Comments : A Silent Voice Has No Choice

  • 18 years ago

    by James

    omg....that was great but sad you done an excellent job 5/5

  • 18 years ago

    by Elizabeth Ann

    Fascinating, I have never read one of its like.

  • 18 years ago

    by Mark Spencer

    Yes Olivia, I know about the rape victims and those who had to abort due to health reasons. In the poem I stated: "Forty million have died since this began." In the 31 years since Roe VS Wade over 45 million abortions have been recorded. I mentioned only 40. The 5+ million I didn't mention represent a generous number considered to be justifiable abortions. The 40 million I mentioned are the non-justifiable abortions. Also known as birth control abortions. God bless.

    Mark

  • 18 years ago

    by Mark Spencer

    • Day 1 - conception takes place.
    • 7 days - embryo implants in mother’s uterus.
    • 10 days - mother’s menses stop.
    • 18 days - heart begins to beat.
    • 21 days - pumps own blood through separate closed circulatory system with own blood type.
    • 28 days - eye, ear and respiratory system begin to form.
    • 42 days - brain waves recorded, skeleton complete, reflexes present.
    • 7 weeks - photo of thumb sucking.
    • 8 weeks - all body systems present.
    • 9 weeks - squints, swallows, moves tongue, makes fist.
    • 11 weeks - spontaneous breathing movements, has fingernails, all body systems working.
    • 12 weeks - weighs one ounce.
    • 16 weeks - genital organs clearly differentiated, grasps with hands, swims, kicks, turns, somersaults, (still not felt by the mother.)
    • 18 weeks - vocal cords work – can cry.
    • 20 weeks - has hair on head, weighs one pound, 12 inches long.
    • 23 weeks - 15% chance of viability outside of womb if birth premature.
    • 24 weeks - 56% of babies survive premature birth.
    • 25 weeks - 79% of babies survive premature birth.

    (Source: M. Allen et. al., "The Limits of Viability." New England Journal of Medicine. 11/25/93: Vol. 329, No. 22, p. 1597.)

    Of course the extremist will say this is nothing more than right wing propaganda. And then there’s Dr. Jerome Lejeune, known as "The Father of Modern Genetics," who testified that human life begins at conception before the Louisiana Legislature's House Committee on the Administration of Criminal Justice on June 7, 1990.

    Dr. Lejeune explained that within three to seven days after fertilization we can determine if the new human being is a boy or a girl. "At no time," Dr. Lejeune said, "is the human being a blob of protoplasm. As far as your nature is concerned, I see no difference between the early person that you were at conception and the late person which you are now. You were, and are, a human being."

    Dr. Lejeune also pointed out that each human being is unique -- different from the mother -- from the moment of conception. He said, "Recent discoveries by Dr. Alec Jeffreys of England, demonstrate that this information [on the DNA molecule] is stored by a system of bar codes not unlike those found on products at the supermarket...it is no longer a theory that each of us is unique."

    Dr. Jerome Lejeune died on April 3, 1994. Dr. Lejeune of Paris, France was a medical doctor, a Doctor of Science and a professor of Fundamental Genetics for over twenty years. Dr. Lejeune discovered the genetic cause of Down Syndrome, receiving the Kennedy Prize for the discovery and, in addition, received the Memorial Allen Award Medal, the world's highest award for work in the field of Genetics. He practiced his profession at the Hôpital des Enfants Malades (Sick Children's Hospital) in Paris. Dr. Lejeune was a member of the American Academy of the Arts and Science, a member of the Royal Society of Medicine in London, The Royal Society of Science in Stockholm, the Science Academy in Italy and Argentina, The Pontifical Academy of Science and The Academy of Medicine in France.

  • 18 years ago

    by chloe

    first time i read it i didnt get it until i got down to the part about the unborn. But then knowing what it meant i went back and read it from the start it and threw me, i meen it was absoultley brilliant, never seen a poem like this before, great job! x

  • 18 years ago

    by ROB J

    that was cool