Planned Parenthood's Caped Assassin

Screwtape must be getting a little worried that the diabolical activity at work in our nation’s largest abortuary, Planned Parenthood, is becoming more and more apparent to the casual observer. Planned Parenthood in San Francisco recently unveiled a "superheroine" named "Dianisis" (anyone remember their Greco-Roman mythology?) whose mission is to rid the world of chastity advocates and anti-abortion demonstrators.

EXCERPT:

"The eight-minute [animated video] ‘A Superhero for Choice,’ posted on the Planned Parenthood Golden Gate website, has a bespectacled black woman in San Francisco morphing into a red-suited flying enforcer, bent on making the world safe for the organization’s values.

"Viewers see three teenagers talking with an ugly green-faced man sporting a top hat and bow tie who tries to tell the kids abstinence is the only sure way to protect against sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted pregnancy. The teen girl rebuts the man, naming several birth-control methods.

"Retorts the little green man: ‘Those are instruments from the devil’s toolbox!’

"The superhero arrives in time to fill a trash can with water and dump the pro-abstinence character into it, slamming the cover down. After the man’s muffled voice eventually dies off, the superhero tosses the teens a ‘safe sex kit,’ reminding the kids: ‘Safe is sexy!’

"The ‘Superhero for Choice,’ dubbed Dianisis, next confronts a group of protesters in front of a Planned Parenthood facility. They, too, are ugly and have green faces, carrying signs that say, ‘Pray for thy sins.’

"The superhero character uses a ‘condom gun’ that catches each protester in a prophylactic bubble, which subsequently explodes. Though she admits the protesters have a First Amendment right to picket, she glories in the fact that people can now visit the Planned Parenthood facility unimpeded."

GET THE STORY.

(WARNING: The second image taken from the cartoon and posted with WorldNet’s story is quite graphic.)

ANOTHER WARNING: Surf through the San Francisco Planned Parenthood site at your own risk. Some of the materials that are marketed for teenagers are unmentionable in polite company.

Planned Parenthood’s Caped Assassin

Ppsuperhero

Screwtape must be getting a little worried that the diabolical activity at work in our nation’s largest abortuary, Planned Parenthood, is becoming more and more apparent to the casual observer. Planned Parenthood in San Francisco recently unveiled a "superheroine" named "Dianisis" (anyone remember their Greco-Roman mythology?) whose mission is to rid the world of chastity advocates and anti-abortion demonstrators.

EXCERPT:

"The eight-minute [animated video] ‘A Superhero for Choice,’ posted on the Planned Parenthood Golden Gate website, has a bespectacled black woman in San Francisco morphing into a red-suited flying enforcer, bent on making the world safe for the organization’s values.

"Viewers see three teenagers talking with an ugly green-faced man sporting a top hat and bow tie who tries to tell the kids abstinence is the only sure way to protect against sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted pregnancy. The teen girl rebuts the man, naming several birth-control methods.

"Retorts the little green man: ‘Those are instruments from the devil’s toolbox!’

"The superhero arrives in time to fill a trash can with water and dump the pro-abstinence character into it, slamming the cover down. After the man’s muffled voice eventually dies off, the superhero tosses the teens a ‘safe sex kit,’ reminding the kids: ‘Safe is sexy!’

"The ‘Superhero for Choice,’ dubbed Dianisis, next confronts a group of protesters in front of a Planned Parenthood facility. They, too, are ugly and have green faces, carrying signs that say, ‘Pray for thy sins.’

"The superhero character uses a ‘condom gun’ that catches each protester in a prophylactic bubble, which subsequently explodes. Though she admits the protesters have a First Amendment right to picket, she glories in the fact that people can now visit the Planned Parenthood facility unimpeded."

GET THE STORY.

(WARNING: The second image taken from the cartoon and posted with WorldNet’s story is quite graphic.)

ANOTHER WARNING: Surf through the San Francisco Planned Parenthood site at your own risk. Some of the materials that are marketed for teenagers are unmentionable in polite company.

Sampling Music South Of The Border

A reader writes:

I’m an artist (hip hop), and part of the "tradition" of making good beats is
sampling from other records. Technically, this is illegal without
permission.

Apparently so. I was surprised, thinking that fair use might be a defense for very small bits of music–and it might still be–but

HERE’S A LAWYER SAYING THAT FAIR USE IS NOT A DEFENSE IN SUCH CASES.

Obviously, sometimes the spirit of the law outweighs the letter. For
example, nobody concerns themselves with crossing the street at the
crosswalk, even though it’s illegal not to do so. The spirit of the law is
safety, and so long as you follow it, it’s no sin.

Can I apply this same principle to sampling?

Potentially, but with some significant qualifiers that I’ll get into in a minute.

Theft is defined as the use of someone else’s property against the reasonable will of the owner, and I can imagine uses of short samples of music that would be so insignificant from an economic point of view that they would not be contrary to the reasonable will of the copyright holder (meaning: it would be unreasonable for the copyright holder to object).

For example, if you were making songs purely for your own entertainment and not distributing them, this would likely not be contrary to the reasonable will of the copyright holder any more than it would be for me to make a collage of pictures and passages I had snipped out of books or magazines, provided I don’t start distributing such collages. (There are other examples, but I wanted to pick a clear one, and it’s clearer if you aren’t distributing such works than if you are.)

The spirit of the sampling law
is to protect commercial profit off of someone else’s work.

True.

My music,
however, is done for God and the Church. What money I make from it, I give
to charity or I use it to make more music.

That doesn’t do anything to overturn the copyright holder’s right to remuneration, though. It may mean that you are not making money, but it doesn’t give them the money that they would be paid if you obtained permission to do this legally. They’re still out money that the law says is due to them.

I’m not distributing to millions
of people.

This means that the amount of money that the copyright holder is due will be smaller, but they’re still out money that the law says they’re due if you don’t pay it.

Since it’s not intrinsically immoral to sample, is it morally
licit for me to use small samples in my beats? It would be another matter if
I were making entire songs or records available, but these are just small
samples incorporated into the beat.

Prescing from the question of the prudence of the matter (in which you have to reckon the likelihood of getting sued and having to pay huge sums of money that you may not have) and considering the matter strictly morally, it seems to me that you might be able to morally justify sampling if you were doing it for your own entertainment and performing for others in non-commercial (nobody pays money) venues.

But if you are distributing copies (for money or not) or selling copies (even small numbers of copies or for small fees), I would suggest that you do one of the following things:

  1. Confine your sampling to the kind of uses mentioned above,
  2. Secure permission to use the samples you want to (the guy I linked above says this is often possible to do for free, and it would secure you against being sued),
  3. Lay down some material yourself that you can then sample (this would be real cheap or free if you’ve got the skills),
  4. Hire or call in a favor from some friends to get some material laid down that you can sample (this should be pretty cheap; maybe just free beer or something), or
  5. Move to Canada or another country where they have more liberal sampling laws (probably too much to ask).

Hope this helps!

Copying Music North Of The Border

A reader writes:

Is it wrong or sinful to copy music if it is legal to do so?

In Canada, right around the birth of MP3 and affordable CD burners, the music industry (Canadian and US companies) lobbied the government incessantly about pirating.  They wanted Canada to put a tax on all recordable media especially blank CD’s that would be shared among artists and studios.  Anyway, the government eventually caved and now there is a tax on tapes, blank CD’s, and even MP3 players regardless of whether you intend to use them for copied music or not.

In exchange for the tax, the law allows for Canadians to make copies of music for personal use.  The only restriction is that you must copy the music yourself (i.e. your friend cannot make a copy and give it to you).  There is doubt on whether downloading the music with p2p file sharing clients fits under that law.  Yesterday the courts ruled that it is allowable under that law but there are going to be plenty appeals by music companies.  Some legislators are planning on introducing legislation to disallow p2p downloading of copyright materials but for now its legal.

So what would be the Church’s view on this?  Would there be a difference between physically copying a CD vs downloading a file in given that the former is clearly legal and the later is ambiguously legal?

Here’s are a few supporting links: Yesterday’s Ruling, Copyright Board of Canada

The ultimate standard of right and wrong is the divine law, but the divine law often contains principles that much be given more concrete form in particular situations by human legislators. Thus, for example, the divine law would require that, if one drives an automobile, one must drive it safely (apart from emergency circumstances). It is not determined by the divine law, however, whether one should drive the car on the right or the left side of the road.

Given the way many streets and highways work–and the way human being work–it will be necessary to adopt a policy of either driving on the right or the left for safety reasons, but God doesn’t determine a single policy that all much follow on this point. Instead, it is left up to human legislators to give give the requirement of safe driving more concrete form by determining, in a particular region, whether driving or the left or the right will be required.

Once the legislators have determined that, we are bound by it and–correspondingly–liberated by it. In other words, if they decide that motorists are to drive on the right hand side of the road then when we are in their domain we are bound not to drive on the left hand side of the road but (unless something else intervenes to affect the situation) we are at liberty to drive on the right.

Something similar pertains to music copying. There are basic principles regarding economics, labor, and property embedded in the divine law, but the particular form in which these are to be cashed out (no pun intended) in a paricular society are left to human legislators to determine.

Once they’ve done that in your society, however, you are both bound and freed by what they do. You are bound not to violate the law but also free to take advantage of the liberty it affords.

Thus if Canada (or some other country) rules that a particular form of music copying is legal then it should be regarded as morally permissible–until the contrary is proven.

It is possible for human legislators to so badly botch their job that they make laws which are fundamentally unjust. In these cases one would (at least theoretically) have moral liberty to exceed what the laws allows one to do. Conversely, one might not be morally free to take advantage of what the law allows you to do.

However, there is a moral presumption in favor of the law. If you want to argue that a particular act of a human legislature is unjust, the burden of proof will be on you.

This is going to be very difficult to do in the case of laws relating to electronic copying of music. The whole subject of copyright law is slippery enough and liable to change due to technological innovation that I don’t see a clear argument that it is unjust toward copyright holders and thus that one would be morally bound to refrain from exercising the liberty that copyright law affords one.

Until such an argument emerges, it seems to me that one is within one’s moral rights to avail oneself of the liberty that copyright law permits one. Thus if Canada allows music copying in particular circumstances such as the ones you mention, I don’t see why you can’t do it.

The law you mention regarding personal copying of CDs, tapes, etc., seems settled, and so if I were a Canadian then I wouldn’t have a problem doing that.

If Canadian law regarding peer-to-peer copying is more tentative then it would seem to me that you would be within your moral rights to act on the law as you presently understand it, in keeping with the virtue of prudence.

Thus if it appears that the law would allow you to do p2p copying then you could go ahead and do so unless you foresee a substantial chance that the law will be reversed and that you will be sued for having done the copying during the period when the law was unclear. (The latter doesn’t seem that likely to me, but then what do I know about Canadian law?)

Hope this helps!

Attending Non-Catholic Services In A Mixed Marriage

A reader writes:

What is the official Church teaching and/or guidance on attending both Mass and
a church service at another Christian denomination on Sundays?  Here is some
more specific background information.  My family (wife + kids) and I are
currently members of a Protestant church.  I have been reading up on
the Catholic faith for a number of years now and I’m considering pursuing it
further and possibly joining the Catholic Church.  However, my wife does not
share this desire. 

I was wondering if I could attend both on Sundays if I
became Catholic.  I’m assuming that on days when our Protestant church serves
communion that I would need to refrain.  I have not really brought up the issue
of the kids with my wife either, but one step at a time.

Thank you for writing! I pray that God will smooth your journey as you work your way through these issues.

You are correct that, as a Catholic, you could not receive communion in your current church since Protestant churches (unfortunately) did not retain a sacramental priesthood and therefore, apart from very exceptional circumstances, do not have the Real Presence when they celebrate the Lord’s Supper. Canon law does not allow Catholics to receive communion in these circumstances (CIC 846 ยง2).

Present canon law does not, however, prohibit Catholics from attending non-Catholic services. Therefore, you would be able to continue to attend Protestant services with your wife and family as long as doing so does not pose a problem for your Catholic faith.

You would have the obligations other Catholics do, such as the duty to attend Mass. In some mixed-marriage families this is solved by attending Mass on Saturday evening and then going to Protestant services on Sunday morning, or the reverse, or by going to both services on Sundays (e.g., a morning service at once church and an evening service at the other). In some cases, both spouses go to both services.

Hope this helps, and God bless you!

Roe vs. Wade vs. (Nano) Technology

A reader writes:

Often, when you’re arguing about abortion, you’re told that many embryos fail to implant, with the implication that if God lets this happen, he can’t place much value on early human life.

Yeah, bad implication. One can chalk it up to the Fall just as well. Also, it isn’t certain that all of these miscarriages were human beings. While under ordinary circumstances the union of sperm and ovum result in a new human being from the moment of conception, there might be situations of gross genetic defects in which we might not be dealing with a human being. Unfortunately, we simply don’t know enough–either about genetics or about what goes on in early pregnancy–to draw any conclusions with confidence at this point.

If we develop nanotechnology capable of surgery on a cellular level, would we:

a) be obliged to save these embryos if possible

b) allow the embryos to die (there may be good reasons why they fail to implant) – it is a natural lifespan, no matter how brief, or

c) make this a choice of the parents – many couples who have difficulty conceiving would benefit

The answer to this one is not yet clear. Almost certainly the situation would start out with (c) as the deault option, if for no other reason that initially such nanosurgery would be extraordinarily expensive and beyond the means of many couples. It would likely require heroic sacrifices for many couples to even gain access to the technology in its early days.

It would also take time for moral theologians and then the Church to come to conclusions about what is morally obligatory in this situation. Until that starts to get sorted out, it would still be up to couples to decide what to do.

I suspect that we would not arrive at a point where the Magisterium was saying that nanotechnology must be used in these situations. For one thing, as noted above, some of the conceptions may be so grossly genetically defective that they simply are not humans.

Imagine, if you will, a conception that has five chromosomes instead of the usual forty-six. I don’t know if that ever happens, but use it for purposes of a thought experiment. Such a conception likely would not be a human, could only live a very brief time, and could not be repaired by nanosurgery as adding in the needed genetic material would result in it simply not being the same entity any more.

If some conceptions are not human beings–even though, as we said, in the normal course of affairs the union of sperm and egg result in the creation of a new human being from the moment of conception–then, for those bizarre situations where conception fails to produce a human there would be no moral obligation to use the nanotech.

Further, the same kind of end-of-life calculations that we’re currently starting to go through with folks whose bodies are dying would begin to apply to those who are still in utero.

There might well be situations in which the use of the nanotech would be disproportionate to the goal to be achieved and thus not morally required. For example, using nanotech to force an embryo to implant when the embryo has a genetic defect that will cause the embryo to die in a few weeks anyway. In that case the use of the tech is likely not to be proportionate to the good to be gained and thus it will not be morally obligatory.

In cases where the nanotech is not capable of producing a proportionate good then the thing to do for many couples would be to entrust the child to God’s care and accept its death as a tragedy that will one day be undone by the power of Jesus to redeem individuals from death.

I thus find it hard to imagine a day in which it is morally obligatory to use nanotech in all circumstances. There may be some in which it is morally obligatory, but not all. Just as medical procedures to extend life for born people are obligatory in some but not all circumstances, medical procedures to extend life for the unborn may be obligatory in some but not all circumstances.

Another possible abortion-limiting benefit of nanotechnology might be to correct ectopic pregnancies, where the fetus develops outside the womb in the fallopian tubes.

I can see some circumstances in which this may help, though in other cases nanotech may not be necessary for a falopian-uterine embryo transplant. In other cases, it may not help.

And finally another benefit of nanotech would be the possibility of genetic surgery to correct defects.

Again, in some cases yes. In other cases, I don’t know that it would help. As noted, some genetic defects may be so extreme that nanosurgery might not help. Also, there may be stages of development in which there is not much for nanites to do–for example, if the baby is too small and growing too fast for the nanites to do the surgery without harming it in the process.

If nanotechnology is developed to the extent that the visionaries of the Foresight Institute hope, there could literally be no medical reason for having an abortion.

I’d want to put quotes around "medical reason" since, properly speaking, there are no medical reasons to have a direct abortion, however medical technology certainly has the potential to eliminate a large number of the instances in which individuals think that a therapeutic abortion is warranted, just as it has already eliminated many.

I would caution against thinking that we’re ever likely to get a technological fix for all the potentialities there are. There are intrinsic technological limits, and technological progress comes in stages. Sometimes those stages get sidetracked by economic factors, lack of interest on the part of researchers, political correctness, etc. We rarely get a brilliant, comprehensive fix right out of the box.

As was once pointed out to the eminent physician Dr. Stephen Franklin, "Maybe somebody should have labeled the future: ‘Some Assembly Required.’"

"The World Is Over. The Fight Has Just Begun."

That’s the tagline for the new Battlestar Galactica series.

Cool, huh?

It may soon (in the next few years) apply to another arena: the abortion debate.

Abortion Nazis have acted for years like overturning Roe would be the end of the world.

Nope.

It’d be the beginning of the fight.

Long term, pro-lifers will win that fight for simple demographic reasons: the "Roe effect." But what would the early stages of the fight look like?

HERE’S SOME ANALYSIS FROM A LADY WHO SEEMS TO BE NO FAN OF THE IDEA OF ENDING ROE BUT WHO RECOGNIZES WHAT IT WOULD MEAN IN PRACTICE.

About that fight . . . bring it on, man! Bring it on!

The sooner we fight it, the sooner baby killing ends.

“The World Is Over. The Fight Has Just Begun.”

That’s the tagline for the new Battlestar Galactica series.

Cool, huh?

It may soon (in the next few years) apply to another arena: the abortion debate.

Abortion Nazis have acted for years like overturning Roe would be the end of the world.

Nope.

It’d be the beginning of the fight.

Long term, pro-lifers will win that fight for simple demographic reasons: the "Roe effect." But what would the early stages of the fight look like?

HERE’S SOME ANALYSIS FROM A LADY WHO SEEMS TO BE NO FAN OF THE IDEA OF ENDING ROE BUT WHO RECOGNIZES WHAT IT WOULD MEAN IN PRACTICE.

About that fight . . . bring it on, man! Bring it on!

The sooner we fight it, the sooner baby killing ends.

Roe v. Wade v. Technology

Tony Blankley makes a point I’ve been making for some time:

It is the very language of Roe that carries the seed of its own possible irrelevance within the next several years. Roe enunciated the more or less unencumbered right of a woman to obtain an abortion prior to fetal viability. After viability, the right of states to regulate or prohibit abortions arise. The court defined legal viability as "potentially able to live outside the mother’s womb, albeit with artificial aid."

But medical science is remorselessly advancing on two fronts along paths that may fairly soon seize and destroy in a scientific pincer movement the viability of Roe’s reasoning.

Today, babies born after only 20 weeks of gestation routinely survive — and thus are viable under the Roe definition (and thus potentially legally safe from the abortionist’s medical weapons).

But radical research may soon reduce that 20 weeks to just a few — or perhaps no weeks.

Blankley then reports on two methods currently under development which might give us the ultimate collapse of the idea of non-viability: the artificial womb. (Interesting stuff. Read it.)

Then he notes:

Once such technologies make it medically possible for a fetus to be "potentially able to live outside the mother’s womb, albeit with artificial aid" the language of Roe v Wade will not have to be overturned. It could stay on the books as legally valid, but factually meaningless.

What may happen next?

WE MIGHT FIND OURSELVES IN A BRAVE NEW WORLD.