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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!opusc!usceast!nyikos
- From: nyikos@math.scarolina.edu (Peter Nyikos)
- Subject: Mark Cochran, check *Thornburgh*, try again
- Message-ID: <nyikos.724631548@milo.math.scarolina.edu>
- Summary: Mark Cochran v. Chief Justice Burger, dissenting
- Keywords: risks, surgical procedure
- Sender: usenet@usceast.cs.scarolina.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: USC Department of Computer Science
- Date: 17 Dec 92 22:32:28 GMT
- Lines: 134
-
- My thanks to Peter Cash for relaying this follow-up to one of my posts
- while my netserver is blind [still is--175 hours and counting, since
- the last time it received any news]. It shows an astonishing willingness
- on the part of Mark Cochran to repeat disinformation. Whether he realizes
- it is disinformation is another matter, but at least he seems quite
- confident of the truth of what he is saying.
-
- His statement, however, contradicts what Chief Justice Burger said in his
- *Thornburgh* dissent.
-
- _________________________Copy of Cochran Post__________________________
-
- From: mcochran@nyx.cs.du.edu (Mark A. Cochran)
- Subject: Re: abortion
- Message-ID: <1992Dec15.013914.12332@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
- X-Disclaimer: Nyx is a public access Unix system run by the University
- of Denver for the Denver community. The University has neither
- control over nor responsibility for the opinions of users.
- Sender: usenet@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu (netnews admin account)
- Organization: Um, err... I *know* I saw it here a few days ago...
- References: <Byqo2M.EE0@mentor.cc.purdue.edu> <1fokv0INN4rt@gap.caltech.edu> <nyikos.724089886@milo.math.scarolina.edu>
- Date: Tue, 15 Dec 92 01:39:14 GMT
- Lines: 19
-
- In article <nyikos.724089886@milo.math.scarolina.edu> nyikos@math.scarolina.edu (Peter Nyikos) writes:
-
- >And BTW, an earlier post on this thread said all pregnancy involves a
- >risk to life, and asked what the Weaver Nelson probability should be
- >before abortion is allowed. To which I would reply, that all abortion
- >involves a risk to life, and what anyone's probability should be
- >before they will EVEN SUPPORT LAWS MANDATING ABORTIONISTS INFORM WOMEN
- >OF THE RISKS INVOLVED.
- >
- What makes you think the risks are not explained?
- All invasive medical procedures require informed consent.
- Informed consent requires that all risks of the procedure be detailed.
- Care to try again?
-
- --
- Mark Cochran merlin@eddie.ee.vt.edu
- These are the views of my employer. They also represent the views of
- your employer, your government, the Church of your choice, and the
- Ghost of Elvis. So there.
- ____________________________End of post______________________________
-
- My second try:
-
- Chief Justice Burger, dissenting in 476 US at 783:
-
- The extent to which the Court has departed from the limitations
- expressed in *Roe* is readily apparent. In *Roe*, the Court
- emphasized
- "that the State does have an important and legitimate
- interest in preserving and protecting the health of the
- pregnant woman..." *Id., at 162.
-
- Yet today the Court astonishingly goes so far as to say that the
- State may not even require that a woman contemplating an abortion
- be provided with accurate medical information concerning the risks
- inherent in the medical procedure which she is about to undergo
- and the availability of state-funded alternatives if she elects
- not to run those risks. Can anyone doubt that the State could
- impose a similar requirement with respect to other medical
- procedures? Can anyone doubt that doctors routinely give similar
- information concerning risks in countless procedures having far
- less impact on life and health, both physical and emotional than
- an abortion, and risk a malpractice lawsuit if they fail to do so?
- Yet the Court concludes that the State cannot impose this
- simple information-dispensing requirement in the abortion context
- where the decision is fraught with serious physical, psychological,
- and moral concerns of the highest order.
-
- Update: this part of *Thornburgh* was overturned in *Casey*, but I do
- not know of any state law except the Pa. law that was upheld, that now
- requires abortionists to inform patients of the risks. There is NO such
- law in South Carolina, thanks in part to the head honcho [I forget his
- exact title], male, of the SC ACLU, who stated in testimony to the SC
- state legislature that such provisions are unconstitutional, and the
- bill died as a result of delaying tactics by him and other pro-choicers and
- pro-aborts.
-
- Knowing how tenacious Mark and other pro-choicers can be, I imagine they
- would tough it out by claiming that Mark made no claims as to *legal*
- requirements, only ethical ones, the risk of a lawsuit being ever-present.
-
- These people should, however, recall how aggressively Susan Garvin spoke
- when I spoke of actual life-threatening malpractice by Ismail Elguindi,
- saying I'd better be praying that my information be correct because
- NUISANCE LAWSUITS BEGET LAWSUITS against the one bringing them to court.
- How is a woman supposed to document the fact that the information was
- withheld from her? Chris Lyman figuratively snarled at me because I
- happened to be "wrong"--at least according to the court decision--about
- a Native American woman being withheld information about an actual
- ovarian cancer. And another pro-choicer (or was he a pro-abort?)
- said *drool* over the prospect of curbs being put on
-
- SLEAZY ANTI-CHOICE LAWYERS.
-
- I wonder, by the way, whether Larry Margolis can provide the place where
- the following passage from _Aborted Women, Silent no More_ was, in his
- words, "thoroughly refuted". The passage goes a bit further than Burger
- in the above dissent in certain aspects of the "doctor-patient
- relationship."
-
- Third, abortion is the only surgery for which the surgeon
- is not obliged to inform the patient of the possible risks
- of the procedure, or even of the exact nature of the procedure.
- Indeed, abortion providers are the only medical personnel who
- have a "constitutional right" to withhold information, even
- when directly questioned by the patient. ^^^^
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- [Citations to *Akron* and *Thornburgh* follow. Of course, this was before
- this year's *Casey* decision.]
-
- This right is supposedly granted so that "conscientious physicians"
- might "protect" women from being frightened by the risks they
- face or upset by what the abortion procedure will do to their
- unborn children. Unfortunately, this "right" to control and
- censure the information which is given to women also allows
- paternalistic control, manipulation, and deceit. *Abortion* *is*
- *the* *only* *medical* *procedure* *for* *which* *legal* *and*
- *medical* *codes* *deny* *the* *patient* *the* *right* *to*
- *informed* *consent*. [p.234] [italics in the original
- for starred words]
-
- I'd like to see Adrienne Regard's reaction to the above. To read her
- posts, you'd think women had no need of such information because
- they can find out all THEY CARE to know without such paternalistic
- laws. No hint of where, except the library. No lists of books or
- authors for suggested reading.
-
- Peter Nyikos
-
-
-