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Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

Colorado would force in-vitro fertilization labs to support those frozen fertilized embryos forever

Strange kind of eternal life, but that would be the effect of declaring fertilized eggs to be full humans with full human rights. Citizens of Colorado would be able to claim them as tax deductions as long as they pay the refrigeration bill every year, and they can be jailed for murder if they don't. Then there's all those fertilized eggs that never take, for natural or chemical reasons...

"Once you have the principle enshrined in a state constitution that flies in the face of Roe, that would be the test case that would go before the Supreme Court," said Brian Rooney of the Ann Arbor, Michigan-based Thomas More Law Center, which has written similar proposals for other states.

The embryos could buy weapons, arm themselves against abortion doctors...

Colo. Petition Revives Anti-Abortion Bid
By P. SOLOMON BANDA
Associated Press Writer

DENVER (AP) -- A 20-year-old law student has become a cause celebre in the anti-abortion movement for her efforts to have the state Constitution define fertilized eggs as people - a tactic spreading nationwide in bids to neutralize the Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion.

The measure spearheaded by Kristi Burton would give fertilized eggs state protections of inalienable rights, justice and due process, and she needs 76,000 signatures to get it on the state ballot next November.

Similar efforts are under way in Georgia, Michigan, Mississippi and Oregon.

"I wouldn't be surprised if we saw the awakening of a sleeping giant here as conservatives come out to vote on this because of the purity of the bill and because it's a no-nonsense amendment," said Keith Mason, a veteran of grass-roots efforts defending Ten Commandments displays and parental notification laws. He is helping the petition effort.

Burton's so-called human life amendment doesn't mention abortion. She insists her only aim is to define when human life begins, and any discussion about abortion is up to lawmakers, she said.

"It's a concrete point in time that we can point to. It's at the moment of conception, life begins and at that moment we need to protect it. If we don't do that, then anyone can take away people's lives at other stages," Burton said.

Abortion rights groups say the measure would hamper in-vitro fertilization and stem cell research. They say it also could affect birth control because the most widely used form of contraception works by preventing fertilized eggs from attaching to the uterus.

Burton's strategy also diverges from a decades-old approach among anti-abortion activists of trying to incrementally regulate abortions.

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