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The real lesson of Dr. Gosnell

The Philadelphia doctor’s clinic is a sign of what is to come if legitimate and safe abortions become inaccessible.

Kermit Gosnell

Dr. Kermit Gosnell delivered live babies and killed them. These were not legal abortions. They were infanticides, no question.

A Philadelphia jury convicted Gosnell this week of first-degree murder, infanticide and racketeering, among other charges. It was a just verdict. He agreed to forgo an appeal in exchange for a life sentence rather than face the possibility of getting the death penalty.

Continue reading this editorial.

 

Associated Press

A poison pill for health care reform

Republicans in Congress say they want to protect individuals with pre-existing conditions, but where is their concern for the uninsured in Virginia?

Republicans still fighting hard to turn Obamacare into a short-lived failure suddenly have grown in compassion for the uninsured sick.

Virginians living in high-poverty, medically underserved rural areas should recognize crocodile tears when they see them, and ask: Where was the GOP’s concern for the uninsured before the Affordable Care Act? Where would it be were the party able to kill the ACA by a thousand budget cuts?

Continue reading this editorial.

Iron Man’s healthy conversion

By Esther Cepeda

Is it just me or is Tony Stark on a health kick?

In the third “Iron Man” — a series that spent its first two installments glorifying the reckless life of a spoiled, rich genius — Stark, the man inside the metallic exoskeleton, seems to have finally taken a turn toward wellness.

No spoiler alerts are needed for me to point out that, though subtle, Stark set beautiful examples of healthful eating throughout this latest episode.

Continue reading.

Cepeda is a columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.

Shining a light on tanning beds

The FDA takes overdue action to warn consumers about the risks.

The Food and Drug Administration is taking overdue action to alert users about the cancer risk associated with indoor tanning beds and to warn teenagers not to use them.

Recent studies show that the risk of melanoma — the deadliest form of skin cancer — is 75 percent higher among people who have been exposed to ultraviolet radiation from indoor tanning. That word needs to get out to teen­agers. An estimated 2.3 million of them use indoor tanning facilities each year, and melanoma has become the second most common form of cancer among young adults.

Continue reading this editorial.

A woman’s safety is paramount

by Victoria Cobb and Mallory Quigley

The trial of Kermit Gosnell has shaken the conscience of our nation.

The abortionist, currently awaiting judgment in a Philadelphia courtroom, is charged with the murder of four newborn infants, whom he allegedly killed with scissors after they’d been born alive, as well as with the death of a Virginia woman.

Read more.

Cobb is the president of The Family Foundation Action. Quigley is the communications director for Susan B. Anthony List, which is affiliated with Women Speak Out Virginia.

Reach out to the mentally ill

Donna Willard

I write this letter from my heart today. I lost a friend to a mental illness yesterday.

May is Mental Health Awareness month. Do you know someone who is mentally ill? If you do, encourage him or her to get help.

Read more.

Willard lives in Roanoke.

Prude or prudent?

By KATHLEEN PARKER

They lost me at the word “women.”

As so often happens with contemporary debate, arguments being proffered in support of allowing teenagers as young as 15 (and possibly younger) to buy the “morning-after pill” without adult supervision are false on their premise.

Here’s an experiment to demonstrate.

Question 1: Do you think that women should have access to Plan B, also known as the morning-after pill, to be used at their own discretion? Yes!

Question 2: Do you think that girls as young as 11 or 12 should be able to buy the morning-after pill without any adult supervision? Didn’t think so.

Question 3: If you answered yes to Question 2, are you a parent? Didn’t think so.

Perhaps a few parents answered yes to Question 3, but I suspect not many. Yet, repeatedly in the past several days, we’ve heard the argument that any interference with the over-the-counter sale of Plan B to any female of any age is blocking a woman’s right to self-determination. Fifteen-year-olds, where the limit is currently set, are girls, not women. And female parts do not a woman make any more than a correspondingly developed male makes the proud possessor a man.

The debate arose after a federal judge last month ordered that the government remove all obstacles to over-the-counter sales of Plan B. As it stands, children as young as 15 can buy the drug without a prescription or parental knowledge. They do have to show identification proving they are 15, which, as critics of such restrictions have pointed out, is problematic for many teens.

Apparently the Obama administration agrees that young girls shouldn’t use so serious a drug, even though proclaimed medically “safe,” without adult supervision. The Justice Department has given notice that it will appeal the judge’s decision, a move that could potentially backfire and, in fact, remove all age barriers.

The dominant question is legitimate: Even if we would prefer that girls not be sexually active so early in life, wouldn’t we rather they block a pregnancy before it happens than wait and face the worse prospect of abortion?

The pros are obvious: Plan B, if taken within three days of unprotected sex, greatly reduces the chance of pregnancy. If a child waits too long to take the pill, however, a fertilized egg could reach the uterine wall and become implanted, after which the drug is useless.

You see how the word “child” keeps getting in the way.

There’s no point debating whether such young girls should be sexually active. Obviously, given the potential consequences, both physical and psychological, the answer is no. Just as obvious, our culture says quite the opposite: As long as there’s an exit, whether abortion or Plan B, what’s the incentive to await mere maturity?

Advocates for lifting age limits on Plan B, including Planned Parenthood President Cecile Richards, insist that the pill is universally safe and, therefore, all age barriers should be dropped. From a strictly utilitarian viewpoint, this may be well-advised. But is science the only determining factor when it comes to the well-being of our children? Even President Obama, who once boasted that his policies would be based on science and not emotion, has parental qualms about children buying serious drugs to treat a condition that has deeply psychological underpinnings.

What about the right of parents to protect their children? A 15-year-old can’t get Tylenol at school without parental permission, but we have no hesitation about children taking a far more serious drug without oversight?

These are fair questions that deserve more than passing scrutiny — or indictments of prudishness. A Slate headline about the controversy goes: “The Politics of Prude.” More to the point: The slippery slope away from parental autonomy is no paranoid delusion. Whatever parents may do to try to delay the ruin of childhood innocence, the culture says otherwise: Have sex, take a pill, don’t tell mom.

Where, finally, do we draw the increasingly blurred line for childhood?

Americans may disagree about what is sexually appropriate for their children. And everyone surely wishes to prevent children from having babies. But public policy should be aimed at involving rather than marginalizing parents.

To say that this controversy is strictly political is no argument against debate. Politics is the debate about the role of government in our lives. And the debate about Plan B is fundamentally about whether government or parents have ultimate authority over their children’s well-being.

 Parker is a columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.

 

 

 

Saturday letters

Praise for a local filmmaker and the Roanoke County Board of Supervisors elections in today’s letters to the editor.

Asthma workshop has advice to help breathe easier

In Roanoke, approximately 16,000 people have asthma. It’s a potentially life-threatening disease, but there are many resources to control it. The Greater Roanoke Valley Asthma and Air Quality Coalition’s goal is to reduce the morbidity and mortality due to asthma in the Roanoke region.

During Asthma Awareness Month, the coalition will offer a community education program, Close the CASE on Asthma, to teach people how to control and manage their asthma. The free, interactive workshop will be held at 6 p.m. May 20 in the Lobby Conference Room of Jefferson College of Health Sciences.

If your child has asthma, you can download our template, Asthma Action Plan, at breathe­roanoke.wordpress.com/asthma. Having a plan is crucial to controlling asthma, so if you haven’t already, work with your child’s doctor to make one.

You also can monitor your local air quality with the American Lung Association’s free smartphone app, available at stateoftheair.org. High-pollution days are dangerous for asthmatics, but the good news is Roanoke’s air has less soot and smog than ever before.

For more information on Asthma Awareness Month happenings, contact me at satousman@jchs.edu. Let’s work together to control asthma in our community.

STUART TOUSMAN
Professor of Psychology
Jefferson College of Health Sciences
ROANOKE

Trouble brewing over caffeine

There’s a downside to too many stimulants in our diet.

Turns out Alert is the perfect name for Wrigley’s Energy Caffeine Gum, which delivers the caffeine equivalent of half a cup of coffee in every piece.

That latest entry among caffeinated product lines aimed largely at the youth market was the final jolt for the Food and Drug Administration, which is taking a closer look at the safety of energy foods — and whether the agency needs to step up its role in regulating ingredients.

Continue reading this editorial.

Abortion political ad skirts the truth

Women’s clinics where abortions are performed were as safe as any medical office before new regulations.

And so it begins. The skirts-on-fire lying ads. The first, but certainly not the last, for this year’s gubernatorial campaign.

Women Speak Out Virginia, a PAC affiliated with the Susan B. Anthony List, launched a radio ad claiming that Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe “refuses to require women’s health clinics to provide the same sanitary environment we expect of dental offices and hospitals.”

It isn’t just us calling bull. The lie earned the group a “Pants on Fire” rating by Politifact.

For those unfamiliar with the Susan B. Anthony List, thinking it a women’s suffrage rather than a women suffering movement, it is an organization of extremists united for the sole purpose of destroying Planned Parenthood and ending all tax­payer-funded abortions, as if the Hyde Amendment and other measures haven’t already. Skirting the truth appears to be the axis on which the organization rotates.

Continue reading this editorial.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Weather Journal

Soupiness eases a bit

Mon, 20 May 2013 05:22:51 +0000

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Recent Comments

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