Do Not Feed The Erik

Okay, folks. A little lunchblogging.

I just want to thank everybody again for the sanity and good humor they have displayed in the two "Huh?" posts.

It has become clear that the original commenter, Erik Johnson, is deliberately attempting to cause trouble. His lurching to new topics, raising new accusations for which he has no proof, and sending out of e-mails to other bloggers can only be interpreted as deliberate harrassment.

Y’all did notice, didn’t you, that after he introduced his latest theme that he indicated that he e-mailed it to ten other people (again, all of them being bloggers from what I can tell), right?

One of them, Steve Dillard, responded by saying:

Look, I don’t know who you are or how in the world I got on your email
list, but go sell crazy somewhere else.

Classic!

I am also told that Erik has been causing problems on other folks’ blogs, where the most successful strategy has been to simply ignore him.

I request the same here. If Erik logs on and comments again, I request that people simply ignore him.

Now a word to Erik: I have been patient with you beyond any reasonable expectation. It appears that you are a troubled individual who may be in need of counselling, as is the case with many people making the transition to adulthood. I suggest that you talk to a counsellor.

However that may be, you are no longer welcome on this blog. Do not post further comments here.

Our Evangelical Brethren . . .

. . . and we are getting into fewer battles than in the old days. There’s less animosity on both sides.

Not to say that there’s none. . . . But less.

HERE’S AN INTERESTING ARTICLE ON THAT BY RICHARD OSTLING.
(CHT to the reader who e-mailed!)

One of the Catholic individuals interviewed for the article points out:

"The admiration for John Paul II is simply astounding given (evangelicals’) historic real hatred for the papacy," says William Shea of the College of the Holy Cross.

If anything, he thinks, Pope Benedict XVI is closer to the evangelicals’ outlook than John Paul II.

I think that’s right. In many important ways, B16 is even more where Evangelicals are at that JP2 was.

Unfortunately, that convergence of attitudes in some areas may make differences in others all the more sharply felt.

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.’"

Return Of The Sith

Coming soon to a DVD player near you: Revenge of the Sith is to be released on DVD on November 1:

"The Force will return to retail stores Nov. 1 with a double whammy: Star Wars: Episode III — Revenge of the Sith will be released on DVD, and Star Wars Battlefront II will be made available for all the top video game platforms.

Sith is the year’s top-grossing movie, with domestic box office earnings of $373.9 million (and an additional $425 million overseas). The two-disc set will include a full-length documentary; two new featurettes, one exploring the prophecy of Anakin Skywalker as the Chosen One and the other on the movie’s stunts; and a 15-part collection of ‘Web documentaries.’"

GET THE STORY.

Practice your Jedi mind tricks now so that you can convince the Star Wars fanatic in your life that he does not want the new DVD until Christmas Day. If that doesn’t work, take heart. There’s sure to be a jumbo-deluxe, extended-edition, collector’s set of all of the Star Wars movies Any Day Now.

This Week's Show (July 28, 2005)

LISTEN TO THE SHOW.

DOWNLOAD THE SHOW.

HIGHLIGHTS:

  • Has Jimmy heard of this unapproved apparition?
  • Who are the Fathers and Doctors of the Church?
  • Can women be ordained priests or bishops validly?
  • What does the language of divinization mean?
  • What are the seven hills of Rome? Is Vatican Hill one of them?
  • Must Catholics believe in purgatory (caller has trouble with this, with the "sale" of indulgences, with salvation, etc.)
  • Did purgatory exist and was there anyone in it prior to the time of Christ?
  • How to refer to a monsignor or a bishop in conversation?
  • Should the caller attend a wedding where the parties are living in sin prior to the wedding?
  • Why does God let the devil run amok after he refused to serve? Why do evil spirits obey Jesus?
  • What to do about priests supporting homosexuality?
  • What does the Church teach about trans-gendered people?
  • What’s the difference between being published "with ecclesiastical approval" and the nihil obstat and imprimatur?
  • How to tell if a prayer or pious work currently carries an indulgence?
  • How would one report a miracle that one felt one had experienced in connection with the intercession of John Paul II?
  • Can consecrated chalices, etc., be sold?

This Week’s Show (July 28, 2005)

LISTEN TO THE SHOW.

DOWNLOAD THE SHOW.

HIGHLIGHTS:

  • Has Jimmy heard of this unapproved apparition?
  • Who are the Fathers and Doctors of the Church?
  • Can women be ordained priests or bishops validly?
  • What does the language of divinization mean?
  • What are the seven hills of Rome? Is Vatican Hill one of them?
  • Must Catholics believe in purgatory (caller has trouble with this, with the "sale" of indulgences, with salvation, etc.)
  • Did purgatory exist and was there anyone in it prior to the time of Christ?
  • How to refer to a monsignor or a bishop in conversation?
  • Should the caller attend a wedding where the parties are living in sin prior to the wedding?
  • Why does God let the devil run amok after he refused to serve? Why do evil spirits obey Jesus?
  • What to do about priests supporting homosexuality?
  • What does the Church teach about trans-gendered people?
  • What’s the difference between being published "with ecclesiastical approval" and the nihil obstat and imprimatur?
  • How to tell if a prayer or pious work currently carries an indulgence?
  • How would one report a miracle that one felt one had experienced in connection with the intercession of John Paul II?
  • Can consecrated chalices, etc., be sold?

Huh?–Parte Dieux

I was impressed by the comments folks posted on my original Huh? post. A lot of very perceptive comments and well-delivered humor. My compliments, folks! I was touched!

I’m not going to drag this subject out, but wanted to put a few items on the record.

First, as many pointed out, I did not endorse the Iraq War in the posts that the original commenter cited. Neither did I dis-endorse it.

Second, I have no intention of commenting specifically on the war at this point. There is no official Catholic stance on the war, and I generally confine myself to matters of theory rather than matters of application when it comes to subjects like this.

Further, if I were to stake out a position in the way that the commenter wants, it would only "feed the troll" as the saying goes. I have no interest in being provoked into a debate with the commenter on this or any other subject. I’ve tried to be patient and charitable, but I’m not going to feed a fixation.

Lest there be any doubt as to the unreasonableness of what was being asked of me in this case (and others have already very ably pointed out the problems here), I would like to put on record an e-mail that was sent to me at 11:05 p.m. Pacific Time, just over an hour before my "Huh?" post even went up–at which point I had publicly said nothing in response to the commenter. In this e-mail, the commenter wrote:

Mr. Akin,
So, you have been a little bit too much influenced by Richard John
Neuhaus, so that you’re a neoconservative like he is now, right?

This is simply wild speculation on the part of the commenter.

In point of fact, I can’t recall ever reading anything Fr. Neuhaus has written on the Iraq War. I don’t know what Fr. Neuhaus’ opinion of it is. I don’t know if he’s a "neoconservative," and I certainly am not one myself.

The commenter is simply leaping wildly to conclusions for which he has no rational grounds.

Further, the commenter carboned his e-mail to eight different people besides myself, all of whom are notable Catholic bloggers. In deference to them, I will not re-post their e-mail addresses.

I will, however, compliment them on the fact that at this time of this writing not one of them has chosen to respond to the commenter’s e-mail–at least not with me included in the reply. It appears that they all have the blogger ethics and professionalism to recognize and resist such attempts to gin up a baseless controversy and start a blogpile on someone else.

For all I know, they themselves may have had encounters with individuals attempting to entrap them in this fashion.

In any event, my compliments to them and to the voices of reason that have weighed in on this subject.

We now return to the blog . . . already in progress.

"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.