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Colorado's Failed Life-At-Fertilization 'Personhood' Initiative Lives On In Mississippi

Abortion

By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS   10/17/11 02:42 PM ET   AP

JACKSON, Miss. -- A national effort to put abortion bans into state constitutions is looking for its first victory next month in Mississippi, where voters are being asked to approve an amendment declaring that life begins when a human egg is fertilized.

Supporters hope the so-called personhood initiative will succeed in a Bible Belt state that already has some of the nation's toughest abortion regulations and only a single clinic where the procedures are performed.

The initiative is endorsed by both candidates in a governor's race that's being decided the same day. While Mississippi is the only state with such an amendment on the ballot this fall, efforts are under way to put the question to voters in at least four other states in 2012.

Any victory at the state level would likely be short-lived since a life-at-fertilization amendment would conflict with the U.S. Constitution. Leaders of the movement say their ultimate goal is to provoke a court fight to overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision that established a legal right to abortion.

Opponents say defining life as beginning at fertilization could block some common forms of birth control and deter Mississippi physicians from performing in vitro fertilization because they'd fear criminal charges if an embryo doesn't survive. They also say supporters of the amendment are trying to impose their religious beliefs on others to force women to carry unwanted pregnancies, including those caused by rape or incest.

Those campaigning for the Mississippi initiative – including the Tupelo-based American Family Association – are using glowing images of babies in utero or chubby-cheeked newborns, and say they're trying to end a sin that blights America.

The proposal being decided Nov. 8 has divided the medical community and bewildered some physicians.

"We feel like the docs and the patients are getting caught in the middle of a war between the anti-abortion folks and the pro-choice folks," said Dr. Wayne Slocum of Tupelo, head of the Mississippi section of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, a group that opposes the initiative.

George Cochran, a University of Mississippi constitutional law professor, said even if Mississippi voters adopt the initiative, he believes it's unlikely to ever be enforced because it's certain to be challenged and overturned in court.

"Suits are brought, they have it declared unconstitutional," Cochran said. "It's not very difficult."

Cochran said there's a 5-4 majority on the U.S. Supreme Court now to uphold Roe v. Wade. That and other Supreme Court rulings have required states to allow abortions up to the point that a fetus could survive outside of the womb – approximately 24 weeks.

Still, a win at the ballot box "will send shockwaves around this country, then around the world," predicted Keith Mason, co-founder of Personhood USA, the Colorado group that's pushing the petition drives around the country.

Mason's group eventually wants to amend the U.S. Constitution to say life begins at fertilization, and he hopes the push for state constitutional amendments will create momentum. Similar "human life" amendments have been introduced on the federal level repeatedly over the past 30 years and have failed.

Thad Hall, a University of Utah professor who has written a book about abortion politics, said people who want to outlaw abortion are seeking state-by-state changes that often put the question to voters, rather than federal changes.

"What you see here is a kind of difference between slowness and difficulty in policy changes on federal level ... and the ease with which states can change public policy," Hall said.

People are gathering signatures in Florida, Montana, Ohio and Oregon to try to put personhood initiatives on ballots starting in 2012, Mason said. He said similar efforts will begin soon in eight other states.

Personhood Ohio said Friday that it had reached its first threshold toward the 2012 ballot by gathering more than 1,000 signatures, allowing it to start knocking on doors to gather the rest of the 385,000 signatures it needs.

Previously, Mason's group got amendments on Colorado ballots in 2008 and 2010, but they were rejected. Some groups that oppose abortion, including Eagle Forum, opposed the Colorado efforts, saying the ballot initiatives only enriched Planned Parenthood and other groups that support abortion rights.

In Mississippi, the state's largest Christian denomination, the Mississippi Baptist Convention, is backing the personhood proposal through its lobbying arm, the Christian Action Commission. "The Lord expects us to value life, even as he does," the commission's executive director, Jimmy Porter, says in a video.

The state already has several laws regulating abortions, including parental or judicial consent for any minor to get an abortion and mandatory in-person counseling and a 24-hour wait before any woman can terminate a pregnancy.

The Mississippi State Medical Association says it is not supporting the initiative – a step short of actively opposing it.

"I agree with the sentiments of this movement; but, I can't agree with throwing a physician into a system where the decision will not be malpractice but wrongful death or murder," the group's president and family physician Dr. Thomas E. Joiner wrote in a letter to members.

Slocum, who leads the ob-gyn group, said the amendment could ban forms of birth control that prevent a fertilized egg from implanting, such as the IUD or the morning-after pill, and that it might limit physicians' willingness to perform in vitro fertilization.

The American Society for Reproductive Medicine also opposes the amendment, saying it would "unduly restrict an infertile patient's right to make decisions about embryos created as part of the in vitro fertilization process."

Dr. Freda Bush of Jackson, an obstetrician-gynecologist who's campaigning for the ballot measure, said she believes the initiative would not affect hormonal birth control pills or curtail in vitro fertilization. She said opponents of the ballot measure are spreading rumors to scare people.

The Mississippi initiative has already survived a legal effort to keep it off the ballot. One of the plaintiffs was Cristen Hemmins of Oxford, who was raped by two strangers in 1991 in Jackson.

She said she didn't become pregnant through the rape, but she's insulted that any woman who does should have to carry out an unwanted pregnancy, whether it came about through rape or other circumstances.

"I just think it's a travesty in America that the government could make me bear a child that I don't want to have or that could endanger my life as a victim of rape or a violent crime," Hemmins said.

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JACKSON, Miss. -- A national effort to put abortion bans into state constitutions is looking for its first victory next month in Mississippi, where voters are being asked to approve an amendment decla...
JACKSON, Miss. -- A national effort to put abortion bans into state constitutions is looking for its first victory next month in Mississippi, where voters are being asked to approve an amendment decla...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrSarcasm
Opinion Does Not Equal Truth
04:15 PM on 11/08/2011
SEPARATION OF CHURCH & STATE.
03:55 AM on 10/28/2011
I think this initiative is ridiculous. It's another state trying to govern by church. I'm sure glad I don't live in a state that tells me what to do with my body.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Demarcus Jackson
Community College Psychology Prof in the South
02:01 AM on 10/28/2011
Mississippi's unemployment rate is 10.3% by the way.
11:31 PM on 10/27/2011
We cannot simultaneously enforce the rights of a zygote as a legal person without violating the rights of the mother who carries it. Because both entities occupy the same space at the same time, the entity for whom the government can articulate physical dimensions and effect a physical relationship takes precedence.
It's not a moral issue. It's an enforcement issue. We do not have either jurisdiction or power over the metaphysical only over the physical. Without a physical definition of our legal person-hood and private domain, we are all at risk of physical exploitation ranging from enslavement to the involuntary harvesting of our organs for the rich and powerful.
If you still need Christian moral guidance on this issue, The Living God does speak to us through 1John Ch4. If a man says, I love God, and hateth his sister, he is a liar: for he that loveth not his sister whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
brinniewales
11:30 PM on 10/26/2011
I currently live in a country that completely forbids abortion. Not for rape, not for incest, not for any reason.
One of the most insidious side effects of the "no abortion" law pertains to the OB health of women in general. Doctors and public hospitals will not assist women who present with any vaginal hemorrhaging, including post-menopausal hemorrhaging, because they are fearful of the legal ramifications that they may be inadvertently "assisting" in a spontaneous (or not) abortion.
There is an eleven year old girl in my community who is pregnant. Physically, carrying a baby to full term is doubtful and natural childbirth is impossible. Her life is totally at risk and will probably be lost. Is this what Mississippi wants?
The proposal for Mississippi is similar to laws enacted in only six countries of the world: Vatican City, El Salvador, Malta, Nicaragua, The Philippines, and Chile. Although too late for Mississippi, other states proposing these types of laws need to do better at researching the ramifications.
I am totally confused by the fact that Roe v Wade has been in place since the '70s, yet all these years later, people are still trying to rescind or circumvent it. If a woman does not believe in abortion, then she can decide not to have one. It's her body. It's her choice.
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dcsloan
Theology, Education, Computers
05:38 PM on 10/25/2011
Personhood begins with consciousness, not conception.

By defining personhood as beginning at conception:

* every miscarriage will require a criminal investigation.

* in vitro fertilization will be illegal because approximately half of the implanted embryos will not survive.

* Ectopic pregnancies cannot be treated until the embryo is dead or has been expelled because legally the embryo has been given more value than the life of the mother.

* partial miscarriages cannot be treated until the embryo is dead or has been expelled because legally the embryo has been given more value than the life of the mother.

* An anencephaly pregnancy and other terminal birth defects cannot be aborted because legally the embryo has been given more value than the life of the mother.

The sad part is that if those who oppose abortion had spent the years since Roe v. Wade funding scientific research into pre-natal consciousness and awareness and how it can be objectively determined, then Roe v. Wade would have been modified and strengthened to prohibit abortion before the last trimester. At the same time, it would have strengthened the right of women to have an abortion before the onset of personhood.

But that kind of cooperation and finding of "common ground" is not going to happen. Both sides find it more profitable to be divisive and oppositional.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gloriaswanson43
Ask and you will get more info.
07:38 PM on 10/20/2011
Ah, yes, this will certainly send shock waves throughout the world!! The rest of the world already wonders if we've lost our minds and this will confirm it. A fertilized egg is not a baby. It is not a life as you know it. No woman should be forced to carry a child she doesn't want to carry, period. Birth control fails, sterilization fails, abstinence is a nice goal but is completely unreasonable. For the men, when you see a woman you would like to have sex with but not have children with..don't have sex with her. The union, as you already know, could create a child. Have more control over your own sperm. For the women, condoms always and use your own birth control. The same thing applies to you, though. He's cute, he's sexy, he's dumb as a post and you don't want his kids. Don't have sex with him.
Oh, and interfering with the invitro fertilization help? Really not cool.
12:08 AM on 10/20/2011
The sad thing also, is ignoring "God's design," wherein 50% of fertilized eggs are never successfully implanted in the womb, or are spontaneously aborted within the first few weeks or months. So, they are requiring greater control over embryos and fetuses than even God (Nature) has provided. Go figure.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Demarcus Jackson
Community College Psychology Prof in the South
09:26 PM on 10/19/2011
The unemployment rate in Mississippi is 10.3% and this is stupid initiative if the focus. Sick!
Source: http://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=z1ebjpgk2654c1_&met_y=unemployment_rate&idim=state:ST280000&fdim_y=seasonality:S&dl=en&hl=en&q=unemployment+rate+in+mississippi
12:09 AM on 10/19/2011
Masturbation prohibition amendment, continued:

The Biblical foundation for this offense is clearly stated in Genesis 38:8-10, as follows:

Then Judah said to Onan, “Go in to your brother’s wife, and perform your duty as a brother-in-law to her, and raise up offspring for your brother.” And Onan knew that the offspring would not be his; so it came about that when he went in to his brother’s wife, he wasted his seed on the ground, in order not to give offspring to his brother. But what he did was displeasing in the sight of the Lord, so He took his life also.

This verse clearly demonstrates the continuity of human life from semen to conception, and the unlawful interruption of the beginning of life from masturbation. God’s penalty was death.

Therefore, be it enacted that the act of contraception, including acts of masturbation, shall be a felony when practiced to prevent conception; furthermore, all acts of masturbation will be a misdemeanor insofar as the wasting of semen is an offense to God and the sanctity of the procreation of human life.

Appropriate methods of investigation, prosecution and sanctions shall be set by the legislature within six months of the adoption of this amendment.
03:45 PM on 10/19/2011
Brilliant!
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goatini
We are two-legged wombs, that’s all
09:58 PM on 10/19/2011
"Police! Open up! We have a warrant to search your laundry hamper! Millions of potential lives have been destroyed and you have the stiff socks to prove it!"
11:36 PM on 10/19/2011
LOL! Thanks - the first example of enforcement!
12:09 AM on 10/19/2011
I'm sorry, this amendment just doesn't go far enough. There is continuity in the procreation of life even before conception, and so I propose the following additional amendment to Mississippi and the other states considering Personhood Amendments:

Amendment 27 –
The Mississippi Beginning of Life Amendment-

Be it Enacted by the People of the State of Mississippi: SECTION 1. Article III of the constitution of the state of Mississippi is hereby amended BY THE ADDITION OF A NEW SECTION TO READ: Section 34. Beginning of Life defined. As used in this Article III of the state constitution, "The term 'beginning of life' or 'persons' shall include every human being from the moment of oogenesis in the mother and spermatogenesis in the father who are procreating." This initiative shall not require any additional revenue for implementation.

Insofar as the essential DNA for the conception of a human embryo exists in the ova and sperm of the procreating parents, thus marking the true beginning of human life, it is necessary to protect the sources of human life from wasteful destruction. This is especially a concern in regards to the male, who is prone to wasting his seed through masturbation.

continued in next post
11:02 PM on 10/18/2011
"In Mississippi, the state's largest Christian denomination, the Mississippi Baptist Convention, is backing the personhood proposal through its lobbying arm, the Christian Action Commission."
#1 - how can a church have a lobbying arm?
#2 - why is the Mississippi Attorney General allowing them to remain a tax exempt entity?
03:55 PM on 10/18/2011
"The inalienable right to life possessed by every human being is present from the moment of initial formation, and all human beings shall be entitled to the equal protection of persons under the law." Learn more by downloading the free Personhood Booklet at:
http://www.personhoodinitiative.com/about-personhood.html
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goatini
We are two-legged wombs, that’s all
10:00 PM on 10/19/2011
"Police! Open up! We have a warrant for your used menstrual products! We have reason to believe that a fertilized egg was passed during your menses!"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
giftsthatpurr
zestful life
07:44 PM on 11/03/2011
Hpw many of these identical posts have you put out? this is your fourth!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ravencalling
My macro-bio is full
08:28 AM on 10/18/2011
Attended an event this last weekend where the flyers mentioned where being handed out. I couldn't help but be moved by the irony that I saw around me. Poor people in bad health, young people in bad health (severely obese) all wanting to sign up to save these "to be" fetuses. Please people, look to yourselves and your families and save them first! Care about the ones that are living now!
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goatini
We are two-legged wombs, that’s all
10:02 PM on 10/19/2011
Do these nitwits have any idea what a threat obesity is to sustaining a successful pregnancy? Their flagrant abuse of their bodies... one would think they were evil, selfish pro-miscarriagers!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ultratrails2
08:27 AM on 10/18/2011
Just curious to know at what point do these people believe a corporation becomes a person?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cynical one
Don't let facts get in the way of a good rant.
10:36 AM on 10/18/2011
Does that mean we can ab_ort a corporation???? I'm all for doing that to GoldManSacks.
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GirlOutWest
I hope to be the person my dog thinks I am.
01:13 PM on 10/18/2011
Or maybe Bank of America?