Court Orders – The judge ignores the humanity of the fetus

The judge ignores the humanity of the fetus and focuses exclusively on the woman’s state of mind, concludes that she does not distinguish between a “beautiful doll” and a living baby – and uses this determination to decide on the death of the child. “I am well aware of the fact that the state orders the dismissal of a woman if she doesn’t seem to want it to be a big interference,” writes Lieven in her decision, according to the news agency. This led Lieven to point out that the state had no choice but to separate the child from his mother, which, in the judge’s opinion, appears to be a worse scenario than a violent abortion traditionally performed on a woman “from her” second trimester. The unidentified woman, allegedly in her twenties and of Nigerian origin, her Catholic mother and her social worker oppose abortion, according to the Catholic News Agency. The court reversed this decision, based on its initial argument, and declared that the child was not even “real” without the baby standing visibly in front of him. British doctors can perform an abortion on a 22-week pregnant woman with an intellectual disability against her will, according to the Press Association, a judge who sentenced in the United Kingdom on Friday. The woman’s disability leads medical directors to believe that she has the mental capacity of a child in primary school, and that she remains under the supervision of the British National Health Service Trust. Reports suggest that the woman’s own mother considers herself a possible nanny for the baby, so that she and her daughter can raise the girl together. “I think she would like to have a baby, just as she would like to have a beautiful doll,” says Lieven. However, the state determined that the pregnant mother was mentally incapable of making her own decisions and took control of these important decisions through the protection court. Sciascia has been a regular contributor to the Western Journal since September 2018 and also works briefly as a policy officer at MassGOP and is currently editor-in-chief of the student newspaper Connector. Another excuse for Lieven’s decision was the woman’s inability to care for the child alone. Sciascia is an undergraduate student at the University of Massachusetts Lowell.