugenic practices became complicit in the process of constructing modern nations in the new world. In Brazil, the nation was seen as a sick organism, and reformersincluding social scientists, architects, and urban plannerswere tantamount to physicians with the responsibility of diagnosis and treatment. In the center of Rio de Janeiro, this mission brought together a diverse cast of characters: from the physicians and architects of the Parisian Muse Social, the early French think-tank that sought to undertake Frances pressing social question, to the physicians and architects of Rio de Janeiro who formulated the theories, practices, and ethos of Brazilian modernism, to Le Corbusier, who began consolidating a eugenicist ideology precisely during the months he spent in Brazil in the mid-1930s.

In the early 1920s, even before the First Brazilian Congress of Eugenics took place, a dramatic event occurred in Rio. The battle against bubonic plague, yellow fever, and other tropical diseases had led to a sanitary and urban reform that reached its climax with the demolition of an entire populated mountain, the Morro do Castelo, in the center of the Brazilian capital. This mountain was no ordinary mountain; it was the original site where the colonial city, with its historical buildings and underground infrastructure, had been established in 1567. But the idea of eliminating the mountain was not new. As far back as 1798, a medical report had argued for the mountains demolition, since according to the author it acted as an enormous barrier that blocked the circulation of air from the sea and consequently facilitated the proliferation of diseases. But it was not until the 1920s, when aesthetic and moral imperatives were added to sanitary ones, that the mountain came to be seen as the very negation of modernity itself; a reservoir of vice and disease with a motley marginal population, including poor Blacks and formerly enslaved people who, according to the elites, invaded the center of the city with their embarrassing practices of superstition and misery. At that time, medicine became the principal tool used by elites to study and then reconfigure their national populations. It was only when hygieneuntil then understood as personal or environmentalbecame social hygienean economic science concerned with the outputs of human capital (production and reproduction)that the demolition of the Morro do Castelo became possible. The demolition represented the first and most radical action in the construction of a new national image, free of backward associations and racial exoticism.

The extensive territory that resulted from this demolition was immediately occupied by the 1922 International Exhibition. Commemorating the one hundredth anniversary of Brazils independence, the exhibition was conceived as a self-portrait of a modern nationa nation that undertook a self-remaking process, not only of its milieu but also of its population. Promoting itself as a tabula rasa, the exhibition represented a literal triumph over the territorya territory now cleansed of its history and unwanted inhabitants. Its more than 500-page catalog is striking in its complete elimination of all traces of the African and indigenous components of Brazilian culture. With the exception of one article briefly mentioning the abolition of slavery, the catalog presents Brazil as a white country. Its images demonstrate a new alliance between beauty, health, tropicality, and modernization that Brazilian elites adopted to represent themselves and their new nation. In most publicity materials, white men, women, and children of classic Greco-Roman appearance wearing red or white robes and crowns were arranged against European-looking hills and gardens to frame the architecture and machinery of modern factories.

Just as human beings were portrayed as icons of the ideal, so too were natural monuments released from their tropical fatality, politicized as new icons of collective identity and moralized as elements of transformation. In several advertisements, the catalog exalted the natural monuments of Rio de Janeiro, particularly those human-made or human-dominated. An advertisement for a medication, for instance, portrays the Po de Acar as one of the Seven Wonders of the World. The catalog also celebrates Corcovado, the extraordinary mountain at the center of the Tijuca Forest and the worlds largest human-made urban rainforest which, only a few years later, would be crowned with a monumental forty-meter-tall statue of Christ the Redeemer. Razing the Morro do Castelo while transforming two other mountains within the city into sites of pure aesthetic pleasure, tropical naturenow monumentalizedis portrayed precisely as a site of interplay between the body, labor, and technology.

The exhibition not only represented a triumph over nature, but a triumph over degeneration. In fact, the First Brazilian Congress for the Protection of Infants, an essential part of the exhibition, was an agent of Brazils transformation of puericulture, the French faith-based science, into a neo-Lamarckian form of eugenics. Revealing the influence of French medicine on Brazilian medical circles, debates in the Congress focused on the importance of puericulturethe term that Adolphe Pinard, the French physician and member of the Parisian Muse Social revitalized as an human analogue for agriculture for the scientific cultivation of the mother-child unit. Echoing Pinard, Brazilian physicians were convinced that a child was the result of two forces in equilibrium: heredity and milieu, and that consequently puericulture was one of the most accessible ways of conserving and perfecting the human species while also whitening the population.

Just as the exhibition catalog was overrun by Hellenic-looking people, the demolished mountains footprint was suddenly overrun by neo-colonial pavilions. Shortly after the exhibition, in 1922, and lasting until 1938, neo-colonial architecture was declared by the government to be the national style, mandatory for every building that would represent Brazil abroad. This need to present modern Brazil as a homogeneous white society needs to be seen alongside the omission of race as a demographic factor in every national census from 1890 to 1940, which was not the result of a need to promote a race-neutral society, but an explicit expression of the fantasy of a much-desired white Brazil.

The adoption of neo-colonial architecture was followed a few years later, in 1926, by an invitation to French Beaux-Art architect and member of the Muse Social Donat-Alfred Agache to formulate an urban plan for the Morro de Castelo esplanade in this visual language that Brazilian elites had come to identify as their own. Neo-colonial and Beaux Art styles were interchangeable as representations of the visual ideology of the country, and Agaches invitation suggests a telling complicity between science and aesthetics in the practices of physicians and architects. Agaches proponents in Brazil were largely physicians who supported the neo-Lamarkian ideas proclaimed at the Muse Social, where both Pinard and Agache were active members. Although Brazilian elites were not a homogeneous group, they seemed to agree on the image they wanted for their cities. Even Mario de Andrade, one of the main protagonists of the Semana de Arte Moderna in So Paulo, who celebrated Brazilian identity as a mixture of the European, indigenous, and African, as well as Lucio Costa, the architect of Brasilia, the modern capital ex-nihilo of Brazil, were both open supporters of Jose Mariano Filho, the Brazilian physician who became the most vehement promoter of neo-colonial architecture and the main advocate for the appointment of Agache.

In 1928, in a series of articles published in Dirio Nacional, Andrade celebrated the role of architects working for the normalization of the neo-colonial as a Brazilian national style. In many ways, these modern attitudes sought to homogenize the city and its population by eradicating undesirable inhabitants and proclaiming the esplanade to be a political and economic altar to power, infused with white European forms. It was not a coincidence that all thisthe demolition of the mountain, the elimination of Rio de Janeiros original urban nucleus, the displacement of its poor residents, and the construction of the exhibition pavilionswas executed almost simultaneously with new policies and mandates such as the white only decree of 1921, which prohibited the immigration of Blacks to Brazil.

Why did the organizers of this exhibition select the neo-colonial style to represent their new modern country in the centennial anniversary of its independence? In other words, what do these two imageswhite people and neo-colonial architecturehave to do with one another? No one illustrates this connection between race and architecture better than Lucio Costawho, in 1928, made this racist link in a newspaper article:

I am pessimistic about architecture and urbanism in general. All architecture is a question of race. When our nation is that exotic thing that we see on the streets, our architecture will inevitably be an exotic thing. It is not those half dozen who travel and dress on Rue de la Paix, but that anonymous crowd that takes trains from Central [Station] and Leopoldina, people with sickly faces who shame us everywhere. What can we expect from people like this? Everything is a function of race. If the breed is good, and the government is good, the architecture will be good. Talk, discuss, gesticulate: our basic problem is selective immigration; the rest is secondaryit will change on its own.

Thus, the neo-colonial style, which was in a sense anti-modernist, pro-Iberian, and white was appropriated as the emblem of progress and modernitysuggesting a clear link between colonialism and modernism. Costa intended for his eugenic syllogism of breed-begetting-good-government-begetting-good-architecture to also work in reverse.

When Le Corbusier traveled for the second time to Brazil in 1936, his discourses were centered on nature, death, and the racial and sexual other. The fear of degeneration that had haunted French society for decades, and a sense of impending death inhabited modernity. For him, no other place represented this decay better than Rio de Janeiro, with its black population and exotic tropical landscape. From the early 1930s, as an antidote to this irrevocable decay, Le Corbusier endorsed puericulture as a means of improving the quality of newborns and managing defective infants. As a Lamarckian of his time, he was convinced that the well-being of the child was linked to the mothers health and lineage, as well as to environmental influences. Le Corbusier intertwined pronatalist outlookswhich emphasized the traditional reproductive role of women in the familywith the built environment in which reproduction, maternity, and child rearing occurred. In a 1931 article published in the neo-syndicalist journal Plans, he called for the establishment of special nurseries directly connected to every single dwelling, run by qualified nurses and supervised by doctors: [to provide] security-selection-scientific child rearing[in other words] puericulture. A year later, he introduced the fourth section of an unpublished article with the conjoined term eugenisme-puericulture. His insistence on seeing eugenics and puericulture as inseparable continued for the next decade, ultimately claiming that Eugenics [and] puericulture will ensure a well-bred race. Within this context, Le Corbusier came to believe not only that there was an intimate connection between architecture, health, and the perfection of the human race, but that he had been chosen as the primary agent to materialize this coalescence.

In 1936, while preparing his series of talks in Rio de Janeiro, Le Corbusier made a sketch on a piece of cardboard that distilled and concretized one of the most basic and accepted rationales of modernity: change the environment, change the man. Written at the top is the word Castello, followed by the name Lucio Costa, the phrases pedro aller police and Castello cots clichs, the name of architect Carlos Porto, and the phrase Acheter livre Carrel. The latter was a reminder for him to buy the new bestseller by the French Nobel prize-winning physician Alexis Carrel, Man The Unknown, an unmistakable call for the implementation of eugenics and manifesto for white supremacy. What made Le Corbusier think of Carrel while thinking of Rio de Janeiro? It is not a mere coincidence that Castelo, one of the most significant eugenic laboratories in Latin America, is the first word that appears on the cardboard. But Castelo was not only the name of the pulverized mountain from which thousands of undesirable inhabitants had been displaced, or the stage for the 1922 international exhibition with its neocolonial pavilions and its image of white Brazil, or the epicenter of the master urban plan that Agache had designed for Rio. Castello was also where Lucio Costa was designing the new building for the Ministry of Health and Education, the institution charged with developing and enforcing Brazils eugenic policies under Getulio Vargas new authoritarian regime, for which Le Corbusier had been invited to be a design consultant. This sketch links the dramatic transformation of the urban territory of Rio de Janeiro to Lucio Costas project and to Carrels vision for remaking society, along with the representation of a simple man, the ultimate object of transformation. For Le Corbusier, architecture was a tool for social engineering, an optimum medium for the rebirth of the human body.

The association between Carrel and the built environment would become the launch point for much of Le Corbusiers thinking over the next several years. But it was in Rio during that summer of 1936 that Le Corbusier directly aligned himself with Carrels ideas. In his first talk, evoking Carrels book, Le Corbusier commented to his audience:

Plon, the editor who published my book [When the Cathedrals Were White] in North America, celebrates the success of his latest book: Man, The Unknown by Dr. Carrel. Write, he told me, a book that will be an echo of that one; I will do it with pleasure: the man and his shell, in other words, the habitus in which a man is obliged to pass a great portion of his life

This appears to be the very first time Le Corbusier made public reference to Carrel and his work. But the cardboard note, where he linked Carrel to Rio de Janeiro with the sketch of a man, was the spark for new theories that would become a viable doctrine for remaking man via nature, through which the built environment would be put to work.

Le Corbusiers book La Maison des hommes (The House of Men), co-authored with Franois de Pierrefeu and published by Plon during the Vichy regime, is this echo of Carrels project for the remaking of society. The book begins with a stated connection between race and architecture: It is over twenty years since, from every rostrum in France, the most authoritative voices raised the cry: We must build new houses, the future of our race depends on how it is housed. The book continues, claiming the redeeming power of the built domain to create the necessary transformation of home life, or to infuse into it order, fecundity. In the tone of a manifesto, the book emphasizes how remaking life is completely dependent on how humans are housed, whether in domestic dwellings, the workplace, the city at large, the countryside, or the metropole.

In his Oeuvre complte 1934-1938, Le Corbusier included a sketch of the Brazilian Ministry of Health and Education building. This new ministry, which later became the symbol of Brazilian modernism, shows an open courtyard surrounded by pilotis and orderly tropical palms. At its center is a colossal sculpture of a seated man with a strong, well-defined body and a tiny head. Gustavo Capanema, the first Minister of Health and Education, had commissioned both the building, which he called the Ministry of Man and was destined to prepare, compose, and perfect the Brazilian man, and the sculpture, which he wanted to embody the ideal Brazilian man that the state itself was directed to produce. Personally invested in finding a tangible image for the ideal Brazilian genotype, Capanema pondered, How will the body of the Brazilian man be, of the future Brazilian man, not the vulgar man or the inferior man but the best exemplar of the race? How will his head be? His color? The shape of his face? His physiognomy?

For Capanema, this sculpture would not simply be a work of art but rather a scientific tool to establish the Brazilian type: the ideal figure that would be legitimate to imagine as representative of the future Brazilian human being. To achieve this goal, Capanema looked to science. First, he turned to Francisco Jos de Oliveira Viana, one of the main voices of the whitening thesis, which argued that by mixing blacks and mulattos with whites, darker skin and black features would be filtered. Capanema also consulted with other scientists such as Juvenil da Rocha Vaz, lvaro Fres da Fonseca, and Edgar Roquette-Pinto. These scientists responses to Capanemas questions were extensively argued and supported by their own scientific studies, but they all agreed that the representation of the Brazilian man should be a white man. Roquette-Pinto in particular proposed the adoption of one of the Leucodermos, an anthropological term he used to classify the predominant type of whites in Brazil. He suggested a white man with dark enough skin to look Mediterranean; the white that would more easily acclimate to Brazil. According to Roquette-Pinto, the Leucodermo was the racial type toward which the morphological evolution of the Brazilian population was marching.

Following Lucio Costa and Le Corbusiers suggestion, Capanema asked the Brazilian artist Celso Antnio to produce the twelve-meter-high granite statue at the entrance of the ministry building. But Antnio objected to designing a figure like the one described by the scientists. He believed the Brazilian man should be the one he observed on the streets. In response, Capanema, disgusted by the mestizo of rough feature that was taking shape in [Antnios] atelier, invalidated the agreement with Antnio and held a competition to select an artist who would take over the design of the statue. The statue was never built, but the pressure to define the ideal Brazilian man remained on the Ministrys agenda, and the building itself, which was created to transform a simple man into the Brazilian man, became the very embodiment of modernity.

When Le Corbusier came back to France and began collaborating with Alexis Carrell under the Vichy regime, his vision of a clinically inspired habitat where all human needs can be met reached a new level of specificity. For over a decade, Le Corbusier had looked for opportunities to assume the role of the techno-social international expert, a tradition initiated by Muse Socials technocrats who, working for France and other nations, produced master plans for cities and villages in the so-called Latin world. He was convinced that the human body, the anatomo-politics of its productivity, and the built environment should be managed by the State. In a 1941 broadcast he affirmed that The housing problem is the key to both the familys regeneration and the spirits regeneration, the key to the nations regeneration. Collapsing milieu and heredity, he affirmed, The degeneration of the house, the degeneration of the family, are one.

For the remainder of that decade, Le Corbusier worked on universalizing the last and most blatant vestige of his modernist ideology. The Modulora term Le Corbusier invented from the word module and the notion of the golden sectioncame to life in 1946 as a way to epitomize the fruits of his doctrine. Bridging both the metric and Anglo-Saxon systems, he conceived the Modulor as a six-foot high man with legs firmly rooted and an outstretched arm. Intended as a human model for scaling all aspects of architecture, Le Corbusiers Modulor became an antidote to disorder, an organizational scheme that infused regularity and normativity into architecture. Its overly large hands and feet, so emblematic of primitivism in modern art, references Le Corbusiers early sketches in Brazil. Representing a map of Le Corbusiers own history and his embrace of evolutionary theories, his pursuit of order, normativity, and purity, the Modulor is an enduring global symbol of architectures past complicities with Lamarckian eugenics.

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Fantasies of Whiteness - Architecture - E-Flux

The Right to a Dead Baby? Abortion, Ableism, and the Question of Autonomy – Public Discourse

To what, precisely, is abortion a right?

Considering the disproportionate time it has spent as a central issue in American public discourse over the last half-century, the amount of confusion surrounding this topicfrom bioethics journals to dinner tablesis extraordinary. Indeed, the confusion is so severe that, much of the time, those who imagine they are discussing the same topic in fact have in mind very different kinds of acts.

Some of that confusion comes from intentional obfuscationwhen pro-life activists intentionally downplay the health risks of pregnancy, for example, or when pro-choice activists intentionally mischaracterize the development of the prenatal heart. But thats not what I have in mind here. No, the confusion that Im addressing in this article is a genuine one, coming out of two sincerely heldbut very differentunderstandings of the right to abortion. One imagines it as the right to bodily autonomy while another understands it is the right to reproductive autonomy.

My thesis in this article is that how we treat imperiled newbornsnot only after a failed abortion attempt, but also in a more traditional NICU (neonatal intensive care unit) settingis essential for fully grasping (and critiquing) the currently dominant understanding of the right to abortion. Furthermore, especially when we examine the central role ableism plays across both sets of issues, thinking about them together provides an anti-ableist critique that has important implications for both OB-GYNs and neonatologistsfor both prenatal and neonatal justice.

Two Rival Understandings

Judith Jarvis Thomsons abortion essay using the famous violinist analogy has become so ubiquitous that it is now a bit of a clich to call it the most famous article on abortion ever written. The argument is very familiar, but here it is in brief. Imagine that a famous violinist is attached to your body, dependent on you to continue living. Because abortion is analogous to removing the famous violinist from ones body, and the right to bodily autonomy means it is obvious that one need not stay attached to the famous violinist, the right to bodily autonomy means it is also obvious that one need not stay attached to the prenatal childwhich Thomson grants (at least for the sake of argument) is a human being.

Here we have the classic case for bodily autonomy and privacy, the framework that dominated the 1973 Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade, and is still quite present in major parts of the abortion discourse in the United States. Slogans like Her Body, Her Choice! are still common rallying cries among activists. At the time these arguments were being developed, appeals to reproductive autonomy were not as common. Thomson, for instance, doesnt even attempt to make an argument (her awkward appeal to people seeds notwithstanding) that actually reflects how human reproduction works. Thats because reproductive autonomy is not Thomsons concern. Nor was it a concern of Justice Blackmun (much to the chagrin of Ruth Bader Ginsburg), or most of the dominant abortion-rights activists and thinkers during the 1970s and 1980s.

This would change, however. As more feminist-centered approaches came into prominence over the next decade or two, appeals to reproductive autonomy gained steam. They really hit their stride after the 1992 Supreme Court decision Planned Parenthood v. Casey, which explicitly argued:

For two decades of economic and social developments, people have organized intimate relationships and made choices that define their views of themselves and their places in society, in reliance on the availability of abortion in the event that contraception should fail. The ability of women to participate equally in the economic and social life of the nation has been facilitated by their ability to control their reproductive lives.

Here, the right to abortion is understood as part of what is necessary to control reproduction, which is seen as necessary for the economic and social equality of women. Clearly, by 1992, the reproductive autonomy argument had arrived in earnest. And yet there was still a hangover from the argument in Roe and other arguments coming from bodily-autonomy-centered feminists.

For instance, Casey and many other pro-abortion arguments still kept fetal viability in front of mind when it came to thinking about thresholds for limiting abortion rights. Such a threshold is relevant if one is thinking about bodily autonomy: Viable fetuses no longer need the womans body in a way that is analogous to the way the famous violinist needs anothers body. But if a womans right to abortion is based on her right to reproductive autonomy, then it isnt at all clear why fetal viability should be a bright red line for abortion rights. Indeed, it isnt clear why birth should be a bright red line either.

Pushing Reproductive Autonomy to Its Limits

The now two-decades-old debate over bans of so-called partial-birth abortiona procedure in which the baby is partially delivered and has the contents of her skull evacuatedwas a classic example of pushing on the bright line of birth. A floor debate between Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA) and Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) was revealing in this regard. Senator Santorum pushed Senator Boxer several times to give a precise account of when a baby was born and had full rights under the Constitution. He asked her directly: if the babys toe was still inside her mothers body, would that still be enough to put the childs life at risk?

Significantly, Boxer refused to give a clear answer to this question and other similar questions. And she did so despite the fact that naming the bright line precisely was at the center of the debate. After all, a baby killed via partial-birth abortion only has part of her head still inside her mother. Someone who thinks that is a relevant difference should give an account of what that is. Though the culture at large wasnt quite ready to go full reproductive autonomy at this point (including after birth) Senator Boxer alluded to this view when she gave the following response:

SANTORUM: But I would like to ask you this questionyou agree, once the child is born, separated from the mother, that that child is protected by the Constitution and cannot be killed? Do you agree with that?

BOXER: I would make this statement, that this Constitution as it currently issome want to amend it to say life begins at conception. I think when you bring your baby home [emphasis mine], when your baby is bornand there is no such thing as partial-birththe baby belongs to your family and has the rights.

This wasnt a slip of the tongue or the use of one or two words that were poorly chosen. Somewhere in Senator Boxers mind there was a distinction between birth understood as (1) mere separation from the body of the mother and (2) consent to take care of the child and take her into ones home.

A skeptic might wonder if this is just one view of one U.S. senator twenty years ago and therefore has only questionable relevance for my thesis in this article. But unfortunately, this kind of mindset about reproductive autonomy has done nothing but gain traction, at least in the developed West. This is especially true when we consider reproductive autonomy related to a babys disability.

We will see below that this issue is relevant to how we think about treating imperiled newborns in the NICU. Before we go there, consider this recent case from New Zealand: a mother was told by her physician that her baby likely had spina bifida and that she and her colleagues agreed the child would have no quality of life. Their recommendation was that the mother should have an abortion. Unfortunately, especially for those who wish to resist ableist judgements, this is all too common. But what happened next was quite revealing about the version of reproductive autonomy in play: when the mother revealed that she had no intention of having an abortion, her physician said that they could aim at the death of the child after birth. Here is how the mother narrated it:

When I let her know I had other plans, [the doctor] suggested that since I didnt want to terminate, I could wait until my son was born. If his disability was too severe she said I could choose to withhold treatment and let him die naturally then.

This obviously has nothing to do with a right to bodily autonomy, but rather with a right not to have a baby with a disability that is too severeeven after birth. In this case, the aim of the act in both the abortion and the refusal to treat was the same: aiming at the death of a child because of her disability. To follow the logic consistently here, in this context, the right to an abortion is the right to a dead baby. Again: this not a mere right to bodily autonomy, and there is no distinction made between the moral status of the prenatal human being and that of the neonatal human being.

The case of spina bifida is especially instructive, because it demonstrates how what happens after birth can be connected, morally speaking, to what is going on before birth. In the Netherlands, for instance, a neonatal euthanasia program called the Groningen Protocol at first had a considerable number of killings aimed at medically stable newborns with spina bifida. But as time wore on, the founder of the protocol, Eduard Verhagen, proudly reported that there was no slippery slope toward newborn killing, as some had suggested and feared. Instead, more and more physicians and families were turning to killing children with spina bifida before birth. Again, the aim of the act in both cases is the samethe death of a child because of her unacceptable disability.

Born Alive after a Failed Abortion

The connection between treatment of newborns and abortion was also on display when New York passed its Reproductive Health Act in January of 2019. Before the law was passed, this is what New York Public Health Law Section 4164 stipulated:

When an abortion is to be performed after the twentieth week of pregnancy, a physician other than the physician performing the abortion shall be in attendance to take control of and to provide immediate medical care for any live birth that is the result of the abortion. The commissioner of health is authorized to promulgate rules and regulations to insure the health and safety of the mother and the viable child, in such instances. Such child shall be accorded immediate legal protection under the laws of the state of New York, including but not limited to applicable provisions of the social services law, article five of the civil rights law and the penal law. The medical records of all life-sustaining efforts put forth for such a live aborted birth, their failure or success, shall be kept by attending physician.

Significantly, the Reproductive Health Act repealed this New York public health law and removed this layer of protection for babies born alive after a failed abortion. By insisting that a physician be present who didnt have the same aim as the physician doing the abortion, Section 4146 made a clear distinction between abortion as a right to bodily autonomy and abortion as the right to reproductive autonomy. The Reproductive Health Actbuoyed by an increasing sense that abortion is about reproductive autonomywas at pains to make sure the second physician was not present.

Significantly, recent debates over federal legislation similar to Section 4146 have been met with resistance by activists and legislators supportive of abortion rights. They argue that the law already protects these newborns and thus they do not need an extra layer of protection. One might find this a surprising reactionespecially coming from progressive activists who, in other cases, are deeply skeptical of the cultures ability to protect disabled children and are normally very interested in increasing governments role in protecting them. But it becomes easier to understand if one thinks about the right to abortion as a right to reproductive autonomywhich, in practice, is often the right to make sure a disabled baby does not survive.

How often does a baby survive an abortion attempt? There is disagreement about the actual numbers involved, but they dont seem to be trivial. The journalContraceptionestimates that up to 50 percent of labor induction abortions without digoxin can result in babies born alive. Despite what one might imagine are problems with gathering good data (obviously there are disincentives to reporting such cases), there are a few government entities that try to do so. Queensland, Australia, for instance, reports that about thirty babies survive abortion attempts each year. A few U.S. states keep track of the number of babies born alive after a botched abortion as well. The state of Minnesota, for example, reported three instances in 2018. If this is typical, then there are somewhere in the neighborhood of 150 cases each year in the United States.

Furthermore, a number of abortions sought at the postviability stage are directly related to a concern about the childs disability. My wife and I had our charmingly named genetic consult at twenty weeks gestation for little Thaddeus, and this was the standard for our hospital. For parents who choose to have an abortion just a couple weeks after such a meeting (sometimes after badgering from various members of their medical team), there is a good chance their child would be viable after a botched abortion.

Treatment Decisions for Disabled Newborns in a Non-Abortion Context

What do we do when a mother (or other parent or family) asks that a child not be resuscitated, treated, or cared for in a non-abortion context? The answer to this question also reveals much about how we think about the central issue of this article. Thankfully, because they are disassociated from toxic political and policy questions surrounding abortion, the available data on this question are much clearer.

First, it is worth pausing for a moment to briefly situate the medical profession in relation to disability. The British neonatologist and researcher John Wyatt found that physicians consistently rate the quality of life of their disabled patients worse than the patients themselves do. Something similar has been found withrespect to disabled or sick adolescents and their families. Disability bias present in CPR providers leads some to consider their patients as socially dead and therefore unworthy of being saved. Neonatologists often think that babies born with severe disabilities have fates worse than death. And when confronted with the fact that patients generally prefer length of life to quality of life, physicians might feel surprised and admit we think we know what is best for a patient, but this is often wrong.

We must keep this ableist mindset squarely in mind when we think about how treatment and care decisions are made for disabled newborns. This is especially true when physicians are asked to make judgments about what would constitute profound disability or unacceptably severe morbidity. Such categories are wide open to subjective interpretation based on differing foundational values and philosophical and theological visions of the good.

John Lantos, an eminent bioethicist and neonatologist at the University of MissouriKansas City School of Medicine, points out that disagreements between parents and neonatologists about treatment decisions are not uncommon and usually come down to questions about the value of life with severe physical or cognitive impairments. Furthermore, though neonatologists say they want shared decision-making with parents, Lantos notes that in fact they do not practice it, and few allow the parents preferences to prevail when there is a conflict. Furthermore, even when shared decision-making is practiced, the power and knowledge imbalance very often means that the facts are framed (via choice architecture) by the physicians background values, biasing the discussion toward her point of view.

Despite the ableist biases still in play, Lantos notes that changes in societal attitudes toward people with disabilities have contributed to some changes in clinical practice. Indeed, he notes that back in the 1970s surgery for correctable anatomical malformations in babies with trisomy 21 [Down syndrome] used to be within the zone of parental discretion and only a small minority of doctors would have sought protective custody to operate on a baby with Downs syndrome. Similarly, treatment of babies with Trisomy 18 used to be considered futile, but now has moved to the zone of parental discretion.

Lantos also notes that parents are more accepting of disabilities than are physicians, which offers hope that the medical community will continue to grow out of its ableism. Especially important for this process is the challenge physicians and ethicists like Cummings, Mercurio, and Paris offer to physicians in this context: Engage in consistent and extended communication over time, foreground all values in play and talk openly about ones biases, and commit to building trust. This culture of encounter, if pursued authentically, could push physicians still further along the path of justice for persons with disabilities.

Unfortunately, even these kinds of laudable frameworks for navigating conflicts in decision-making between parents and physicians will leave huge problems with ableism unresolved. Lantos points out that with increased prenatal detection of disability, many parents who dont want such a child will have an abortion. As a result, when such children do make it to birth, a higher proportion of their parents will ask for treatment, which neonatologists may not want to give. (Id also add that it may result in more disabled children born alive after a botched abortion.) But what happens when parents have an ableist bias about the childs quality of life? As Lantos points out, a commitment to shared decision-making does not mean that any decision is ethically defensible. At times, a treatment decision will need to be imposed on parents who are aiming at the death of their disabled children.

Cummings, Mercurio, and Paris helpfully cite the American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for Nonintervention or Withdrawal of Intensive Care for High Risk Newborns this way:

As noted above, concepts like unacceptably severe morbidity are subjective, but with a justice-centered, anti-ableist lens they can be more helpful. With such a lens, almost no cases would be thrust into the first category and many more cases would be put into the second. Instead of capitulating to the ableist view that fellow human beings with Down syndrome, spina bifida, Trisomy 18, etc. have unacceptably severe morbidities, we would welcome them as full and equal members of the human family. It is already the case, as Mercurio and Cummings point out, that in certain circumstances treatment of newborns is considered obligatory and will be provided even when ableist parents insist that the baby be left to die. As part of our cultures growing resistance to ableism, however, medical teams must be significantly more aggressive in imposing such treatment on parents who want to aim at the death of their child because of her disability.

Consequences for Ableist Judgments That Aim at Death?

But suppose a physician does not follow this path? What if, instead, she either cooperates with the parents or imposes on the parents (directly or indirectly, via choice architecture based on her particular background beliefs) a treatment decision that aims at the death of a child because of her disability? What should the consequences be for such an act?

Before discussing this, let us be clear about the moral analysis. Not all refusal to aid a newborn child is aiming at death. Some might be attempts to do something else (like removing overly burdensome treatment), with death as a foreseen and unintended consequence. For instance, one might forgo painful chemotherapy or chest compressionsand be absolutely delighted that the child, against all odds, survives. That delight is a clear indicator that one was not aiming at death.

Some forgoing or cessation of treatment, however, is in fact aiming at death. If one comes to the conclusion that it is better that a child die because of her disability, and one removes a ventilator with that aim in mind, and the child, against all odds, starts breathing on her own and survives, then one is surely not delighted, for the goal was to end up with a dead child. This, in fact, was precisely the kind of situation presented by the famous Baby Doe case in which the parents, on advice from their physicians, refused to have a common and safe surgery to repair esophageal atresia because their child had Down syndrome.

The fact that everyone knew that this was aiming at the death of a child because of her disability sent shockwaves throughout the United States in the early 1980s. Pro-lifers and disability rights activists teamed up with the Reagan administration to enact HHS regulations and pass federal laws to protect disabled children like Baby Doe. Under the Child Abuse Amendments of 1984, cases of refusal of treatment of a newborn go to a review board and possibly to state protective services. If a medical team today worked with parents to aim at the death of an infant with Down syndrome in this way, they could be held accountable under child abuse and negligence statues.

Id add that in our current moment, which gives particular legal attention to disabled populations as a protected class, there could be more legal liability for medical teams who engage in grossly ableist and abusive behavior toward children with Down syndrome. Under federal law, which as of 2009 includes the disabled as a protected class, someone who engaged in child abuse because of a childs disability could be charged with a federal (and state) hate crime as well. And of course it wouldnt just be children with Down syndrome that are legally protected from this kind of child abuse: aiming at the death of children with disabilities related to spina bifida, Trisomy 18, and many other conditions would also be prohibited.

Saving vs. Creating and Reconnecting to Abortion

Why hasnt this kind of moral and legal analysis caught on in neonatal bioethics and clinical ethics circles? Janvier and Mercurio offer us a fascinating insight that may help explain what is going on here. They present two casesone about a preterm (born at twenty-four weeks gestation) newborn named Catherine and one about a previously healthy two-month-old baby named Sam. Both meet with severe health problems, and both have about the same potential for long-term disabilitythough Sam actually has a lower chance of survival. Their research found that in many hospitals in the U.S., Canada, and elsewhere, intensive care treatment would be initiated routinely for Sam, but considered optional for Catherine. This despite not only Catherines better chance of survival, but the fact that most ethical guidelines (from the American Academy of Pediatrics to the Nuffield Council on Bioethics) insist that the ethical principles for treating newborn children are no different from those for treating older children and adults.

The reason for this, Janvier and Mercurio suggest, is because preterm babies lack the interpersonal attachment that older babies and children have, and health care providers may not consider them to have the same personhood as older infants who went home. Because of this distinction, the authors suggest that providers may think of themselves as saving Sam, who now has a disability, while they are creating a person with a disability if they successfully treat Catherine. If true, this insight would certainly help explain why a clinical and bioethical culture would react with horror to what happened to Baby Doeand to withdrawing or withholding vital treatment of older disabled children because of their disabilitybut have a different view of the very same judgments and actions happening in the neonatal intensive care unit.

This distinction between saving and creating is obviously deeply problematic. Newborn children are fellow human beings and must have full legal protections and supports enjoyed by older children. But Janvier and Mercurios insight helps us make the connection back to abortion. Philosophers like Peter Singer, Michael Tooley, and others are correct in noting that, if we do not consider the human fetus a person, then we cannot see the newborn infant as a person either. Both are fellow members of the species Homo sapiens, but if we are to avoid speciesism we must insist not on common humanity but rather on morally relevant traits like rationality, self-awareness, and interpersonal relationships. The case of Catherine above is particularly instructive for their position: born at twenty-four weeks gestation, she is actually less developed than many prenatal human beings when it comes to morally relevant traits like these.

But if we reject the position offered by Singer, Tooley, and those making the saving vs. creating distinctionif we insist that neonatal human beings deserve legal protection from having their deaths aimed at because of their disabilitythen we must also insist that prenatal human beings deserve legal protection from having their deaths aimed at because of their disability. And this means rejecting the idea that the right to abortion is the right to reproductive autonomy. The right to abortion as it existed under Roe was the right to bodily autonomynot the right to a dead baby. It is of course deeply wrong to refuse to aid a disabled child after a botched abortion because one doesnt want the disabled child to survive, but it was just as wrong to aim at the death of the prenatal child in the first place.

One might object with an appeal to moral status here, arguing that there is a morally relevant difference between a prenatal child and neonatal child. But the fact that we are making special space for nontreatment of neonates after botched abortions (recall the discussion of New Yorks Reproductive Health Act above and the repeal of the two-physician requirement)and for nontreatment of neonates that we dont allow for older childrenmeans that we dont think of the neonate as having a special status that would overrule reproductive autonomy. The corrective here is to treat all fellow members of the human family (prenatal, neonatal, and older) with radical moral and legal equality.

Disability and Prenatal Justice

The state of Ohio recently passed a law protecting prenatal human beings with Down syndrome from being killed via abortion because of their disability. The law was upheld in April of 2021 by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals as not creating a substantial obstacle to a womans ability to choose or obtain an abortion. Judge Alice Batchelder wrote the lead opinion, which argued that the State of Ohio has a legitimate interest in protecting the Down syndrome community, keeping doctors from becoming witting participants in Down-syndrome-selective abortions, and ensuring that women are not coerced by the medical teams.

Women and families face incredibly pervasiveand coercivepressure to have an abortion when their prenatal child is thought to have Down syndrome. One research project focused on the lasting, traumatic flashbulb memories that women report as a result of negative experiences with medical staff, including a lack of compassion, pressure to terminate their pregnancy, and pessimistic expectations about outcomes for their child and family.

For a specific example, consider the case of Lorraine, who was pregnant at the age of forty-five with a boy she had already named Jaxson. As reported by the BBC, Lorraine agreed to have an extra screening and blood test, not because she and her husband would have an abortion, but because her midwife said they would get longer to see Jaxson on the ultrasound screen. The sonographer told the parents that the baby showed signs of having Down syndrome and suggested that they get more testing via amniocentesis, a test that slightly increases the chance of miscarriage. Partly because Lorraine had lost a baby the previous year, but also because she would never have the abortion, she refused the extra test. The sonographer became very aggressive and said women like you make me sick. Why bother having a screening at all if youre not going to do anything about it?

The same BBC story told the story of Emma, who was offered 15 terminations, even though we made it really clear that it wasnt an option for us. . . . [T]hey really seemed to push and really seemed to want us to terminate. Her medical team made a point of saying she could have the abortion very, very late in her pregnancy. I was told that until my baby had started traveling down the birth canal, I could still terminate, Emma said.

Significantly, the UK doesnt allow normal prenatal children to be killed that late in pregnancy. This fact led a twenty-six-year-old British woman with Down syndrome named Heidi Crowter to sue the UKs Department of Health and Social Care, arguing that a provision that makes it legal to kill people like her up until birth is an obvious example of wrongful discrimination on the basis of disability. Though a UK court justruled against her, it should be clear from the above arguments that her position was the correct one.

Happily, Ohio currently does a much better job of defending prenatal justice for disabled children. Their law says:

No person shall purposely perform or induce or attempt to perform or induce an abortion on a pregnant woman if the person has knowledge that the pregnant woman is seeking the abortion, in whole or in part, because of any of the following:

(1) A test result indicating Down syndrome in an unborn child;

(2) A prenatal diagnosis of Down syndrome in an unborn child;

(3) Any other reason to believe that an unborn child has Down syndrome.

Furthermore, anyone found to violate this law in Ohio is guilty of a felony of the fourth degreewhich means that the state medical board shall revoke a physicians license to practice medicine in this state and he or she will be liable in a civil action for compensatory and exemplary damages and reasonable attorneys fees. Good on Ohio for defending the rights of the disabled.

There is a whole separate debate to be had about the right to abortion understood as the right to bodily autonomy. (At the heart of that debate, incidentally, is the invocation of viabilityan ever-shifting concept that, as Lantos points out, has increased dramatically for babies at twenty-two and twenty-three weeks gestationand will shift even more dramatically with the development of artificial wombs.) But what I have shown in this article is that the deeply ableist problems with (non)treatment of newborn infants are logically, morally, and sometimes clinically connected to deeply ableist problems with abortion being understood as reproductive autonomy.

Matters of Public Policy: the Maryland and California Bills

Im quite sensitive to the critique that professorsand especially bioethicistscan often take dramatic speculation into the realm of the utterly implausible. Especially because of the great evil being discussed in this article, one might think that Ive cherry-picked a few stories or authors to make my argument. But supporters of two billsone in Maryland and one in Californiaare moving explicitly to defend aiming at the death of newborns by omission, in precisely the ways Ive described.

The Maryland bill, for instance, would eviscerate any penalty for aiming at the death of a newborn child by omission for up to twenty-eight days after birth:

This section may not be construed to authorizeany form of investigation or penaltyfor a person: (1) Terminating or attempting to terminate the persons own pregnancy; or (2) Experiencing a miscarriage, perinatal deathrelated to a failure to act, or stillbirth [emphasis mine].

Interestingly, the language in the California bill uses many of the concepts I have invoked in this article, though it oddly connects the right to refuse to treat a newborn human being to the right to privacy:

The Legislature finds and declares that every individual possesses afundamental right of privacy with respect to personal reproductive decisions, which entails the right to make and effectuate decisionsabout all matters relating to pregnancy, including prenatal care, childbirth, postpartum care, contraception, sterilization, abortion care, miscarriage management, and infertility care.

Because of this finding, the bill would mandate that there could be no civil or criminal charges filed for actions or omissions that result in miscarriage, stillbirth, abortion, or perinatal death.

These proposed laws notwithstanding, there is no right (of privacy or otherwise) to a dead baby. Indeed, the idea is especially heinous if, as is too often the case, one seeks her death because one finds her disability unacceptable. This not only means resisting the kinds of laws being proposed in Maryland and California; it means refusing to distinguish between the equal justice under law owed to both neonatal and prenatal human beings.

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The Right to a Dead Baby? Abortion, Ableism, and the Question of Autonomy - Public Discourse

Youth leaders encouraged to be ‘aware’ of issues – Fiji Times

Youth leaders in Lautoka have been encouraged to be aware of issues affecting their members.

Pacific Centre for Peacebuilding chairwoman Florence Swamy said a week-long youth empowerment training for the leaders would enable them to help their members deal with these societal issues.

During the course of this week, what we will do is deliver an intense training that will empower young people focusing on the needs that you yourselves have identified in the spaces that you live in, she said.

We will deliver this training using our restorative justice platform to equip you with tools that will help you to analyse your situation, to communicate your needs, hopes and fears and to dialogue and negotiate the differences that you have.

While opening the event, Minister for Youth and Sports Parveen Kumar said the training was for the benefit of youths that made up 40 per cent of Fijis population.

It is my sincere hope that the youth participants will develop their own minds in regards to their families and their future, he said.

This program is an opportunity for participants to gather and explore the topics of human rights and gender reproduction, healthy relationships and mental health care so that you may carry these lessons throughout your lives.

According to the Mr Kumar, there are more than 800 youth clubs registered under the ministry with more than 15,000 active members.

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Youth leaders encouraged to be 'aware' of issues - Fiji Times

Bears in downtown Asheville aren’t going anywhere; here’s what to do if you see one – Citizen Times

Asheville residents spot a black bear downtown

Asheville resident Cari Barcas recorded a police officer escorting a black bear downtown on the afternoon of April 21, 2022.

Asheville Citizen Times

ASHEVILLE -It mayseem odd to see a black bear inthecity, but in Asheville, its not as rare as one might think.

On April 21, there was yet another sighting of a black bear taking a stroll downtown. Erin Kellem, manager at Woolworth Walk, managed to take a video of the bear as it wandered around the intersection of Haywood Street and Battery Park Avenue, around 3:30 p.m.

My co-worker caught sight of the bear and said, A bear!" Kellem said. "Customers kind of rushed outside and I rushed outside and had my camera and there were a whole lot of people who had crowded around and were taking pictures and watching."

NC Wildlife: Mama bear freed from plastic lid around neck in East Asheville

It is a high-traffic pedestrian and vehicle intersection and there were many others clustered on the sidewalks and driving by who witnessed the scene, she said.

Black bears are known to reside in and around the city, and sometimes they stumble into the heavily human-populated areas of downtown.

Its not uncommon to see a bear in downtown Asheville, said Ashley Hobbs, assistant black bear and furbearers biologist for the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission.

They go about their whole life cycles within Asheville city limits. We have bears that live in those little neighborhoods that surround the core area of downtown Asheville so its not uncommon for a bear to wander into the populated areas. In fact, we have bears that den for the winter right along I-240 within 5-feet of I-240.

Related: Bear takes a stroll through Rabbit Rabbit in downtown Asheville

Kellem had not personally seen a bear downtown before the encounter, though she knows others who have on occasion. A 20-year resident, Kellem is used to seeing them in her neighborhood in East Asheville.

I see them almost daily at home but not downtown, Kellem said.

Cari Barcas, associate director of Green Built Alliance, was leavingher downtown office building when she noticed acrowd.

I saw that there was a police vehicle and a bunch of people gawking. … As I approached the intersection, I saw a bear just standing there, actually trying to climb a tree, Barcas said.It was obviously a little claustrophobic and scared but was very peaceful and passive.

Police arrived and created a corridor around the bear to ensure it had space and a path to leave the area, Kellem said.

What I heard was that she picked a tree somewhere a block or two away and went up the tree, she said. I know in past times they will just leave a police officer in the area wherever the bear has gone up into the tree and once its dark and no one is around and there isnt a big fanfare, the bear will come down and make its way back to where it wants to be. The bear does not want that much attention.

Barcas took a video of the scene, which shows a police officer seemingly escorting the bear down the street.

The police officer was having to remind (people) to give a healthy boundary and give the bear some space so everyone could stay safe, Barcas said.

For eight years, Barcas has lived in Asheville. It wasnt her first bear sighting, but it was the first time shes seen one walking through the central business district downtown, she said.

Bear family plays at Isaac Dickson

Bear family plays at Isaac Dickson

Asheville Citizen Times

The number of bear sightings so far this spring and the number of many bears living in the city and regionis difficult to confirm, Hobbssaid. It is uncommon to see a bear in the more high-density pedestrian areas of the city.

Those sightings are less common because there are so many people around, especially in the middle of the day, but they do happen because the bears live and breathe right there in the middle of Asheville, Hobbs said.

Its really due to an expanding human population on top of an expanding bear population. So its kind of a no-brainer that we have more interactions as the years go on.

Bear sanctuaries no more: NC Wildlife OKs hunting, critics plan to appeal decision

Bear education and safety protocols are crucial for the community to learn and practice, especially as the city and surrounding areas grow, Barcas said.

As our community is developing and growing, I think its our responsibility as residents and as stewards of the land and this natural area to be responsible about how we interact with bears, she said.

In the videos, the bear can be seen wearing a tracking collar, which indicates that the bear is a female and part of the urban/suburban black bear study, Hobbs said.

Its looking at reproduction, what bears are eating around town, where theyre denning … within Asheville city limits, Hobbs said.

The bears dens are not relocated outside ofthe city because it would be ineffective, she said. Also, there is no place in the state to take bears where they wouldnt encounter people again.

Study: Bears in Asheville twice as big, reproduce in half the time of rural counterparts

These bears kind of have an internal GPS, if you will, where they know where they live and they want to stay in their home," Hobbs said. "Theres a lot of research that shows you can take a bear even a few states away and theyll make a beeline back to that spot where you picked it up. Its just not effective.

In other words, the bears are here to stay.

A bear sighting may be an exciting event, especially if a person hasnt seen one up close before. However, there are things a person should and shouldnt do to keep all humans and animals in the area safe. That may be sacrificing capturing a viral video and putting away the phone.

I make sure to keep a safe distance, Kellem said. I realized that a crowd was gathering and this bear had no way to escape and she was very stressed out. I actually stopped recording and came back inside when I realized I was kind of part of the problem. She did not want to be downtown anymore, and she did not have a way a direction that looked safe to head.

More: More bear-resistant trash cans on-the-way; 112 carts to shorten waiting list

Residents and visitors to the area should know what to do if they see a bear in the city or in the woods. The first thing is to make sure the bear has an escape route, Hobbs said.

You can do that by giving the bear a lot of space so that when they want to get away from you which they do when it comes to that fight or flight end of the spectrum they just want to get away from us, Hobbs said. Usually, when a bear sees you theyre going to turn tail and run.

In a case of a bear continuing to approach and theres no way to get away, the person should take a stance to attempt to scare it away.

Then youll want to put your arms over your head, get big and scary and kind of show that bear you mean business, Hobbs said.

In the exceedingly rare scenario of a bear continuing to pursue even after this, Dobbs said to find rocks or sticks or something else to throw at the bear to deter it.

Bear news: Black bear invites himself to techno dance party at home of East Asheville DJ

Dogs should be kept on a leash at all times to keep control at all times, she said.

Bears and dogs do not mix, Dobbs said. Never have your dog off-leash. And get you and your dog out of the area. Back away slowly in the opposite direction and again, make sure they always have an escape route.

NC Wildlife biologists: Bear that attacked couple on Blue Ridge Parkway climbed onto car

A human may have a fight or flight response, but its not a good idea to run, she said.

You should never run from a bear. That could trigger a predatory response or a chase response in them, Hobbs said. Thats their instinct of response when they see something running. So just keep your eye on the bear, watch what its doing and back away slowly out of the area.

The same rules apply in the woods, as well, she said.

If needed, call the NC Wildlife Commission helpline (866-318-2401) or local authorities for assistance.

It can be helpful for us to escort the bear to a safer spot, Hobbs said. If youre in a neighborhood area, it may not be uncommon to see them in the area so that may not warrant a call if you see a bear. But if you see a bear and it was getting into your trash or trying to get onto your porch or into your home, that would warrant a call, as well.

Bears are most active during dusk and dawn hours, she said, though bears in Asheville can be seen any time of the day. So, its recommended to always be always aware of ones surroundings.

Make sure that you can hear whats around you, Hobbs said. Make sure you dont have headphones in, and things like that, because these bears will give you a warning sign if you get too close. Theyll huff at you, theyll make popping noises with their jaw, and theyll let you know that youre too close.

If walking, bear spray or a bell or signal horn are effective but whistling, calling out Hey, bear!or making other noises can work to let the bear know of ones presence, too, she said.

Bears have an incredible sense of hearing so ninetimes out of 10 theyll get out of your way if you let them know youre in the area, Hobbs said.

BearWise is a national educational program developed by bear biologists and employed by the Wildlife Commission. The group offers some BearWise Basics for co-existing with bears:

For instructions on how to use bear spray and more guidelines on how to handle black bear encounters, visit bearwise.org.

Tiana Kennell is the food and dining reporter for the Asheville Citizen Times, part of the USA Today Network. Email her at tkennell@citizentimes.com or follow her on Twitter/Instagram @PrincessOfPage. Please help support this type of journalism with a subscription to the Citizen Times.

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Bears in downtown Asheville aren't going anywhere; here's what to do if you see one - Citizen Times

First Endangered Red Wolf Pups Born in the Wild Since 2018 – EARTH.ORG

Renewed hope for the critically endangered red wolf species as six new pups were born in North Carolinas Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge.

For the first time in four years, a litter of six red wolf pups has been born in the wild, the US Fish and Wildlife Services Red Wolf Recovery Program confirmed, sparking new hope for the future recovery of the critically endangered species.

This new litter is the first wild-born litter of red wolves since 2018. This red wolf pair was formed through the combination of several management actions and the two red wolves subsequently following their natural instincts in pairing, establishing their territory and mating, the Red Wolf Recovery Program shared on Facebook. Every generation yields a newborn hope for the red wolf a cause for joy and celebration!

The new arrivals (4 females, 2 males) were born to a pair of wild red wolves in Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge in eastern North Carolina amid renewed conservation efforts by the US federal agency since early this year.

Since 2015, The US Fish and Wildlife Service has largely abandoned its recovery efforts. But the agency announced in February that it will commit significant resources to revitalise its programme and ensure a full recovery for the species in the wild. One action they took was the release of seven captive-bred red wolves into the wild population, which is made up of a pack of two adults and three pups.

Once widely common in eastern and south central regions of the US, the red wolf is now one of the most endangered species in the US, with less than 20 individuals remaining in the wild across five sparsely populated counties in eastern North Carolina. Though the animal is protected under the Endangered Species Preservation Act in 1967, its population numbers have dropped significantly over the past few decades due to human activity such as hunting and habitat destruction.

In 2021 alone, seven red wolves were confirmed killed by vehicle strikes, gunshots and other unknown causes, with the former two remaining to be the biggest threats to the species.

The dwindling population has also not added any new pups in recent years either. The last birth of red wolf pups occurred in 2018, when four pups were born, highlighting the grim future for the survival of the species.

But under the new programme, the Service has renewed matchmaking efforts to boost reproductive processes and encourage adult wolves to pair, establish their territory, and mate.

Many environmentalists have praised the agencys efforts and hopes for continued success. Theres a clear cause-and-effect relationship between the Services recovery efforts and the survival and reproduction of red wolves in the wild, said Perrin de Jong, from the environmental non-profit Center for Biological Diversity. Its tremendously encouraging to see the agency trying to protect and recover wild red wolves again. My heart is filled with hope at the sight of a new generation of red wolves taking their rightful place on the landscape.

Featured images by: Red Wolf Recovery Program, US Fish and Wildlife Service

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First Endangered Red Wolf Pups Born in the Wild Since 2018 - EARTH.ORG

[Latest] Human Reproduction MCQ | Assertion | CaseStudy 2022

Human Reproduction MCQ Chapter 3

Below are some of the very important NCERT Human Reproduction MCQ Class 12 Biology Chapter 3 with Answers. These Human Reproduction MCQ have been prepared by expert teachers and subject experts based on the latest syllabus and pattern of term 1 and term 2. We have given these Human Reproduction MCQ Class 12 Biology Questions with Answers to help students understand the concept.

MCQ Questions for Class 12 Biology Chapter 3 are very important for the latest CBSE term 1 and term 2 pattern. These MCQs are very important for students who want to score high in CBSE Board.

We have put together these NCERTQuestions Human Reproduction MCQ for Class 12 Biology Chapter 3 with Answers for the practice on a regular basis to score high in exams. Refer to these MCQs Questions with answers here along with a detailed explanation.

1. Pouch in which testes are suspended outside the abdominal cavity is

(a) tunica albuginea(b) inguinal canal(c) epididymis(d) scrotum

2. Tested are extra abdominal in position. Which of the following is the most appropriate reason?

(a) Narrow pelvis in male(b) Special protection for testes(c) Prostrate gland and seminal vesicles occupy maximum space(d) Require lower temperature than normal body temperature

3. Temperature of human testes is

(a) 2-2.5oC below body temperature(b) 38oC (c) 33oC (d) 2.25oC above body temperature

4. Testicular lobules contain

(a) 3-5 seminiferous tabules(b) 2-6 seminiferous tabules (c) 5-7 seminiferous tabules(d) 3-5 seminiferous tabules

5. Approximate length and width of testis are

(a) 4-5 cm and 2-3 cm(b) 5-6 cm and 3-4 cm(c) 6-7 cm and 4-5 cm(d) 7-8 cm and 8-9 cm

6. The seminiferous tabules of the testis is lined on its inside by

(a) spermatocytes(b) spermatogonia(c) cells of Sertoli(d) both (b) and (c)

7. Interstitial cells secretes

(a) androgen(b) oestrogen(c) FSH(d) inhibin

8. The vas deferens recieves duct from the seminal vesicle and opens into urethra as

(a) epididymis(b) ejaculatory duct(c) efferent ductule(d) ureter

9. The vasa efferentia exit the testis and open into the A located along the B surface.

Here, A and B refer to

(a) A-rete testis, B-epididymis(b) A-epididymis, B-rete testis(c) A-epididymis, B-posterior(d) A-epididymis, B-anterior

10. Choose the correct option.

(a) A-Testis-possesses 3-4 testicular lobules(b) B-Seminal vesicle-storage of sperm(c) C-Vas deferens-helps in sperm transfer(d) D-Prostrate gland-secretes seminal fluid

11. Read the following statements.

(I) Each testis has about 25 compartment called testicular lobules(II) Each testicular lobule contains one to three highly coiled seminiferous (III) Sertoli cells act as nurse cells of testicles(IV) Sertoli cells are activated by FSH secreted

Which of the above statements are incorrect?

(a) I & III(b) Only I(c) II & IV(d) III & IV

12. Select the correct sequence for transport of sperm cells in male reproductive system.

(a) Testis Epididymis Vasa efferentia Rete testis Inquinal canal Urethra(b) Seminiferous tubules Rete testis Vasa efferentia Epididymis Vas deferens Ejaculatory duct Urethra Urethral meatus(c) Seminiferous tubules Vasa efferentia Epididymis Iquinal canal Urethra(d) Testis Epididymis Vasa efferentia Vas deferens Ejaculatory duct Inquinal canal Urethra Urethral meatus

13. Urethral meatus refers to the

(a) urinogenital duct(b) openings of vas deferens into urethra(c) external openings of the urinogenital duct(d) muscles surrounding the urinogenital duct

14. Given below diagram refers to the TS of testis showing few seminiferous tubules.

A, B, C and D in the above diagram represent.

(a) A Sertoli cells, B Secondary spermatocyte, C Interstitial cells, D Sperms(b) A Interstitial cells, B Spermatogonia, C Sertoli cells, D Sperms(c) A Sertoli cells, B Spermatozoa, C Interstitial cells, D Sperms(d) A Sertoli cells, B Spermatogonia, C- Interstitial cells, D Sperms

15. Seminal plasma, the fluid part of semen, is contributed by

(I) Seminal vesicle(II) Prostrate(III) Urethra (IV) Bulbourethral gland

(a) I and II(b) I, II and IV(c) II, III and IV(d) I and IV

16. Function of bulbourethral gland is

(a) lubrication of penis(b) to increase motility of sperm(c) to enhance the sperm count(d) all of the above

17. The ovaries are located one on each side of the A . Each ovary is about 2-4 cm in length connected to the B wall by C . Fill the suitable choices for A-C.

(a) A-inner medulla, B-peripheral cortex, C-ligaments(b) A-lower abdomen, B-pelvic, C-ligaments(c) A-pelvic wall, B-lower abdomen, C-ligaments(d) A-inner medulla, B-peripheral cortex, C-lower abdomen

18. Identify A, B, C and D.

(a) A-Oviduct, B-Uterus, C-Cervix, D-Ovary(b) A-Cervix, B-Uterus, C-Ovary, D-Tumour(c) A-Uterus, B-Uterine Cavity, C- Oviductal Funnel, D-Ovary(d) A-Cervix, B-Uterine Cavity, C-Fallopian Tube, D- Ovary

19. Human fallopian tube is about

(a) 8-9 cm long(b) 9-10 cm long(c) 10-12 cm long(d) 12-17 cm long

20. Match the following.

(a) (A) 2, (B) 1, (C) 3, (D) 4(b) (A) 1, (B) 2, (C) 3, (D) 4 (c) (A) 4, (B) 3, (C) 1, (D) 2(d) (A) 2, (B) 3, (C) 4, (D) 1

Click Below To Learn Biology Term-1 Chapter Wise MCQs

21. The main function of fimbriae of Fallopian tube is

(a) help in development of ovary(b) help in collection of the ovum after ovulation(c) help in development of ova(d) help in fertilisation

22. The external genitalia of female reproductive system are collectively called

(a) vagina(b) vulva(c) cervix(d) clitoris

23. Identify the odd one out from the following.

(a) labia minora(b) fimbriae(c) infundibulum(d) isthmus

24. Fleshy folds of tissue which extends down to the mons pubis and surround the vaginal opening is called

(a) labia minora(b) labia majora(c) hymen(d) clitoris

25. Cushion of fatty tissue by skin and pubic hair is called

(a) mons pubis(b) labia majora(c) clitoris(d) vagina

26. The uterus opens into the vagina by a canal called

(a) cervical (b) canal (c) ampulla (d) oviduct

27. Sectional view of mammary gland shows

(I) nipple and areola(II) mammary lobes (alveolus) and duct(III) ribs(IV) ampulla and lactiferous duct

Choose the correct option

(a) I, II, III and IV(b) I, II and III(c) III, IV and II(d) I, IV and III

28. Several mammary duct join to form a wider mammary ampulla, which is connected to

(a) lactiferous duct (b) seminiferous duct (c) seminiferous tubules (d) lactiferous canal

29. The spermatogonia undergo division to produce sperm by the process of spermatogonesis.

(a) true (b) false (c) cannot say (d) partially true or false

30. Which of the following cells of haploid number of chromosomes?

(a) 1o spermatocytes (b) 2o spermatocytes (c) Spermatid (d) Both (b) and (c)

31. Which among the following has 23 chromosomes?

(a) spermatogonia(b) zygotes (c) secondary oocyte (d) oogonia

32. Find out spermatid and sertoli cell in given below diagram.

(a) D and E(b) E and F(c) A and C(d) B and E

33. Spermiogenesis or spermatiliosis is

(a) changing of spermatid to spermatozoa (b) changing of spermatid to sperm (c) both (a) and (b) (d) changing of spermatid to secondary spermatocyte

34. In the formation of spermatozoa, the spermatids attach to

(a) Leydig cells(b) corona radiata cells(c) sertoli cells(d) first polar body

35. The difference between spermatogenesis and spermiation is

(a) in spermiogenesis, spermatozoa from sertoli cell are released into the cavity of seminiferous tubules, while in spermiation, spermatozoa are formed (b) in spermiogenesis, spermatozoa are formed, while in spermiation, spermatids are formed (c) in spermiogenesis, spermatids are formed, while in spermiation, spermatozoa are formed (d) in spermiogenesis, spermatozoa are formed, while in spermiation, spermatozoa released through seminiferous tubules

36. The release of _________ leads to initiation of spermatogenesis.

(a) GnRH (b) lactin (c) testosterone (d) oestrogen

37. Everytime copulation does not lead to fertilization and pregnancy because of failure of sperm to reach the

(a) ampulla (b) cervix (c) endometrium (d) myometrium

38. What is the correct sequence of sperm formation?

(a) spermatid, spermatocyte, spermatogonia, spermatozoa(b) spermatogonia, spermatocyte, spermatozoa, spermatid(c) spermatogonia, spermatozoa, spermatocyte, spermatid(d) spermatogonia, spermatocyte, spermatid, spermatozoa

39. Identify A, B & C in the diagram below.

(a) A acrosome, B tail, C mitochondria (b) A plasma membrane, B acrosome, C mitochondria (c) A mitochondria, B acrosome, C plasma membrane (d) A mitochondria, B plasma membrane, C tail

40. Match the following.

(a) (A) 2, (B) 4, (C) 1, (D) 3(b) (A) 4, (B) 3, (C) 1, (D) 2(c) (A) 4, (B) 1, (C) 2, (D) 3(d) (A) 2, (B) 1, (C) 3, (D) 4

41. Find the odd one out.

(a) spermatocyte(b) polar body(c) spermatid(d) spermatogonium

42. Oogenesis is initiated during the embryonic development stage when a couple of million oogonia are formed within each fetal ovary; no more oogonia are formed and added after birth.

(a) true(b) false(c) cant say(d) partially true or false

43. Primary oocyte surrounded by a layer of granulosa cells is called

(a) secondary follicle(b) ootid(c) primary follicle(d) tertiary follicle

44. At the time of birth, the oocyte is present in _______ stage of cell cycle.

(a) prophase-I(b) prophase-II(c) meiosis-II(d) mitosis

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[Latest] Human Reproduction MCQ | Assertion | CaseStudy 2022

It’s time to take reproduction in space seriously – Axios

Before humans can settle off-Earth, scientists need to figure out how or even whether people can reproduce in space.

Why it matters: Powerful figures in the space industry like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos have dreams of a future where millions of people live in space, which would naturally require a self-sustaining population of humans somewhere other than Earth.

What's happening: Scientists have sent a number of experiments to the International Space Station in recent years to try to answer various questions about what it might take for mammals, and eventually humans, to reproduce in space.

Yes, but: More in-depth studies are needed in order to figure out just what it would take for humans and other species to have babies off-Earth, and some scientists say there hasn't been enough attention paid to funding and performing these types of studies.

The big question: What are the major factors that could limit how and whether humans can have healthy babies in space?

What's next: A number of studies being proposed in the coming years could help answer those outstanding questions around reproduction in space.

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It's time to take reproduction in space seriously - Axios

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit quotes Professor O. Carter Snead in major decision | The Law School | University of Notre Dame – Notre…

Notre Dame Law Professor O. CarterSneadwas quoted last week in a major decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in a case upholding a Texas ban on a second-trimester abortion procedure. The procedure, officially named dilation and extraction,is referred to as live dismemberment in the challenged Texas statute.

The decision in the case, Whole Womans Health v. Ken Paxton, was issuedAugust 18.

Judge James C. Ho quoted Professor Snead in the concurring opinion.

Someday, scientists may look back on todays abortion debates as shocking and barbaric just as we look back in disbelief at those who ridiculed and ostracized proponents of handwashing and sterilizing surgical instruments to prevent disease and infection, Judge Ho wrote.

Indeed, many have that view today. According to CarterSnead, one of the nations leading scholars on public bioethics and an expert witness in this case, 132 countries out of 194 that I looked at ban abortion outright, at all gestational stages, with certain exceptions defined by law,while 178 countries generally ban abortion after a gestational age of 12 weeks. So 92 percent of all countries presumptively ban abortions at 12 weeks or less.

Texas does not ban abortion until 22 weeks, the judge concluded. So Texas law is not only valid under the Constitution and Supreme Court precedent its also more permissive than the overwhelming majority of laws around the world.

Snead, who also directs the University of Notre Dames de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture,is one of the worlds leading experts on public bioethics the governance of science, medicine, and biotechnology in the name of ethical goods. His research explores issues relating to neuroethics, enhancement, human embryo research, assisted reproduction, abortion, and end-of-life decision-making.

In 2018, he and Notre Dame Law School graduate Laura Wolk 16 J.D. co-authored an article on this case for the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy titled, Irreconcilable Differences? Whole Womans Health, Gonzales, and Justice Kennedys Vision of American Abortion Jurisprudence.

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U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit quotes Professor O. Carter Snead in major decision | The Law School | University of Notre Dame - Notre...

Male Fertility Is Declining, And Environmental Toxins Could Be A Reason – Patch.com

In the U.S., nearly 1 in 8 couples struggles with infertility. Unfortunately, physicians like me who specialize in reproductive medicine are unable to determine the cause of male infertility around 30 percent to 50 percent of the time. There is almost nothing more disheartening than telling a couple "I don't know" or "There's nothing I can do to help."

Upon getting this news, couple after couple asks me questions that all follow a similar line of thinking. "What about his work, his cellphone, our laptops, all these plastics? Do you think they could have contributed to this?"

What my patients are really asking me is a big question in male reproductive health: Does environmental toxicity contribute to male infertility?

Infertility is defined as a couple's inability to get pregnant for one year despite regular intercourse. When this is the case, doctors evaluate both partners to determine why.

For men, the cornerstone of the fertility evaluation is semen analysis, and there are a number of ways to assess sperm. Sperm count the total number of sperm a man produces and sperm concentration number of sperm per milliliter of semen are common measures, but they aren't the best predictors of fertility. A more accurate measure looks at the total motile sperm count, which evaluates the fraction of sperm that are able to swim and move.

A wide range of factors from obesity to hormonal imbalances to genetic diseases can affect fertility. For many men, there are treatments that can help. But starting in the 1990s, researchers noticed a concerning trend. Even when controlling for many of the known risk factors, male fertility appeared to have been declining for decades.

The science is consistent: Men today produce fewer sperm than in the past, and the sperm are less healthy. The question, then, is what could be causing this decline in fertility.

Scientists have known for years that, at least in animal models, environmental toxic exposure can alter hormonal balance and throw off reproduction. Researchers can't intentionally expose human patients to harmful compounds and measure outcomes, but we can try to assess associations.

As the downward trend in male fertility emerged, I and other researchers began looking more toward chemicals in the environment for answers. This approach doesn't allow us to definitively establish which chemicals are causing the male fertility decline, but the weight of the evidence is growing.

A lot of this research focuses on endocrine disrupters, molecules that mimic the body's hormones and throw off the fragile hormonal balance of reproduction. These include substances like phthalates better known as plasticizers as well as pesticides, herbicides, heavy metals, toxic gases and other synthetic materials.

Plasticizers are found in most plastics like water bottles and food containers and exposure is associated with negative impacts on testosterone and semen health.Herbicides and pesticides abound in the food supply and some specifically those with synthetic organic compounds that include phosphorus are known to negatively affect fertility.

Air pollution surrounds cities, subjecting residents to particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and other compounds that likely contribute to abnormal sperm quality. Radiation exposure from laptops, cellphones and modems has also been associated with declining sperm counts, impaired sperm motility and abnormal sperm shape. Heavy metals such as cadmium, lead and arsenic are also present in food, water and cosmetics and are also known to harm sperm health.

Endocrine-disrupting compounds and the infertility problems they cause are taking a significant toll on human physical and emotional health. And treating these harms is costly.

A lot of chemicals are in use today, and tracking them all is incredibly difficult. Today, more than 80,000 chemicals are registered with the National Toxicology Program. When the program was founded in 1978, 60,000 of those were grandfathered into the program with minimal information, and nearly 2,000 new chemicals are introduced each year. Many scientists believe that the safety testing for health and environmental risks is not strong enough and that the rapid development and introduction of new chemicals challenges the ability of organizations to test long-term risks to human health.

Current U.S. national toxicology regulations follow the principle of innocent until proved guilty and are less comprehensive and restrictive than similar regulations in Europe, for example. The World Health Organization recently identified 800 compounds capable of disrupting hormones, only a small fraction of which have been tested.

A trade group, the American Chemistry Council, says on its website that manufacturers "have the regulatory certainty they need to innovate, grow, create jobs and win in the global marketplace at the same time that public health and the environment benefit from strong risk-based protections."

But the reality of the current regulatory system in the U.S. is that chemicals are introduced with minimal testing and taken off the market only when harm is proved. And that can take decades.

Dr. Niels Skakkebaek, the lead researcher on one of the first manuscripts on decreasing sperm counts, called the male fertility decline a "wake-up call to all of us." My patients have provided a wakeup call for me that increased public awareness and advocacy are important to protect global reproductive health now and in the future. I'm not a toxicologist and can't identify the cause of the infertility trends I'm seeing, but as physician, I am concerned that too much of the burden of proof is falling on the human body and people who become my patients.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

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Male Fertility Is Declining, And Environmental Toxins Could Be A Reason - Patch.com

Male fertility is declining. Scientists are zoning in on the reason why – New Zealand Herald

Infertility is defined as a couple's inability to get pregnant for one year despite regular intercourse. Photo / Kelly Sikkema, Unsplash

ANALYSIS:

In the United States, nearly one in eight couples struggles with infertility.

Unfortunately, physicians like me who specialise in reproductive medicine are unable to determine the cause of male infertility around 30 per cent to 50 per cent of the time.

There is almost nothing more disheartening than telling a couple "I don't know" or "There's nothing I can do to help."

Upon getting this news, couple after couple asks me questions that all follow a similar line of thinking. "What about his work, his cellphone, our laptops, all these plastics? Do you think they could have contributed to this?"

What my patients are really asking me is a big question in male reproductive health: does environmental toxicity contribute to male infertility?

Infertility is defined as a couple's inability to get pregnant for one year despite regular intercourse. When this is the case, doctors evaluate both partners to determine why.

For men, the cornerstone of the fertility evaluation is semen analysis, and there are a number of ways to assess sperm.

Sperm count the total number of sperm a man produces and sperm concentration number of sperm per millilitre of semen are common measures, but they aren't the best predictors of fertility.

A more accurate measure looks at the total motile sperm count, which evaluates the fraction of sperm that are able to swim and move.

31 Jul, 2021 07:20 PMQuick Read

23 Jul, 2021 05:00 PMQuick Read

2 Jul, 2021 10:14 PMQuick Read

A wide range of factors from obesity to hormonal imbalances to genetic diseases can affect fertility. For many men, there are treatments that can help.

But starting in the 1990s, researchers noticed a concerning trend. Even when controlling for many of the known risk factors, male fertility appeared to have been declining for decades.

In 1992, a study found a global 50 per cent decline in sperm counts in men over the previous 60 years. Multiple studies over subsequent years confirmed that initial finding, including a 2017 paper showing a 50 per cent to 60 per cent decline in sperm concentration between 1973 and 2011 in men from around the world.

These studies, though important, focused on sperm concentration or total sperm count. So in 2019, a team of researchers decided to focus on the more powerful total motile sperm count. They found that the proportion of men with a normal total motile sperm count had declined by approximately 10 per cent over the previous 16 years.

The science is consistent: men today produce fewer sperm than in the past, and the sperm are less healthy. The question, then, is what could be causing this decline in fertility.

Scientists have known for years that, at least in animal models, environmental toxic exposure can alter hormonal balance and throw off reproduction. Researchers can't intentionally expose human patients to harmful compounds and measure outcomes, but we can try to assess associations.

As the downward trend in male fertility emerged, I and other researchers began looking more toward chemicals in the environment for answers. This approach doesn't allow us to definitively establish which chemicals are causing the male fertility decline, but the weight of the evidence is growing.

A lot of this research focuses on endocrine disrupters, molecules that mimic the body's hormones and throw off the fragile hormonal balance of reproduction.

These include substances like phthalates better known as plasticisers as well as pesticides, herbicides, heavy metals, toxic gases and other synthetic materials.

Plasticisers are found in most plastics like water bottles and food containers and exposure is associated with negative impacts on testosterone and semen health.

Herbicides and pesticides abound in the food supply and some specifically those with synthetic organic compounds that include phosphorus are known to negatively affect fertility.

Air pollution surrounds cities, subjecting residents to particulate matter, sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and other compounds that likely contribute to abnormal sperm quality.

Radiation exposure from laptops, cellphones and modems has also been associated with declining sperm counts, impaired sperm motility and abnormal sperm shape.

Heavy metals such as cadmium, lead and arsenic are also present in food, water and cosmetics and are also known to harm sperm health.

Endocrine-disrupting compounds and the infertility problems they cause are taking a significant toll on human physical and emotional health. And treating these harms is costly.

A lot of chemicals are in use today, and tracking them all is incredibly difficult. Today, more than 80,000 chemicals are registered with America's National Toxicology Program.

When the program was founded in 1978, 60,000 of those were grandfathered into the program with minimal information, and nearly 2000 new chemicals are introduced each year.

Many scientists believe that the safety testing for health and environmental risks is not strong enough and that the rapid development and introduction of new chemicals challenges the ability of organisations to test long-term risks to human health.

Current US national toxicology regulations follow the principle of innocent until proved guilty and are less comprehensive and restrictive than similar regulations in Europe, for example.

The World Health Organisation recently identified 800 compounds capable of disrupting hormones, only a small fraction of which have been tested.

A trade group, the American Chemistry Council, says on its website that manufacturers "have the regulatory certainty they need to innovate, grow, create jobs and win in the global marketplace at the same time that public health and the environment benefit from strong risk-based protections".

But the reality of the current regulatory system in the US is that chemicals are introduced with minimal testing and taken off the market only when harm is proved. And that can take decades.

Dr Niels Skakkebaek, the lead researcher on one of the first manuscripts on decreasing sperm counts, called the male fertility decline a "wake-up call to all of us".

My patients have provided a wakeup call for me that increased public awareness and advocacy are important to protect global reproductive health now and in the future. I'm not a toxicologist and can't identify the cause of the infertility trends I'm seeing, but as physician, I am concerned that too much of the burden of proof is falling on the human body and people who become my patients.

Ryan P. Smith is associate professor of urology at the University of Virginia.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

See the rest here:
Male fertility is declining. Scientists are zoning in on the reason why - New Zealand Herald

What makes up a speaker inside and out – Popular Science

Few modern electronic devices are as ubiquitousand taken for grantedas the humble loudspeaker. A useful way to project and reproduce sound with a surprisingly simple design, speakers have been helping blast everything from weather reports and headlines to Top 40 and talk radio to society at large for decades. Not a lot has changed in the general makeup of the devices since German inventor Philipp Reis modeled the first loudspeaker as a component of a telephone-like device in 1861, but todays models are more finely tuned than ever. Whether youre in the market for a new piece of audio gear or you just want to brush up on your knowledge of this mighty invention, this crash course will get you up to speed on what makes up a speaker.

To reproduce audio, a dynamic speakeralso known as a drivertranslates an electrical current into sound. Within the base of every driver, two magnets precisely oriented opposite each other create a magnetic field. Inside this field, a rigid suspension holds a flexible coil of copper wire called a voice coil. When the signal comes in from the source (be that radio, CD player, TV, or iPhone), the suspension and coil rapidly vibrate. Those vibes transfer to the speaker cone, which alters the pressure of the surrounding air molecules, ultimately translating the energy into sound waves.

Because a speakers own vibration can compromise its stability, its basket (a catchall term for the cone, coil, and suspension) needs to be constructed from rigid, break-resistant materials. The most common materials in a basket are aluminum, steel, plastic, and paper. This consideration also extends to speaker housings, as well, which are commonly constructed from medium-density fibreboard or wood and require precise engineering and machining to ensure that errant vibrations dont cause unwanted rattling.

Entire loudspeaker units are often composed of multiple drivers in a single enclosure. This can get confusing, as speaker is used to interchangeably refer to either a single driver or an entire multi-driver unit.

Because loudspeakers are differentiated by their number of drivers, this is by far the most important term to keep in mind when shopping for one. Some models may have a single driver that reproduces the entire frequency spectrum, while others may use an array of drivers, each with its own specific frequency range. The suite of drivers in a given enclosure works together to create a full sound.

The aptly-named full-range driver is an individual speaker designed to reproduce the widest possible range of frequencies without assistance from other drivers. Because they can operate independently, full-range drivers can be incredibly cost-effective for manufacturers to produceand space-efficient for consumers. This is also why theyre one of the most common drivers around, found in radios, televisions, Bluetooth speakers, and other compact electronics.

While full-range drivers aim to reproduce as many frequencies as possible in a single unit, this design still has its limitations: Single drivers often struggle to reproduce every audible frequency at an equal volume. This can result in over-emphasis of certain sounds and ultimately an inaccurate representation of the audio source. Some manufacturers attempt to offset this shortfall by adding extra material to the drivers cone so high frequencies ring better, or by placing the driver in a resonant enclosure (i.e., one thatll amp up echoes) to boost bass.

The most common solution to the limitations of a full-range driver is to split up the work between several ones with different frequency ranges. In these multi-driver units, a midrange driver handles the bulk of the audio spectrum, covering frequencies that range anywhere from 200 Hz to 5,000 Hzthe most critical range for human hearing, encompassing speech and the fundamental tones of most musical instruments.

Since they excel at reproducing the bulk of audible frequencies but dont need to reproduce the lowest ones in the audible spectrum, midrange drivers are often smaller than full-range drivers. This makes them an efficient and ideal choice for use in smartphones and other small, portable devices where you can sacrifice deep bass response.

Woofers and subwoofers are drivers that cover the lowest range of sound, with some reaching the bottommost bounds of human hearing at 20 Hz. In listening environments, adequate low-frequency response is critical for delivering an immersive level of cinematic rumble. Due to the power required to accurately reproduce this frequency range, this cant be achieved without a dedicated woofer or subwoofer outfitted with a large driver, which is why the best multi-speaker soundbars and other packages usually include a standalone subwoofer.

The low-frequency vibration created by a woofer is particularly prone to causing rattling within the speaker basket and the enclosure itself, so precision and care are required in the construction of these units. Often, manufacturers include damping materials like closed-cell foam within the enclosures, which can absorb low frequencies within the unit and mitigate the transfer of vibration to the room and walls.

The last common type of driver you should know is the tweeter, which is fine-tuned to reproduce the highest frequencies of the audio spectrum: between 2,000 and 20,000 Hz. Unlike other drivers, which utilize cones and have a practical upper limit of about 15,000 Hz, most modern tweeters use a diaphragm, or dome, of materiallike silk or polyesterto excite air molecules and reproduce high-frequency audio. Tweeters most frequently sit near the top of multi-driver speaker systems and are usually less than 1 inch in diameter.

A special electronic circuit called a crossover piece all the drivers together. This circuit sorts frequencies and sends them to the appropriate driver. For example, in a three-driver speaker, the crossover sends high frequencies to the tweeter, middle ones to the midrange driver, and low ones to the woofer.

Considering how effective speakers can be at reproducing audio with clarity and accuracy, the principles upon which theyre designed are incredibly simple. Youre likely to encounter full-range drivers and midrange drivers operating independently when listening to music on a smartphone, a television, or a pair of headphones, while most bookshelf speakers, studio monitors, and home theater systems are likely to incorporate multi-driver speakers that utilize crossovers. Even though their design has held steady for decades, the sheer volume (get it?) of options now availablefrom Bluetooth boxes to home-theater setups with six or more speakersmeans understanding the fundamentals of what makes up a speaker is essential to scoping out a setup that sounds right for you.

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What makes up a speaker inside and out - Popular Science

There’s No Science Argument on Whether Unborn Children Are Human – Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

The recent March for Life in Washington featured signs like Save the baby humans (featuring a whale), Any country that accepts abortion is not teaching its people to love Mother Theresa and One heart stops; many hearts break.

Neurosurgeon Michael Egnor has a message for people who wonder whether the preborn child is a human being:

Ever ask #Why we should believe that a human embryo is a human life? There is no question about itfrom the moment of conception, a unique human being exists. Pro-abortion activists will try to say that the embryo is a different species, some unclassified thing, or part of the mother, but none of these are true. The science of sexual reproduction is as much settled science as is the fact that the Earth orbits the sun and that DNA carries genetic code. There is no debate that life begins at conception. The only debate is whether people respect life at all stages. (Students for Life, July 26, 2021)

Egnor has also written some personal reflections on abortion, including the fact that he himself might have been aborted:

The world is blessed with countless people who, with Gods grace, had moms and dads who chose life instead of death. Im one of them my mom had severe hypertension and doctors recommended I be aborted, but she and my dad refused. I owe my life to their love for me, even before I was born.

He also recounts that, while he always tells the truth to parents about their unborn babies neurological issues as he understands them, sometimes the children surprise him:

Just recently, I saw a 10 year old girl in the office for whom Ive cared since she was in the womb. When her spina bifida was diagnosed by prenatal testing, the doctor basically insisted that she be aborted. It was relatively late in the pregnancy, and the doctor gave them the name of George Tiller, a notorious late-term abortionist in Kansas who aborted babies at an age when even the most callous of other abortionists refuse to kill. Her family declined, and sought me out as a second opinion. I told them the truth about their daughters prognosis which was guarded but by no means hopeless.

As it turned out, I was wrong. She did indeed have spina bifida and I operated on her the day she was born. But she has done much better than any of us even dreamed. She walks, runs, and loves to dance. She is bright and charming, and is the love and light of her mom, dad, and her doting older brothers. I give talks to medical professionals about neurosurgical prenatal diagnoses and at the end of the talks I show a video clip of her dancing.

There is another aspect of abortion that explicitly involves neuroscience: Do unborn children feel pain? Alas, yes:

The argument commonly used by abortion advocates, and by physicians and scientists, who argue that fetuses do not experience pain, is that the central nervous system is too immature to process pain at that age. But I think that thats clearly a misunderstanding of the neurobiology.

Pain, as far as we know, is the only sensory modality that does not require cortical representation to be experienced. That is, it seems that we probably feel pain at deeper levels of the brain, probably at the level of the thalamus. And what the cortex does, is it actually suppresses our experience of pain and helps us interpret it. So decorticate animals seem to experience pain much, much more intensely. The thalamus in fetal life develops around the sixth or eighth week of fetal development. And the thalamic tracks that connect the thalamus to the periphery, that would allow the fetus to feel pain, are present at that stage.

A recent medical journal article confirmed that there is clear scientific evidence that pain is felt from 13 weeks gestation onward. Egnor responded:

The scientific community has for decades misrepresented the straightforward science of conception and fetal development for ideological reasons

I have cared for hundreds of premature infants and it is very clear that these very young children experience pain intensely. An innocuous needlestick in the heel to draw small amount of blood would ordinarily not be particularly painful for an adult. But a tiny infant will scream at such discomfort.

Many Americans do not realize that most Western countries have restrictions on abortion. The United States is one of the few where children be aborted up to the time of birth in many states and, if they survive, may legally be left to die after birth. Currently, the federal government is even working on an act that would remove all state-level protections for unborn children at any age.

You may also wish to read: Political websites Christmas gift to readers: promoting abortion FiveThirtyEight asked readers to share their abortion stories and got something it hadnt bargained on: Many were glad it didnt happen. I am a pediatric neurosurgeon, and every day I treat kids (and adults) who were prime candidates for abortion, but by the grace of God escaped the abortionist. (Michael Egnor)

and

Do babies really feel pain before they are self-aware? Michael Egnor discusses the fact that the thalamus, deep in the brain, creates pain. The cortex moderates it. Thus, juveniles may suffer more. Jonathan Wells recalls, from when he was a lab technologist, how very premature infants would scream when he took a drop of blood for tests.

More here:
There's No Science Argument on Whether Unborn Children Are Human - Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence

New IJGO Supplement: Quality of care for abortion-related complications | Figo – International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics

IJGO is delighted to announce the publication of a World Health Organization (WHO) and joint UN special Human Reproduction Programme (HRP)[1] supplement containing insights from the WHO and HRP Multi-Country Study on Abortion-related morbidity (MCS-A) across 11 African countries.

Seven papers utilise secondary data analysis to assess the quality of care for abortion-related complications in facilities in Sub-Saharan Africa. The wealth of data generated provide a unique opportunity to assess the provision and experience of care for abortion-related complications in Sub-Saharan Africa, especially in countries with restrictive abortion laws.

This supplement shows how far we still have to go in ensuring quality, respectful post-abortion care for all; it also proves how much we can learn when we commit to working together. Across 11 countries, knowledge has been gained and research capacity has been strengthened. A stronger research community is better able to listen, ask and answer questions, working together for a future where every woman and girl achieves the highest standard of sexual and reproductive health and rights.

zge Tunalp, Medical Officer at WHO and HRP.

Complications due to unsafe abortions are an important cause of morbidity and mortality in many Sub-Saharan African countries. Despite the burden these complications represent for health services, information on the provision and quality of care for abortion and abortion-related complications in many settings across Sub-Saharan Africa is lacking.

To try to fill this important evidence gap, WHO/HRP conducted a cross-sectional study in 210 health facilities in partnership with local research institutes between February 2017 and April 2018. The findings span both clinical provision of care and quality of care from the womens perspective, exploring how this is experienced differentially by those living in vulnerable situations such as adolescents and women accessing care in insecure environments.

A multipronged approach including self-care, clinical care, task sharing, human rights, and an enabling legal environment is needed to deliver high-quality abortion and post-abortion care, including access to family planning, but there is still considerable progress to make. Immediate action needs to be taken by healthcare providers and policy makers.

Read the MCS-A WHO supplement here

Three key areas are highlighted here:

The authors of the editorial of the supplement, Professors Seni Kouanda and Zahida Qureshi, conclude with these hopeful words:

While we still face many challenges and obstacles to ensuring access to high-quality abortion and post-abortion care for all women, we believe that efforts such as the MCS-A in Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean represent an important step forward. We hope that the work presented throughout this supplement will help inspire innovations and insights to help fulfil womens reproductive rights.

[1] The UNDP-UNFPA-UNICEF-WHO-World Bank Special Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction (HRP)

Read more:
New IJGO Supplement: Quality of care for abortion-related complications | Figo - International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics

Liberation or Folly? Your Takes on Artificial Wombs – The Atlantic

Earlier this week I asked readers, What do you think about artificial wombs? Are they ethical? Desirable? Should they be a priority for scientists? If they become advanced enough to be viable, would you ever use one? How would a world in which they were available differ from ours?

Kaitlin, who favors artificial wombs, has been thinking about this subject for a long time, and sees it as a clash between equality and identity:

I was a 16-year-old girl when my mother thought I was monstrous for announcing that women would never be equal until everyone had access to artificial wombs and the ability to have children with their partners, regardless of gender. To my mother this was the stripping away of her identity and role in the societymotherhood. For me, it was imagining a world where no one has to be defined by their reproductive role unless they choose it, the necessary step for creating an egalitarian society with true gender fluidity. I had just finished reading American speculative fiction writer Lois McMaster Bujolds Vorkosigan Saga, where artificial wombs and their use (or not) play major plot points, and I was intoxicated with the possibility that I could be more than my reproductive organs.

Mark opposes artificial wombs in general but has mixed feelings:

I imagine the perfection of such a technique is only a matter of time, and the benefit to previously pre-viable children cannot be ignored. At the same time, the question immediately brought to mind this quote from Shulamith Firestone (Dialetic of Sex, 1970):

The end goal of feminist revolution must be, unlike that of the first feminist movement, not just the elimination of male privilege but of the sex distinction itself: genital differences between human beings would no longer matter culturally.

The reproduction of the species by one sex for the benefit of both would be replaced by (at least the option of) artificial reproduction: children would be born to both sexes equally, or independently of either, however one chooses to look at it The division of labour would be ended by the elimination of labour altogether (through cybernetics). The tyranny of the biological family would be broken.

Our modern society is simply unable to say no in principle to reaching for more power, and as C. S. Lewis noted in The Abolition of Man, all long-term exercises of power, especially in breeding, must mean the power of earlier generations over later ones. While a more equitable division of labor is a good thing, I think that completely and finally severing the link between the mother and child for the sake of utility is not. Its hard to imagine a world where commodification of human dignity would not be the endpoint.

Jesse is an enthusiastic proponent of the technology:

Think of all the times a pregnant woman is told: If you try to carry this child to term, you will both die. Now suppose that for somenot all or many, but even just someof these pregnancies, the mother is then told: You have the option of transferring the child to an artificial womb, which will surely save your life, and has a good chance of bringing the child to term. What a miracle! What a blessing! Who could possibly object?

We can certainly concede that it is not ideal. The mother may suffer detrimental psychological effects from the absence of physical intimacy with her child, and for that matter, perhaps the child will, too. Further, it is virtually certain that the technology will be suboptimal for a long time. We should expect children with low birth weight and developmental abnormalities. There will be diminished opportunity for the mother to transfer her viral antibodies to the childand who knows what other kinds of things the mothers womb may do for her child that we dont yet fully understand? But to argue that any of these things are worse than a dead baby seems a difficult task indeed.

Rosies family history predisposes her to celebrating artificial wombs:

My brother was born at 28 weeks. As a result, he has a range of disabilities including an intellectual disability that leaves him unable to live an independent life. My husband and I are starting to plan a family. If I had the safety of knowing that if I went into labor prematurely our child could continue to develop and grow in an artificial womb, Id be less reticent [about getting] pregnant. Im so afraid of creating another person who I will need to be responsible for well past young adulthood. I think artificial wombs are a fantastic idea!

Laura also focuses on medical obstacles to getting pregnant:

I have health issues that made it challenging to have my child in 2019 and make it very challenging to have another child. I have friends who have struggled immensely with infertility, multiple miscarriages and/or stillbirths, because unfortunately something in their genes makes it hard for their bodies to carry a fetus to full-term. If they had the opportunity to be able to have an artificial womb carry a child for them, it would be a godsend.

Mike is gay, married, and enthusiastic:

Having a child for a gay couple is frankly fraught with complexity, first and foremost, identifying a surrogate! More complexity comes from what now may become a 3 parent family! Being able to remove the surrogate frees gay men in so many ways. And gives them total control in what is a deeply personal decision in the lives of gay couples.

Conor Friedersdorf: Your presidential picks: Adam Silver, Tyler Cowen, Stacey Abrams

But Ilona worries that artificial wombs will prove a slippery slope:

Having had miscarriages, I know firsthand the disappointment and learned quickly what a miracle pregnancy is. Those nine months may be uncomfortable and reshape a body in less than perfect ways, but the time allows for a connection to be created that is cemented at birth. I suspect synthetic wombs would allow for mass produced children as every good development often leads to misuse. Do we really want a day when we can order a child to our specifications without the investment of time and preparation?

What a sad world this could become!

Ann believes that artificial wombs are one more example of what she sees as a broader human folly:

I question the utility of the human propensity to constantly try to one-up Mother Nature. It seems we do a lot of tweaking, to fix something that isnt broken or improve human lives at the expense of other life. We usually end up with more problems than we started with. Examples abound: the advent of chemical fertilizers, gas powered vehicles, ubiquitous paving, industrial scale farming, sugar laden foodthe list is endless and timeless.

The result seems to be that this entire planet is, in our care, on a trajectory towards complete artificiality. And since wisdom is imparted so very late in a single human life, and rarely accepted as a template for the congregate of human activity even when it is spelled out chapter and verse to each new generation, it appears we will keep marching towards our own dismal, depressive, disassociated relationship with our own nature. Not to mention a far less appealing habitat. I vote no on one more addition to Frankensteins museum.

Robert worries about overpopulation:

This is a solution looking for a problem. THE WORLD IS STILL OVERPOPULATED; it cant support the population it does have. Do we really need more carbon-burners born through artificial means? Its a triumph for aggressive individualism (or libertarianism if you prefer) over the good of everyone else. I want mine. If it helps kill you, gee, Im really sorry but at least I got mine. Just morally WRONG. Were all in this together. Its time to act like it.

And Jean says artificial wombs have implications for femaleness that fill her with dread:

If we remove pregnancy from the female body, it renders so many salient aspects of femaleness moot. I may sound like a biological essentialist, but when you look at the female body, almost everything about it (starting at puberty) is tailored around pregnancy, childbirth, and child rearing. Think of the hormones (and hormonal fluctuations) that influence the psychological ways females differ from men. Think about menstruationhow many females would choose to continue bleeding every month with the cramps and the mood swings now that they wont be using their uterus?

I feel conflicted, as a female, because the female body can be a hindrancethe proportionally high body fat, aforementioned mood swings and periods, the toll of pregnancy and childbirth under the best circumstancesyet outsourcing wombs might so significantly alter the character of females, which serves as a balance to males in many ways, and could theoretically sort of erase women as we know them. I also, in truly paranoid fashion, worry about some dystopian situation where women would be forced to have children since theres no longer a physical burdenonly the emotional one.

In contrast, Amelia believes the technology would be good for women and their equal standing:

Heres my take: artificial wombs are the last frontier of womens liberation. Decoupling the woman from being pregnant and having to give birth really would level the playing field. As long as the tech isnt being used to breed a ton of extra people or super soldiers or something, this would absolutely improve the lives of women everywhere. There would be no more attempting high-risk pregnancies and allowing the mother to die in childbirth.

It sickens me that women go through the process of pregnancy and birth, and then have to recover from their bodies being ripped and cut open while theyre raising an infant. Imagine being handed a ready-made baby without having to go through the pregnancy and birth. Parents would find themselves better equipped for the task at hand.

Bekke frets about maintaining the connection between mother and child:

Just no! Bonding with a child is important, and how much bonding, physically and emotionally, can a mother do with a totally artificial birth?

But Errol is skeptical of that argument:

Is there no such thing as a father who loves his child? And I guess that siblings dont have reason to care about each other since they were never inside the others stomach.

Jonathan argues that a world where pre-natal children can be safely and reliably transferred out of a natural womb would transform social attitudes toward abortion:

Abortion kills a human being in its most innocent and most vulnerable stateoften through grotesque violence While a small fraction of these abortions occur because the pre-natal child (by no will of its own) gravely endangers the health and life of its mother, the overwhelming majority of abortions occur because the burden of the child is for myriad reasons unwanted. This is the case for hundreds of thousands of abortions each year in the United States.

Today, it is common to justify this violence on the basis of bodily autonomy the claim that the mother has the right to deny the pre-natal child the use of her body at any time If, however, a prenatal child could be safely and reliably removed to an artificial womb, this violence would no longer be the necessary result of vindicating bodily autonomy. Rather, a woman would be able to transfer the pre-natal child without any of the attendant violence. Voluntarily choosing that violence would quickly become a horrifying notion, and society would rapidly embrace the artificial womb as the means of escaping pregnancy and childbirth.

Undoubtedly, this would be a tremendous step toward resolving the moral, legal, and political crisis of abortion. Might I add, however, that such future generations would also come to regard todays abortion regime as horrifically grotesque and flagrantly immoral? When abortion is no longer a necessary evil to vindicate bodily autonomy, future generations will see abortion in its naked form: evil. And history does not treat well the promoters of necessary evil.

Jesse has thoughts on reproductive rights, too:

If you squint a little, artificial wombs look like a solution that can satisfy everyone: A mother who does not want to complete her pregnancy could surrender the child to a designated agency, much as one would currently under safe haven laws, whereupon it would be received into an artificial womb, carried to term, and adopted. The mother gets her autonomy and is relieved of the burden, pro-life interests get a non-terminated fetus.

Everyone is happy, yes?

I suspect this would satisfy many moderate pro-life and pro-choice individuals, while creating new issues and some shifted goalposts on both sides. On the pro-choice side, you may have some arguing that even being required to surrender the fetus is an intolerable imposition on the mothers autonomy: they may prefer to terminate their pregnancy in a different way, they will have to live with the burden of knowing their child is alive in the world (the very characterization of this knowledge as a burden is a topic prime for interesting debate), or perhaps most intriguing of all, they may simply argue that the very decision to bring a life fully into the world is one which should lie solely with the mother (this brings to mind the fascinating question of how the availability of artificial wombs might affect paternal rights in deciding the course of a pregnancy).

On the pro-life side, you will surely have purists arguing that artificial wombs are aberrant and unnatural, and that health risks they impose on the gestating fetus are unconscionable. I also expect moralistic arguments to the effect that a mother who is pregnant through consensual intercourse does not deserve to be relieved of their pregnancythat they have a positive responsibility to the child to carry it fully to term. Most interesting to me is not so much the change in position that this would entail, as how it would bring to the forefront of these arguments the centrality of conservative moral values: choice, consequence, and more than a little biblical bear-your-sin stoicism.

And last but not least, Susanna explains why she favors research to push this technology forward:

Im 24 years old, and while I dont expect to have a baby soon, I think I would like to in the future. Im not in the least excited about being pregnant though. It seems both extremely uncomfortable and extremely inconvenient. A way to make a (biological) family without that long, painful, dangerous process sounds wonderfully liberating.

I wonder how artificial wombs might shift our broader social attitudes toward motherhood. If babies didnt come out of women, might they be less of a womens thing and might it seem less natural to assume women will take on more baby-related responsibilities? I dont think calling something unnatural is even close to giving a definitive reason to reject it. Human life in a natural state, without any of our technological advances, would be a lot less pleasant in many ways than it is right now. There may be many upsides to natural birth (lots of evidence suggests many benefits of breastfeeding, for example, and its hard to see how that could come along with artificial wombs) and this isnt to deny them. But the potential seems huge. I, for one, would strongly support medical (and ethical!) research into the possibility of artificial wombs for humans.

Thank you for all of your responses, and see you next week.

Read this article:
Liberation or Folly? Your Takes on Artificial Wombs - The Atlantic

Commentary: Abortion ban is an attack on the lives of Black people – Austin American-Statesman

Marcela Howell and Marsha Jones| Austin American-Statesman

Texas abortion clinics can sue over the state's controversial ban

The Supreme Court ruled that clinics challenging a Texas abortion ban can continue to fight in lower federal courts, but permitted the law to remain.

Associated Press, USA TODAY

As we approach the 49thanniversary of Roe v. Wade, the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case legalizing abortion, Black women in Texas are not celebrating this constitutional right but fighting to keep it. Texans seeking abortion care have to drive 14 times farther than they did previously, according to an analysis of the states new abortion ban by the reproductive health research group the Guttmacher Institute. For 70 percent of the Texans seeking care, Louisiana is the closest state to obtain a legal abortion. Twenty-three percent have to travel to Oklahoma, the analysis found which, like Louisiana, has multiple abortion restrictions of its own.

And thats the case for people fortunate enough to have the money, transportation, time off from work, childcare and other resources needed to make the journey. Forcing people to go out of state is just one way that this extreme abortion ban threatens the health and rights of Texans who need timely care.

It will come as news to no one that being Black in Texas has long been fraught with disadvantages and discrimination. For Black women and pregnant people who give birth, our bodies and families continue to face unjust surveillance. New mothers who are Black are more likely to be subject to drug screenings, frequently without our knowledge or consent. Black parents are more likely to be reported to or investigated by Child Protective Services, compared to white families.

Black women are disparately likely to experience sexual violence and abuse, making the Texas bans lack of exceptions for rape or incest particularly callous and cruel for Black women. Forced births are particularly deadly for Black pregnant people in a country where Black women are three times more likely than white women to die from complications related to childbirth. Its even more perilous in Texas, which leads the country in postpartum deaths.

In a new tack, the Texas law is written so no government office or official is responsible for enforcing it, instead the law offers a bounty on people who perform or aid and abet access to abortion. Last month, a state district court judge agreed with critics of the vigilante measure. Judge David Peeples ruled the enforcement by private individuals unconstitutional.

Nonetheless, the far-reaching law banning access to abortion care after six weeks gestation, was allowed to stand by the U.S. Supreme Court. American College of Obstetrician and Gynecologists Lead for Equity Transformation Dr. Jennifer Villavicencio spoke about this restriction in The New York Times.

Forcing [people] to find out about a pregnancy and make a decision about how to manage it in a short period of time is antithetical to ethical care, said Dr. Villavicencio.

The bottom line is that abortion bans do not stop abortions; they just make abortion less safe and this is especially true for Black women. A study that looked at potential outcomes of a nationwide abortion ban found it would lead to a 21 percent increase in the number of pregnancy-related deaths overall and a 33 percent increase among Black women.

With their bright smiles reflecting the blithe confidence that comes with knowing the new law will not affect their privileged existence, on Sept. 1, 2021 conservative members of the Texas legislature and Governor Greg Abbott who cant or chooses not to understand basic human reproduction signed into law a targeted attack on the health, rights and lives of Black people. The abortion ban is a call to action and we will not stand idly by.

Howell is founder, CEO and president of In Our Own Voice: National Black Women's Reproductive Justice Agenda.

Jones is co-founder and executive director of The Afiya Center, areproductive justice organization in North Texas founded and directed by Black women.

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Commentary: Abortion ban is an attack on the lives of Black people - Austin American-Statesman