[Pages S12920-S12927]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




            THOUGHTS ON DISCUSSION OF PARTIAL-BIRTH ABORTION

  Mr. SANTORUM. Mr. President, I will speak briefly. The Senator from 
Tennessee, Mr. Frist, is here. I know he is planning to come and talk 
about this issue. Under our agreement, I agreed I would yield the floor 
when he gets here to make a speech.
  I, first, thank the Senator from New Hampshire. I did not catch all 
of his remarks. I caught the last 45 minutes or so. He is talking about 
a very difficult issue. It is an amendment we will have to vote on 
tomorrow. It is not a difficult issue. It is a difficult issue to talk 
about. I think it is a rather simple issue. I am hopeful, again, this 
will be an issue where we put the politics of abortion aside and 
understand this kind of action should at least be looked into by some 
sort of study to determine whether this activity occurs and how 
pervasive this is.
  What I would like to do tonight is share some thoughts in response to 
a discussion today about the anecdotes of cases that were presented in 
defense of partial-birth abortions. We heard about cases of women who 
needed this procedure to save the mother's health or the mother's life. 
I would like to review what the medical evidence is, again, and also 
bring up some cases where people took a different option and show how 
that option, as humane as the other side, with their wonderful pictures 
of husbands and wives and in some cases children, as warm and fuzzy as 
they would make it out to be, the fact is, in every one of those cases 
a child was killed. A baby was killed. That is a tragedy.
  In many cases the baby would not have lived long, but the baby was 
killed before its time. Many of the people I am going to talk about 
tonight understood their baby was not going to live long or might 
suffer from severe abnormalities, but they were willing to take their 
child's life for what it was, as we all do when we are confronted with 
it in our own lives. We find out a son or daughter is afflicted with a 
horrible illness. Our immediate reaction is, well, how can I put my 
child out of its misery? Or my child isn't going to live very much 
longer; how can I end it sooner?

  I don't think that is the immediate reaction of mothers and fathers 
in America. But yet, when it comes to the baby in the womb, we have 
many people who believe that is the logical thing to do. I argue that 
it is not the logical thing. It is not the rational thing. It is not 
the humane thing. It is not in the best interest of the health of the 
mother. All those other things, in fact, in this debate don't matter.
  What does matter in this debate is, is it in the best health interest 
of the mother? I will talk tonight about cases where people made a 
different choice and, I argue, from a health perspective, a better 
choice. When I say ``health,'' I mean not only the physical health of 
the mother but also the mental health of the mother.
  We will talk about some of those cases. I will talk about some of the 
cases that were brought up today and explain why those cases, again, 
were not medically necessary to protect the health of the mother. There 
were other options available, even if they wanted to choose abortion.
  Then I will share with you some things that have happened to me as a 
result of this debate and provide to my colleagues that, while we may 
not win all the votes, at times there are things even more important 
than that.
  I see the Senator from Tennessee, Dr. Frist, is here. I yield the 
floor to him.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Tennessee.
  Mr. FRIST. Mr. President, I rise to continue the debate on the 
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 1999. I rise to follow the Senator 
from Pennsylvania, who has taken a leadership position and a moral 
position. I am delighted to hear he will tonight concentrate on an 
issue that I think has been for far too long overlooked in this debate; 
that is, the effects of this procedure, which is a barbaric procedure, 
on women. Those women are our sisters, our mothers, our daughters. That 
health effect is something that gets lost too often in the debate, 
which is not the politics. It is not the rhetoric. It is not the 
emotion. It is the health of the woman involved.
  This is the third time I have had the opportunity to come to the 
floor and participate in this debate on the issue of partial-birth 
abortion. Each time I come, as a physician, I take the time to review 
the recent medical literature to see what the facts are, what the 
clinical studies are, what is the information and the medical 
armamentarium, the literature that is out there. That is where the 
medical profession, that is where the scientists involved in medicine, 
that is where the surgeons publish their experience, where you talk 
about indications, you talk about the side effects, you talk about 
risk, you talk about complications. That is where you share it with 
your colleagues.
  Each time before coming to the floor to debate this issue and discuss 
this issue, I talk to my colleagues at the various institutions where I 
have trained and have been, on the east coast, the west coast in 
training. I picked up the phone and talked to several of them today, 
colleagues who are obstetricians directly involved in the surgical 
aspects of this procedure.

  Each time this issue comes to the floor of the Senate, I step back 
and look at what studies, what developments there have been since we 
last discussed this issue. I rise tonight to talk about this procedure 
as a medical procedure. It has been interesting to me because over the 
course of today I have heard again and again that there is no 
obstetrician in this body of the Senate. I am not an obstetrician. I am 
a surgeon, which means I am trained to perform surgical procedures.
  I am trained. I spent 20 years in both training and engaged in 
surgery to make surgical diagnoses, to perform

[[Page S12921]]

technical operations, to evaluate the risk of these operations, and to 
assess the outcome of these operations. No, I am not an obstetrician, 
and I don't pretend to be. I call obstetricians. I call people who are 
on the frontline. But I am a surgeon. I know something about surgical 
procedures. That is what I did before coming to the Senate. I am board 
certified in surgery. I am board certified in two different 
specialties.
  When people talk about this medical procedure, I want to make it 
clear I am not an obstetrician. But I am board certified in general 
surgery. I am board certified in cardiothoracic surgery. I have spent 
20 years studying and performing surgical procedures.
  This is background. A lot of what I did is publish and research 
surgical procedures. But this is background. I have focused not, as I 
mentioned earlier, on the politics or the rhetoric, but on the medical 
use of this specific procedure, partial-birth abortion. As my 
colleagues know by now--but I want to restate it because I have gone 
back and reviewed the medical literature and have talked to colleagues 
at other institutions, and I have looked at developments since last 
year--I conclude partial-birth abortion is a brutal, barbaric procedure 
that has no place in the mainstream practice of medicine today.
  Again, partial-birth abortion is a brutal, barbaric procedure that 
has absolutely no place in the mainstream practice of medicine today. 
Partial-birth abortion is a procedure that is rarely, if ever, needed 
in today's practice of medicine. Alternative methods of abortion, if 
abortion is necessary, are always available--even when the abortion is 
performed very late in pregnancy.
  Now, we have had the American College of Obstetricians and 
Gynecologists quoted on the floor, and they will continue to be, which 
I think is appropriate. A number of their statements, I think, are 
taken out of context and put forward. Ultimately, their recommendation 
is, I believe, against the procedure; but for a lot of different 
reasons they are against passage of what is being proposed. I will come 
back to that. But it is interesting, when it comes back to answering 
the question, ``Are there always alternative procedures available,'' 
their answer would be yes.
  Again, I refer to a number of documents, but this is the Journal of 
the American Medical Association of August 26, 1996, volume 280, No. 8. 
In an article this quotation is made:

       An ACOG policy statement emanating from the review declared 
     that the select panel ``could identify no circumstances under 
     which this procedure would be the only option to save the 
     life or preserve the health of the woman.''

  There are always alternative procedures available. This is important 
because the procedure of partial-birth abortion, as we have described 
and laid out--a procedure in which the fetus is manipulated in the 
uterus, partially evacuated from the uterus, scissors inserted to 
puncture the skull or the cranium with evacuation of the contents of 
the cranium, the brain--that procedure has not been studied. We know 
there are certain risks, but the alternative procedures that are 
available in every case have been studied. You can go to a medical 
textbook and look up those alternative procedures, and you can go to 
the clinical literature and read the studies. It has been peer reviewed 
and presented at meetings. Debate has been carried out. There are 
comparisons between one surgeon's results and another's. You can 
identify the risks for the alternative procedures, but you cannot for 
the partial-birth abortion.
  Now, ACOG, as has been mentioned on the floor, does take the position 
that the procedure ``may'' be superior to other procedures, as its 
basis for justifying opposition to this legislation. But with 
everything I have read, ACOG did not identify those specific 
circumstances under which partial-birth abortion would be the preferred 
procedure. And thus, as a scientist, where you want to look at 
outcomes, risks, and results in determining whether or not to use a 
certain procedure or recommend such a procedure, the data is clearly 
not there. It is not there. Thus, you have a procedure which, as I have 
said, is a brutal, barbaric procedure, with no data substantiating it 
or identifying the risks, compared to alternative procedures that have 
been defined, where we know what those risks are. Thus, this use of the 
word ``may,'' I would flip around and say ``may not.'' I would say the 
burden of proof is to go to the literature and present the clinical 
studies that show this barbaric procedure, in any case, is the best or 
most appropriate. The data, I can tell you, is not there.
  So I think the next question to ask is: Are we talking about a 
procedure, partial-birth abortion, which this legislation would 
prohibit, which is a part of mainstream medicine? Is it part of the 
surgical armamentarium out there that is talked about in textbooks, in 
the literature, or in medical schools?
  The answer is, no, it is not. It is a fringe procedure. It is out of 
the mainstream. This procedure is not taught. This procedure is not 
taught in the vast majority of medical schools in the United States of 
America. Yet we will hear some medical schools talk about some types of 
dilatation and extraction, and they will talk about it at 16 weeks, at 
14 weeks, and even 18 weeks. I think we need to make very clear we are 
talking about a procedure that requires manipulation in the uterus, 
partial delivery; thus, the partial-birth aspects of this procedure, 
with the insertion of the scissors and the evacuation of the contents. 
I can tell you, that procedure is not taught in medical schools today. 
When an obstetrician says, ``Oh, yes, but we teach late-term 
abortions,'' some do, but they don't teach this procedure.
  Surgical training. Again, I am not an obstetrician, but I did spend 7 
years in surgical training learning every day. What do you learn as 
part of that? You learn the specific indications for a particular 
procedure. In your surgical training, you learn the various surgical 
techniques that have been described on the floor. Although it is very 
difficult for people to talk about and listen to on the floor of the 
Senate, that is part of it, that is the barbarism, the brutality of the 
way this procedure has evolved. In your surgical training, you look at 
the complications, outcomes, and risks of these accepted surgical 
procedures.

  The indications for a partial-birth abortion, for the surgical 
techniques as described, the complications, the outcomes, and the risks 
are not taught in medical schools today. The procedure of partial-birth 
abortion is not routinely part of the residency programs today. Why? 
Because it is dangerous, because it is a fringe procedure, because it 
is outside of the mainstream of generally accepted medical practice. It 
has not been comprehensively studied or reviewed in the peer-reviewed 
literature. There are no clinical studies of it in the medical 
literature.
  As I said, when this debate comes to the floor and you want to make 
the case, you look at the medical literature, which I have done, and 
then you want to say: What about the textbooks? Surely, it is in the 
textbooks if people are out there doing this procedure on women, which 
I contend is harmful to women; surely, it is written in the medical 
obstetric textbooks. That is what you study. That is the foundation.
  So what I have done over the last couple of days is I have gone to 
the medical textbooks and reviewed 17 of those textbooks. I can tell 
you, after reviewing those 17 textbooks, only 1 of the 17 even 
mentioned partial-birth abortion, and that 1 of the 17 mentioned it in 
one little paragraph. It mentioned the fact there have been vetoes of 
the partial-birth abortion legislation from last Congress and the 
Congress before.
  The textbooks that I reviewed were Williams Obstetrics, which is one 
of the foundations of obstetrical education today by Cunningham and 
Williams.
  I reviewed the manual of obstetrics by Niswander and Evans.
  I reviewed the Essentials of Obstetrics and Gynecology by Hacker and 
Moore.
  I reviewed the Practice Guidelines for Obstetrics and Gynecology by 
Skoggin and Morgan.
  I reviewed the Blueprints in Obstetrics and Gynecology by Callahan 
and Caughey.
  I reviewed Novak's Gynecology by Novak and others.
  I reviewed Operative Gynecology by Te Linde, Rock, and Thompson.
  I reviewed Mishell Comprehensive Gynecology;

[[Page S12922]]

  And Textbook of Women's Health by Wallis.
  And the list goes on.
  Again, I think it is important because it demonstrates that this 
procedure is outside of the mainstream. It is a fringe procedure, and, 
therefore, any defense of this procedure, which we know has 
complications, which we know affects women in a harmful way, should be 
justified in some way in the medical literature, where it is not.
  The fringe nature of this procedure is also underscored by the fact 
that there are no credible statistics on partial-birth abortion.
  Throughout the course of today--and really has been put forward on 
both sides--people cited certain numbers of how many are performed. We 
went through this again in the last Congress. Some say that there are 
500 of these procedures performed annually. The more realistic estimate 
I believe is that there is somewhere--again, it is truly so hard to 
estimate to even mention specific numbers--between 3,000 and 5,000 of 
these partial-birth abortions performed every year.
  The numbers do not matter, I don't think, because what we are talking 
about is this barbaric procedure. It is harmful to women. So 1 is too 
many, or 5 is too many, or 10, or even 500--any is too many.
  What data do we have that this procedure can be performed safely? 
Absolutely none. Part of the problem is the absence of accurate data 
with which to judge the safety of this procedure, and because of, in 
part, the incomplete data that is accumulated, and the way we 
accumulate data on abortions. Although the CDC collects abortion 
statistics every year, not all States provide that information to the 
CDC, and the ones that do lack information on as many as 40 to 50 
percent of the abortions performed in that particular State.
  But I think most importantly the categories that the CDC, Centers for 
Disease Control, uses to report the method of abortion does not split 
out partial-birth abortions from the other procedures. So it gets mixed 
in with all of the other procedures.
  It is this lack of data on this procedure that I think is especially 
troubling because of the grave risk, as the Senator from Pennsylvania 
pointed out earlier, of complications the grave risk that this 
procedure poses to women.
  In the debate, we have opponents of abortion on the one hand, 
proponents of a right to choose on the other, and we have the debates 
that come forth with the tint of emotion and rhetoric. But the thing 
that gets lost is what the Senator from Pennsylvania mentioned, and 
that is that this procedure is terrible for women. He outlined some of 
the ways in terms of the physical and mental health.

  But I would like to drop back and look at this safety issue because 
in all of the arguments for rights, we need to have this procedure out 
there.
  It is critically important, I believe--I say this as a physician--
that we recognize that this procedure is dangerous and hurts women.
  There are ``no credible studies'' on partial-birth abortions ``that 
evaluate or attest to its safety'' for the mother.
  I take that from the Journal of American Medical Association, August 
26, 1998.
  There are ``no credible studies'' on partial-birth abortions ``that 
evaluate or attest to the safety'' for the mother.
  The risk: I can tell you as a surgeon--again, I drop back to the fact 
that I am a surgeon and I spent 20 years of my adult life in surgery--
that patients who undergo partial-birth abortion are at risk for 
hemorrhage, infection, and uterine perforation.
  I can say that. And I can say it and be absolutely positive about it 
because these are the risks that exist with any surgical midtrimester 
termination of pregnancy.
  The partial-birth abortion procedure itself involves manipulation of 
the fetus inside of the uterus, turning the fetus around, extracting 
the fetus from the uterus, and then punching scissors into the cranium 
or the base of the skull; requires spreading of those scissors to make 
the opening large enough to evacuate the brain.
  That procedure has two additional complications than what would be 
with a trimester abortion, and that is uterine rupture, No. 1; and, No. 
2, latrogenic laceration. That means the cutting of the uterus with 
secondary hemorrhage or secondary bleeding.
  Uterione rupture: What does it mean? It means exactly as it sounds--
that the uterus ruptures. And that can be catastrophic to the woman.
  It may be increased during a partial-birth abortion because the 
physician in this procedure must perform a great deal of it blindly 
while reaching into the uterus with a blunt instrument and pulling the 
feet of the fetus down into the canal. Thus, you have uterine rupture.
  I should also add that this type of manipulation is also associated--
we know this from the medical literature because there are very few 
cases where you have to manipulate the fetus. That manipulation is also 
associated with other complications of abruption, amniotic fluid 
embolus, where the fluid goes to other parts of the body and other 
trauma to the uterus.
  All of these are serious, potentially life-threatening complications 
from this fringe procedure that has not been studied, is outside the 
main stream medicine, not in the medical textbooks, not in the peer-
review literature for which we have alternative procedures available.
  The second complication is latrogenic laceration, an accidental 
cutting of the uterus, occurs because, again, much of this procedure is 
done blindly. The surgeon has scissors that are inserted into the base 
of the fetal skull. It is not just the insertion of the scissors, but 
it takes a spreading of the scissors to establish a real puncture large 
enough to evacuate the brain.
  An another example, an article dated August 26, 1998, another 
quotation. Let me open with the quotation marks.
  ``This blind procedure risks maternal injury from laceration of the 
uterus or cervix by the scissors and could result in severe bleeding 
and the threat of shock or even maternal death.''
  ``Could result in severe bleeding and the threat of shock or even 
maternal death.''
  These risks, which I just outlined, have not been quantified for 
partial-birth abortions.
  Would you want this untested procedure performed on anyone that you 
know? The answer, I believe, is absolutely not because there is always 
an alternative procedure available.
  Mr. President, we are discussing a fringe procedure with very real 
risks to a woman's health. The lack of data on this procedure 
underscores my opposition to it. Just as we cannot ignore the risk to 
the mother, let's also look at the risk a little bit further down the 
line.
  It leads me to a conclusion that partial-birth abortion is inhumane, 
and offends the very basic civil sensibilities of the American people. 
The procedure itself, yes. But what about the treatment of the 
periviable fetus? I say that because at what point in the gestation 
period viability actually is realized is subject to debate. It shifts 
with technology and with our ability to intervene over time.
  Most of these procedures are performed today in what is called the 
periviable period--somewhere between 20 and 24 weeks of gestation, and 
beyond.
  The centers for pain perception in a fetus develop very early in that 
second trimester period. We cannot measure fetal pain directly, but we 
do know that infants of similar gestational age after delivery--28 
weeks, 30 weeks, or 24 weeks--those babies, those fetuses that are 
delivered, do respond to pain. Again, we are talking about a procedure 
performed on an infant, a fetus, at 24, 26 weeks.
  With partial-birth abortions, pain management is not provided for the 
fetus at that gestational age. That fetus, remember, is literally 
within inches of actually being delivered. Pain management is given for 
procedures if those 2 or 3 inches are realized and the baby is outside 
of the womb, at the same gestational age; if the fetus is in the womb, 
pain management is not given.
  I say that again because we have to at least think of the fetus and 
think of the procedure, taking scissors and inserting them into the 
cranium, into the skull, and the spreading of those scissors. What is 
that doing? Is that humane?
  Therefore, to my statement that this is a barbaric procedure, I say 
it is an inhumane, barbaric procedure regarding the woman--and I just 
went

[[Page S12923]]

through those complications--and regarding the fetus.
  Because of the ``fringe'' nature of this practice, because of the 
lack of peer review and study of this procedure, I have strong feelings 
about this issue. I have taken too much time walking through the 
medical aspects, but I think it is important to free up a lot of the 
intensity of the debate earlier in the day. I think it is important to 
have a discussion so the American people and my colleagues know at 
least one surgeon's view of this surgical procedure.
  I close by saying that because of this lack of peer review study of 
this procedure, because of the fringe nature of this procedure, because 
of the grave risk it poses to the woman, because I believe it is 
inhumane treatment of that infant, that fetus, and because even as 
ACOG, the gynecologic society, concedes partial-birth abortion is never 
the only procedure that has to be used, I strongly support this 
legislation by the Senator from Pennsylvania to outlaw this barbaric 
and this inhumane practice.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Frist). The Senator from Pennsylvania.
  Mr. SANTORUM. I know the hour is late, and I will not take a lot of 
time. I appreciate the indulgence of the Senator from Kansas for his 
marathon stay on the floor and the Chair tonight.
  First, let me thank the Senator from Tennessee for his expert 
testimony. We hear a lot from those who oppose this procedure and the 
fact there is no obstetrician here. I think someone with the surgical 
skills and the international reputation of Dr. Frist, combined with the 
obstetricians who, in fact, are Members of Congress on the other side 
of this Capitol who oppose this procedure, who support this bill--I 
think we have the medical community of the Congress clearly on our 
side. I think as I stated before, we have the medical community 
generally on our side, hundreds and hundreds of obstetricians who have 
come forward and talked about it.
  I want to talk tonight about a few cases. I do that for a couple of 
reasons. I want to articulate again that there are alternatives 
available to a partial-birth abortion. We heard Dr. Frist talk about 
other abortion techniques that are available in the medical literature, 
techniques available for later in pregnancy if a mother decides to have 
an abortion. I want to share with people, because I think it is 
important and this transcends the partial-birth abortion debate, but I 
think it is relevant to discuss that there are other ways to deal with 
this that are as healthy, and, I argue, even more healthy, for the 
mother involved.
  We heard the Senator from Illinois, Mr. Durbin, today talk about Viki 
Wilson, Coreen Costello, and Vikki Stella. I entered into the Record 
those three cases. All these women came to the Congress. They testified 
themselves. They brought their own stories forward. They are now being 
used by Members of Congress and have been used by Members for several 
years to support the claim this was the only method available to them 
and this saved their health and their future fertility. I will take 
them one by one very quickly, but I want to reemphasize that this was 
not the only option available to them. There were, in fact, more 
healthy procedures.

  That does not mean if a certain procedure is performed--I am sure the 
doctor would affirm this--there is more than one procedure that can be 
used. Even if it is not the proper procedure, it may turn out OK with a 
good result. The point I am trying to make and I think the point the 
medical community is trying to make: It is not the best medicine, it is 
not proper, and it certainly isn't the only procedure available.
  In the case of Viki Wilson, according to her own testimony, she 
didn't have a partial-birth abortion. She says in her testimony that 
the death of her daughter Abigail was induced inside the womb.

       My daughter died with dignity inside my womb, after which 
     the baby was delivered head first.

  Partial-birth abortion, as we heard Dr. Frist describe, is when the 
baby is delivered in a breach position alive, that all of the baby is 
taken out of the mother except for the head, and then a sharp 
instrument is inserted in the base of the skull, the baby is killed, 
and the brains are suctioned out.
  That is not what happened. Yet we know that from her testimony, we 
have known that for several years, since 1995. Yet year after year 
after year, as we debate this bill, people come to the floor and hold 
up this case and say: Here is someone who was saved from health 
consequences by partial-birth abortion. It didn't happen. It didn't 
happen.
  Let's take the cases where it did happen. I have two letters, one 
from a Dr. Pamela Smith who is at Mount Sinai Hospital in Chicago and 
another from Dr. Joseph DeCook who is at Michigan State University, 
discussing two different cases: First the Vikki Stella case, and second 
Coreen Costello.
  It is very comfortable for me to stand here and talk about the very 
personal and tragic cases. I am sure it is very painful for those 
involved to hear their case being brought up by someone they disagree 
with in a very vociferous way. But if they are going to bring their 
case to support a conclusion that this procedure is medically 
necessary, then their story, their records, have to be examined to 
determine whether, in fact, it does support this medical determination, 
which has been arrived at by some, that this is a medically necessary 
procedure.
  In the case of Miss Stella, she has proclaimed that this is the only 
thing that could be done to preserve her fertility.
  This is what Dr. Pamela Smith writes:

       The fact of the matter is that the standard care of that is 
     used by medical personnel to terminate a pregnancy in its 
     later stages does not include partial-birth abortion. 
     Caesarean section, inducing labor with petosin or proglandins 
     or, if the baby has excess fluid in the head, as I believe 
     was the case with Miss Stella, draining the fluid from the 
     baby's head to allow a normal delivery, all are techniques 
     taught and used by obstetrical providers throughout this 
     country. These are techniques for which we have safe 
     statistics in regard to their impact with regard to the 
     health of both the woman and the child. In contrast, there 
     are no safety statistics on partial-birth abortion.

  We heard Dr. Frist say that. This is not a peer-reviewed procedure. 
We do not know from any kind of peer-reviewed study as to whether this 
is proper.

       There is no reference on this technique in the National 
     Library of Medicine database, and no long-term studies 
     published to prove it does not negatively affect a woman's 
     ability to successfully carry a pregnancy to term in the 
     future. Miss Stella may have been told this procedure was 
     necessary and safe, but she was sorely misinformed.

  We all want to believe what our doctor tells us. We all put faith in 
our doctor. When our doctor says this is the only thing that could have 
helped you, I am not surprised that that is repeated by people who had 
the service performed on them. But what this doctor is saying, what 600 
obstetricians have said, what Dr. Frist has said, what Dr. Coburn in 
the House has said, what Dr. Koop has said--Dr. C. Everett Koop--what 
the AMA has said, is that this is not good medicine. So she was sorely 
misinformed.
  One of the complicating factors here that Senator Durbin brought up 
was that Vikki Stella had diabetes. And Dr. Smith addresses that. She 
says:
       Diabetes is a chronic medical condition that tends to get 
     worse over time, and it predisposes individuals to infections 
     that can be harder to treat. If Miss Stella was advised to 
     have an abortion, most likely this was secondary to the fact 
     that her child was diagnosed with conditions that were 
     incompatible with life. The fact that Ms. Stella is a 
     diabetic, coupled with the fact that diabetics are prone to 
     infection and the partial-birth abortion procedure requires 
     manipulating a normally contaminated vagina over a course of 
     3 days, a technique that invites infection, medically I would 
     contend that of all the abortion techniques currently 
     available to her, this was the worst one that could have been 
     recommended for her. The others are quicker, cheaper, and do 
     not place a diabetic in such extreme risk of life-threatening 
     infections.

  Again, for all of the argument that we need this procedure to protect 
the health of the mother, and here are cases in which it was used to 
protect the life and health of the mother, the fact is it was not the 
best thing. The evidence is it was not the best thing. So the very 
cases we are to rely upon to make a judgment that this was in fact a 
case in point as to why this procedure is necessary do not substantiate 
the claim. These are their best cases. You don't bring out your worst 
cases. This is the best evidence.

[[Page S12924]]

  This goes back to what Dr. Frist just mentioned, what I have 
mentioned earlier in the day. We are still waiting to hear what case is 
necessary: In what case is this the best procedure? Give us the set of 
facts and circumstances where this is, in fact, a preferable option, 
where it has been peer reviewed, where there is consensus in the field 
that this problem with the child and problem with the mother, that 
combination, requires partial-birth abortion as the preferred method.
  Organizations have said this may be the best. If you say ``may,'' 
then you have to come forward saying where can it be the best; tell me 
what circumstances. They have not. Yet, incredibly, with all of the 
evidence we have presented on our side of this issue, of how it is bad 
medicine, how it is not peer reviewed, how it is rogue medicine, how it 
was developed by an abortionist who was not an obstetrician, how it is 
only done in abortion clinics, how it is not taught in medical schools, 
it is not in any of the literature--all of this information is 
overwhelming that this is a bad procedure--the only thing they hold 
onto on the other side is, it may be necessary, with no instance, no 
hypothetical.
  Pull out your worst set of facts for me, put them on paper, and tell 
me what it is. They will not do it. You have to wonder, don't you, if 
this is the evidence they want to use to claim that health is a 
necessary provision. It is bogus. It is bogus.
  Coreen Costello--again, this is based on what she has revealed of her 
medical history of her own accord. Again, Dr. DeCook states that a 
partial-birth abortion is never medically indicated. In fact, there are 
several alternative standard medical procedures to treat women 
confronting unfortunate situations such as what Miss Costello had to 
face.
  According to what she presented to us, the Congress, Miss Costello's 
child suffered from at least two conditions, polyhydramnios secondary 
to abnormal fetal swallowing and hydrocephalus.
       In the first the child could not swallow the amniotic fluid 
     and an excess of the fluid, therefore, collected in the 
     mother's uterus.
       The second condition, hydrocephalus, is one that causes an 
     excessive amount of fluid to accumulate in the fetal head. 
     Because of the swallowing defect, the child's lungs were not 
     properly stimulated, and underdevelopment of the lungs would 
     likely be the cause of death if abortion had not intervened. 
     The child had no significant chance of survival, but also 
     would not likely die as soon as the umbilical cord was cut.
       The usual treatment for removing the large amount of fluid 
     in the uterus is called amniocentesis. The usual treatment 
     for draining excess fluid from the fetal head is a process 
     called cephalocentesis. In both cases, the excess fluid is 
     drained by using a thin needle that can be placed inside the 
     womb through the abdomen, transabdominally or through the 
     vagina. The transvaginal approach, however, as performed by 
     Dr. McMahon on Miss Costello, puts a woman at an increased 
     risk of infection because of the nonsterile environment of 
     the vagina. Dr. McMahon used this approach most likely 
     because he had no significant experience in obstetrics and 
     gynecology.

  Again, using a higher risk procedure. Why? This man was not an 
obstetrician; he was an abortionist.

       In other words, he may not have been able to do as well 
     transabdominally in the standard method used by OB/GYNs 
     because that takes a degree of expertise he did not possess.
       After the fluid has been drained and the head decreased in 
     size, labor will be induced and attempts made to deliver the 
     child vaginally. Miss Costello's statement that she was 
     unable to have a vaginal delivery or, as she called it, 
     natural birth or induced labor, is contradicted by the fact 
     that she did indeed have a vaginal delivery conduct by Dr. 
     McMahon. What Miss Costello had was a breach vaginal delivery 
     for purposes of aborting the child, however, as opposed to a 
     vaginal delivery intended to result in a live birth. A 
     cesarean section in this case would not be medically 
     indicated, not because of any inherent danger but because the 
     baby could have been delivered safely vaginally.

  We have heard testimony after testimony from hundreds of 
obstetricians saying there may be cases where separation has to occur 
between the mother and the child because of the health of the mother, 
because of the life of the mother. There may be a case--there are cases 
where the baby within the mother's womb is a threat to the mother's 
life and health. But what these doctors have said over and over and 
over again is, just because we have to separate the mother from the 
child does not mean you have to kill the child in the process.
  In the case of partial-birth abortion--take Coreen Costello--fluid 
was drained. The baby could have been delivered. The baby could have 
been delivered and given a chance to survive. By killing the baby, you 
increase the risk to the mother. When you do a procedure inside of the 
mother that causes the destruction of the child through shattering the 
base of the skull, you are performing a brutal procedure, a very 
bloody, barbaric procedure inside of the mother that could result in 
laceration, and bony fragments or shards perforating that birth canal 
area. That is much more dangerous to the health of the mother than 
simply delivering the baby intact.
  It seems almost incredible to me that in the overwhelming--
overwhelming--status of the medical evidence presented on the floor we 
would have any question as to whether this is really necessary to 
protect the health of the mom.
  My argument goes a little further because I think these doctors are 
saying that you may need to deliver the child prematurely, but you 
never need to kill the baby to protect the health and life of the 
mother. There is always a way to deliver the child. At least give this 
child the dignity of being born.
  Remember, most of these abortions are done on healthy mothers and 
healthy babies. I think everyone looks at this debate and says: Oh, 
this is a debate; about sick moms and sick kids. It is not a debate 
about sick mothers and sick kids. This is a debate primarily about 
healthy mothers who decide late in pregnancy not to have a child, and 
the child is healthy. The child would be born alive if it were not 
killed by the partial-birth abortion. The child, in many cases, would 
not only be born alive but would survive that birth. We in the Senate 
say too bad; too bad.
  I am going to talk now about the small percentage of cases where 
there are the difficult choices because that is the real powerful 
argument. That is why they make it because they believe it is the most 
powerful argument they have to keep this procedure legal. They do not 
want to talk about the 90 percent of the cases because they cannot 
defend that. You cannot defend a 25-week abortion with a healthy mother 
and a healthy baby where that baby would be born alive, survive, 
develop, and live normally. You cannot defend that.
  And guess what. Surprise, surprise, nobody does. They do not talk 
about those cases. That is the norm here. That is the norm. That is 
what goes on out there. They do not talk about that. They want to bring 
in the sick kids and the sick moms and say: We need this for these 
small percentage of cases.
  Again, let's get to the argument again. In every one of those cases 
where there is a maternal health issue, there is overwhelming evidence 
this procedure is not in the best interest of the mother, but they want 
to bring in the sick kids.
  That bothers me because it assumes that you, the American public, out 
there listening to what I am saying, somehow look at sick children as 
less important, as less worthy of life, as disposable, as a burden, as 
a freak, as pain and suffering, not as a beautiful, wonderful gift from 
God. That is why they argue these cases, and they argue these cases 
because there are millions of Americans who, when they hear about this 
child who is deformed or not going to live long, see this child as a 
burden, as unwanted, as imperfect.
  It is a sad commentary on our country if we look at God's creations 
and see only what their utility is to our country, to our lives, to our 
world. And if their utility is not how we can quantify it in terms of 
what kind of job they can have, how smart they will be or how beautiful 
they will be, what they will add to the value of life in America, they 
are seen as less useful, less needed, less wanted, a burden.

  The fact that the people who make this debate, oppose this bill, 
bring this up and talk about just these cases sends a chill down my 
spine, because they are appealing to the darker side of us when they do 
that. They are appealing to our prejudice against people who do not 
look like us, who do not act like us, who are not perfect like us, and 
yet they are the very people who will fight heroic fights. And I give 
credit to many who will fight the heroic fights to give rights to that 
disabled child after it

[[Page S12925]]

survives. But once the child is delivered and once it is alive, then 
they will fight the battle to make sure it gets a proper education 
under IDEA.
  The Senator in the Chair, Dr. Frist, was a great leader on that and 
worked with some of the opponents of this bill on ensuring disabled 
individuals have rights. But I wonder how they can justify using these 
cases to appeal to this dark side of us, the cultural phenomenon in 
this country that demands perfection, that is poisoning our little 
girls with what perfect little girls must look like, that is leading to 
disorder after disorder as a result of the striving for perfection that 
has permeated our culture, what you have to look like, what you have to 
smell like, what you have to wear.
  They feed into that by saying these poor children are not quite 
worthy of life. While we will fight for them once they are born, I 
think what they are actually saying is: But we really hope they are not 
born in the first place.
  That is very disturbing because I am going to share with you tonight 
some stories about parents who made a different choice, who, when they 
heard about the child inside, decided they were going to look at that 
child the way God looks at that child, as a beautiful, wonderful 
creature of God, perfect in every way in His most important eyes, and 
accepted children for as long or as short a time as their life was to 
be.
  I am going to share with you a story first of Andrew Goin.
  Last time we debated this issue on the override of the President's 
veto last year--it was last fall--I had this picture up here. We talked 
about Andrew. And I will do so again. But I have a little addendum to 
this story.
  First, let me tell you about Andrew. That is Andrew. Andrew's mother 
is Whitney Goin. She had a feeling something was wrong 5 months into 
her pregnancy. When she went in for her first sonogram, a large 
abdominal wall defect was detected. She described her condition after 
learning there was a problem with the pregnancy:

       My husband was unreachable so I sat alone, until my mother 
     arrived, as the doctor described my baby as being severely 
     deformed with a gigantic defect and most likely many other 
     defects that he could not detect with their equipment. He 
     went on to explain that babies with this large of a defect 
     are often stillborn, live very shortly, or could survive with 
     extensive surgeries and treatments, depending on the presence 
     of additional anomalies and complications after birth. The 
     complications and associated problems that a baby in this 
     condition could suffer include but are not limited to: 
     bladder exstrophy, imperforate anus, collapsed lungs, 
     diseased liver, fatal infections, cardiovascular 
     malformations . . . .

  And so on.
  A perinatologist suggested she strongly consider having a partial-
birth abortion. The doctor told her it may be something that she 
``needs'' to do--that she ``needs'' to do. He described the procedure 
as ``a late-term abortion where the fetus would be almost completely 
delivered and then terminated.''
  The Goins chose to carry their baby to term. But complications 
related to a drop in the amniotic fluid level created some concerns. 
Doctors advised the Goins that the baby's chances for survival would be 
greater outside the womb. So on October 26, 1995, Andrew Hewitt Goin 
was delivered by C-section. He was born with an abdominal wall defect 
known as omphalocele, a condition in which the abdominal organs--
stomach, liver, spleen, small and large intestines--are outside of the 
baby's body but still contained in a protective envelope of tissue. 
Andrew had his first of several major operations 2 hours after he was 
born.
  Andrew's first months were not easy. He suffered excruciating pain. 
He was on a respirator for 6 weeks. He needed tubes in his nose and 
throat to continually suction his stomach and lungs. He needed eight 
blood transfusions. His mother recalled:

       The enormous pressure of the organs being replaced slowly 
     into his body caused chronic lung disease for which he 
     received extensive oxygen and steroid treatments as he 
     overcame a physical addiction to the numerous pain killers he 
     was given.

  It broke his parents' hearts to see him suffering so badly.
  Andrew fought hard to live. In fact, Baby Andrew did live. On March 
1, 1999, Bruce and Whitney Goin welcomed their second child, Matthew, 
into the family.
  Here is a picture of the two of them.
  Contrary to the misinformation about partial-birth abortion that has 
been so recklessly repeated, carrying Andrew to term did not affect 
Whitney's ability to have future children.
  This is that little boy who ``needed'' to be aborted, who was not 
``perfect'' in our eyes. It is one of these ``abnormalities'' that we 
need to get rid of. What a beautiful little boy. What a gift he is to 
his parents. What a gift he is to all of us for his courage and 
inspiration. What inspiration we get as a society from those who 
overcome the great odds and pain and strife. How ennobled we are by it.

  Are we ennobled by partial-birth abortions? Would we be ennobled in 
this country today if Whitney Goin did what she ``needed'' to do 
according to the doctor?
  Andrew Goin touched more than one life directly.
  When I had this previous picture up of Andrew last year, I was here 
at about this time of night. At that time, Senator DeWine was in the 
Chair. I was thinking, and I called my wife about an hour before, as I 
did tonight, and I said: Honey, I just have to get up and talk some 
more. I just feel it in me. I have to say more. I know it's not going 
to change anybody's vote, but I have to say it. I know there is nobody 
on the floor other than Mike DeWine--at that time; and now Bill Frist 
at this time--who will be listening to what I'm going to say, but I 
have to say it.
  So here I am again. I remember finishing that night a little after 10 
o'clock. And it was after 10 o'clock, because the pages always 
encourage me, when I speak late at night, to speak until after 10 
o'clock so they don't have to go to school in the morning. So 
congratulations, you are 3 minutes away from it.
  So it was after 10 o'clock. And I remember closing down the Senate 
and Mike coming up here, and I just felt this sense that this was all 
for nothing--as much as I care about this issue and as wrong as I 
believe this is for our country--that all that was said that night was 
falling on deaf ears.
  In fact, the next day we lost the override vote. So my feeling of 
futility, if you will, was compounded--until a few days later when I 
received an e-mail from a young man who said:

       Recently my girlfriend and I were flipping through the 
     channels, and we came across C-SPAN, and were fortunate 
     enough to hear your speech regarding the evils of partial-
     birth abortion. We saw the picture of the little boy with the 
     headphones on, who was lucky enough to have had parents who 
     loved him and brought him into this world instead of ending 
     his life prenatally. Both of us were moved to tears by your 
     speech.
       And my girlfriend confessed to me that she had scheduled an 
     appointment for an abortion the following week. She never 
     told me about her pregnancy because she knew that I would 
     object to any decision to kill our child. But after watching 
     your emotional speech, she looked at me, as tears rolled down 
     her cheeks, and told me that she could not go through with 
     it.
       We're not ready to be parents. We still have a couple years 
     left at college. And then we will have a large student loan 
     to pay back. But I am grateful that my child will live. It is 
     a true tragedy that the partial-birth abortion ban failed to 
     override Clinton's veto. But please take some comfort in 
     knowing that at least one life was saved because of your 
     speech. You have saved the life of our child. May God 
     bless you and keep you.

  Fortunately for me, the writer of this e-mail stayed in touch. I 
received an e-mail a couple of weeks ago that reported back what had 
happened over the previous year. He says:

       We reevaluated our ability to raise a child at this point 
     in time in our lives, and we finally decided to put our baby 
     up for adoption. I know that she is being raised by a loving 
     couple that cares deeply for her. I often wonder if we did 
     the right thing by putting her up for adoption, but I know we 
     did the right thing by bringing her into the world. Every now 
     and then I think that one day she is going to grow up and be 
     a part of the lives of many people. Then I wonder what would 
     have happened if I had just kept on clicking through the 
     channels and not stopped to see you speaking on C-SPAN. A 
     terrible thing might have happened and I probably would never 
     have known about it. I will always have in my mind the 
     thoughts about her life that she is living and the people 
     that she is important to. Once again, thank you so much for 
     your speech on C-SPAN that day. It is a terrible tragedy that 
     you were unable to override Clinton's veto, what it meant to 
     us, of course, our daughter and her adopted parents.

  There is something ennobling about that story, something that touches 
all

[[Page S12926]]

of us, something that gives us hope. What I am saying is, I don't think 
partial-birth abortion does that to anyone. I don't think it is 
ennobling to kill a child 3 inches away from being born. I don't think 
it is inspiring. I don't think it is the better angels of our nature. I 
don't think it is going to go down in the annals of the Senate as one 
of our great compassionate civil rights votes or constitutional votes.
  It doesn't lift up our spirits. It doesn't make us walk with that 
longer stride, with our head held high. It is sanctioning the killing 
of an innocent baby who is 3 inches away from constitutional 
protection, and it blurs the line of what is permissible in this 
country. If we can kill a little baby that would otherwise be born 
alive, 3 inches away from being born, what else are we capable of?
  Unfortunately, we are answering that question every day, with the 
violence we see reported on television, with the insensitivity to life 
that we see occurring in our daily lives, with the calls for assisted 
suicide, with the calls for mercy killings, even with this debate, with 
the argument the Senator from California made earlier. She wants to 
make sure that every child is wanted.
  Mother Teresa said it best at the National Prayer Breakfast a few 
years ago. ``Give me your children,'' she said. Give me your children. 
If you don't want your children, give them to me; I want them.
  Tens of thousands of mothers and fathers who cannot have children 
want those children and will love those children. There is not a 
shortage of wanting in America when it comes to children. The most 
debilitating thing to think about is that the life of a child can be 
snuffed out, a life that could include 90 or 100 years. A little girl 
born this year has a 1-in-3 chance to live to be 100. So for those 
little girls who are aborted through partial-birth abortion, 100 years 
of loving and making a contribution to our society, finding the cure to 
cancer, of enriching our lives is snuffed out because for a period of 
time, a short period of time, your mother didn't want you. How many of 
us in our lives today would be snuffed out or could be snuffed out 
because someone doesn't want you?

  We have a chance to make a statement tomorrow in the Senate. We have 
a chance to stand as a body for these little children, these imperfect 
little children who the world and, unfortunately, Members of the Senate 
believe are somehow less worthy of being born because they may not live 
long or they may be in pain and it would be merciful to put them out of 
their misery. I am sure Andrew Goin would say, please don't show me 
that kind of mercy. In fact, we have lots of other children who were 
born who I am sure would say, please don't show me that kind of mercy.
  A picture here of Tony Melendez. Tony was born with no arms, 11 toes, 
and severe clubfoot. That is little Tony. I am sure what he would say 
to you today is, please don't show me that kind of mercy because I am 
not perfect like you would like me to be. Tony didn't let all the 
prejudice that comes with having no arms, a clubfoot, 11 toes stop him 
from being one of the greatest inspirations we have had in our time. 
Tony is now a musician. Tony plays the guitar with his feet. He has 
performed for the Pope on three occasions, has traveled to 16 foreign 
countries, played the national anthem in game 5 of the 1989 World 
Series, on and on and on.
  If you would listen to the debate today on the floor of the Senate, 
you would think it might be more merciful to let him die before he gets 
the chance to prove that he is worthy.
  Donna Joy Watts. Donna Joy was here a couple of years ago. Donna Joy 
is an amazing story. It has been put in the Congressional Record for a 
long time. We had it in here several times. Lori Watts, her mom, found 
out that her child had hydrocephalus, an excessive amount of cerebral 
fluid, water on the brain. She was told her daughter would virtually 
have no brain, that most of her brain would be gone. So the 
obstetrician, when she found out on the sonogram, said Donna Joy should 
be aborted, that a partial-birth abortion should be performed--yes, a 
partial-birth abortion. Mr. Watts said, ``No, we don't want to do an 
abortion.'' So they sent the Wattses to see a high-risk obstetrics 
group. They went to three hospitals in the Baltimore area. All three 
hospitals said they would abort Donna Joy, but they would not deliver 
her. Let me repeat that. They would perform an abortion, but they would 
not deliver her. So people are worried about safe access to abortion. 
We are getting to the point where we need safe access to birth. 
Finally, she found a team that would deliver her. Again, this group 
also advised an abortion but then agreed to deliver. She was born with 
severe health problems.
  What the Wattses expected was that, as soon as the baby was born, a 
team would go into action to see what they could do to help save this 
little girl. They found out that they did nothing. They did nothing. 
They put the baby in a neonatal unit and kept it warm and they said to 
the Wattses, your baby is going to die. We are not going to do 
anything. This baby is so sick, has such a little brain, so many 
complications, we are not going to deal with it. Guess what. She didn't 
give up. She kept living. So now the doctors had this baby, now alive 
three days, and they don't know what to do with her. This baby 
keeps living and she should have been dead.

  Finally, three days later, they implanted a shunt to drain off the 
excess fluid. Of course, the shunt should have been in as soon as 
possible to minimize the damage, but they waited three days. What has 
happened ever since then has been remarkable. Yes, there were 
complications. The shunts haven't worked. They have had to go back in 
several times to fix that. They had trouble feeding her. And so her 
mother came up with an ingenious way of fixing a mixture of baby food 
and giving it by syringe, one drop at a time, because that is all she 
could handle eating. She had other complications.
  Meningoencephalocele is another complication, and I can go on with 
epilepsy, sleep disorders, digestive complications. She has had a lot 
of problems. But she has survived them all. She has survived them all.
  Donna Joy is about to celebrate, next month, her eighth birthday. 
And, yes, I have met her. She has been in my office. She walks and 
talks and plays with my kids. She takes karate and she goes around with 
her mom to various places. We are fortunate to have the Watts living in 
Pennsylvania. She provides living testimony to hope and to the horrors 
of partial-birth abortion, because she should not be alive today. She 
should not be in this picture. If you accept the arguments on the other 
side, it is probably better if she wasn't there.
  I don't accept those arguments. I don't accept the arguments that 
because a child may not have the kind of life that you want, she cannot 
have a life worth living, because all life is worth living.
  There are several other cases here that I would like to put in the 
Record. One I want to talk about, finally, is the case of Christian 
Matthew McNaughton. I talk about this because this is somewhat personal 
because I know the McNaughtons. They are a wonderful family. Mark is a 
State legislator up in Pennsylvania. Christian was born in 1993. Before 
he was born, the McNaughtons found, when Dianne went in for a sonogram, 
that Christian had hydrocephalus, water on the brain. By the way, in 
several of the stories we heard about why we need to have partial-birth 
abortion, the abnormality was hydrocephalus. So these are parallel 
cases. The radiologist said the baby seemed to have more fluid on the 
brain than tissue. They cautioned that it was possible the baby had no 
brain at all. They were told their prospects were dim, and they were 
advised that they could have an abortion. It would be preferable to 
have an abortion. In fact, they were offered a partial-birth abortion.
  Again, as the doctor explained it, the baby would be partially 
delivered, the surgical instrument inserted into the base of the skull, 
the brains would be extracted, or what there was of the brain, and the 
rest of the body would be delivered. Of course, they rejected that 
option. One of the doctors said, after they rejected the option, that 
shunt surgery to relieve the pressure, the fluid on the baby's brain, 
would not be performed if the child's quality of life prospects did not 
warrant it. That goes back to the Donna Joy situation.
  Christian was born in June of 1993. He required special medical care. 
A CAT

[[Page S12927]]

Scan revealed he suffered a stroke in utero, which caused excess fluid 
to build up in his brain. It showed that the lower level quadrant of 
his brain was missing. Within a week of his birth, he had the first 
shunt surgery to drain fluid, and he had a follow-up procedure in three 
months. He exceeded everybody's expectations. So a baby, which doctors 
initially believed was blind, had no capacity for learning, grew to a 
little boy who talked, walked, ran, sang, enjoyed playing baseball and 
basketball. He attended preschool. His heroes were Cal Ripken, Jr., 
Batman, Spiderman, and the Backstreet Boys. He loved whales and 
dolphins. His favorite movie was Angels in the Outfield. And he 
especially loved his baby sister, who was two years younger than he. 
Christian brought joy to all who were fortunate enough to know him.
  In August, Christian began experiencing head pains. Here is little 
Christian in this photo, and this is his little baby sister. His shunt 
was malfunctioning, and it had to be replaced.
  After surgery, Christian experienced cardiac arrest respiratory 
distress. He slipped into a coma. Fluid continued to accumulate on his 
brain. He fought hard to live. But he didn't. He died 2 years ago on 
August 8 at the age of 4.
  If you think these kids don't matter, if you think this option is 
just all pain, ask Mark and Dianne whether they would trade the 4 
years. They have those wonderful memories--difficult, sure; painful, 
sure. But they believed in their child. They loved him. They nurtured 
him. And he returned much more than they ever gave--not just to them 
but to all of us.
  Do you want to know how they felt about their little brother?
  Last year, on his anniversary, these are little ads taken out in the 
Harrisburg Patriot News by his sisters, his brother, his mom and dad.
  His sister said:

       Christian, we love you, we miss you, we wish we could kiss 
     you just one more time.

  His brother, Mark:

       I have a poem for you.
       Blue jays are blue, and I love you; robins are red, and I 
     miss you in bed; sparrows are black, I wish you were back; I 
     am sorry for the bad things I did to you, you are the best 
     and the only brother I ever had, please watch over us and 
     take care of us. Love Mark.

  His mom and dad:

       Our arms ache to hold you again. Our hearts are forever 
     broken, but we thank God we had a chance to love you. We know 
     your smile is brightening up the heavens, and that Jesus 
     loves the little children. Please help us to carry on until 
     the day we can all play together again.

  What would be missed, as some would suggest, if we just take all of 
this pain away, and kill this baby before it would suffer through this 
horrible life?
  The McNaughtons would not trade a minute. I think it is obvious they 
wouldn't trade a minute.
  All of the stories are not happy ones. All of the sad stories do not 
have a bright side. Some are just tragic and tragic and tragic.
  But I can tell you as a family who has gone through the loss of a 
child, and what we thought was a normal pregnancy didn't go the way we 
had hoped, accepting your child, loving your child, taking your 
children as they are, for as long as they are to be may be the hardest 
thing you can do. But it is the best that we can do--not just for the 
child whose life you have affirmed and accepted but in your life.
  In the case of Mark, the little boy knew he was loved. He lived a 
couple of hours. Karen and I and our family have the knowledge that for 
those hours we opened up our arms to him, and during those 2 hours he 
knew he was loved.
  What a wonderful life we could all have if that is all we had.
  We have a chance tomorrow to draw a bright line. A bright line needs 
to be drawn for this country. If there is a time in our society and in 
our world when we need a bright line separating life and death, I can 
think of no better time.
  This debate today and tomorrow is drawing that line, affirming that 
once a baby is in the process of being born and there is a partial-
birth abortion outside of the mother, the line has been crossed. It is 
not a fuzzy line. If we perform that kind of brutality to a little baby 
who would otherwise be born alive, it is beneath us as a country.
  History will look back at this debate, I am sure, and wonder how it 
could have ever occurred. How we could ever have done that to the most 
helpless among us? How did we ever cross the line?
  But tomorrow those Members of the Senate will have a chance to tell a 
different story for history, to say that the greatest deliberative body 
in the world will strike a clear blow for the right to life for little 
children during the process of being born.
  I don't think it is too much to ask. But I do ask it of my 
colleagues. I plead with them to find somewhere in their hearts the 
strength to stand up and do what is right for this country, what is 
right for the little children, and say no to partial-birth abortions.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.

                          ____________________