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Petition Assembling Party Great Success

 

 

Thanks to everyone who came out to the assembling party on Saturday to help with the petitions; the turnout was great, and PersonhoodColorado is gearing up for the petition drive.

Another assembling party will be held at Maranatha Christian Center (7180 Oak St Arvada, CO) at 9 AM this Saturday, August 22.

We hope to see you Saturday!

Catholic Bishop Vasa of the Oregon Diocese of Baker Supports Personhood

Print Edition: 08/06/2009 Catholic Sentinel

Americans are confused about life

BEND — I had the good fortune while listening to a Christian television station to hear a congressman from Georgia who was talking about the Sanctity of Human Life Act. This is a bill introduced in November, 2007, that defines human life as beginning at fertilization and would protect all human life even that life created by human cloning or in-vitro fertilization. This is not at all new news, but hearing the congressman speak gave me a renewed sense of just how complacent and confused we are in the United States about the worth and dignity of human life.

The language of the bill is both instructive and challenging: “The right to life guaranteed by the Constitution is vested in each human being, and is the paramount and most fundamental right of a person. No one in these United States could take exception to this. The congressman talked about the relativistic and rather arbitrary method of determining just who is that person worthy of the protections guaranteed by the Constitution. Certainly that “person” is every human being whose birth process has been completed. There is nothing, however, in the birth process that changes anything of the nature of the one who is brought to birth. Thus the person who is fully delivered is the same “person” he or she was three or five minutes earlier. That which is essential to personhood, having the nature of a human being, is not changed by birth. What changes is what philosophers identify as the “accidents.” For instance, a doll possesses the “nature” of a doll. A doll is, for the sake of this discussion, a miniature human creation resembling a human being. You may put that doll in a box where no one sees it and it is still, by its own nature, a doll. That doll may be loved or completely neglected and it is still a doll. You may dress it in red, yellow, orange or blue and it is still a doll. You may even paint it a variety of colors and even disfigure it but it still remains a doll unless it is nearly destroyed. If you do not believe this try to take a beloved “doll,” which has long since lost its clear appearance as a doll, from its child owner. The doll’s location, relationship with persons, dress color or type, skin color, size and even general physical condition are all accidents, not essentials. None of these things change the “nature” of the doll. We know this now, though it was not always known or believed, in relation to the color of a person’s skin. That color or the national origin of a human being does not alter that which is essential to being a human being.

Unfortunately, by a kind of legal sleight of hand the Supreme Court has managed to overlook what is essential about a human being, his or her human nature, and make a distinction of personhood based on accidents of location, relationship, size, appearance, and degree of dependence. None of these things changes the nature of a human being and so none of these things should be used as ploys to grant or deny basic human rights. Yet, this is precisely what the Supreme Court has done.

The congressman’s bill seeks to correct this erroneous distinction by focusing precisely on that one thing which is essential. The only pertinent question should be: Is this a metabolizing biological entity of human origin with the genetic makeup of a human being? The bill incorporates this essential definition into law: “The life of each human being begins with fertilization, cloning, or its functional equivalent . . . at which time every human being shall have the legal and constitutional attributes and privileges of personhood.”

In making his case to his fellow congressmen, the bill’s author said: “We have a moral and constitutional obligation to protect and defend every precious soul that comes into existence.” The use of the word “soul” in this context refers more to human being than a specific spiritual reality we in the Catholic Church would identify as one’s “immortal soul.” It would not be proper to try to put into civil law this spiritual understanding of the nature of man. Identifying the nature of a human being, however, is not an attempt to impose anyone’s religious belief on someone else. It is rather the acceptance of a biological and scientific fact. That which is essential to the definition of a human being is already present from the moment the human ovum is fertilized by human sperm. Everything else is accident.

In keeping with this proper understanding of that which is essential to the human being, the Sanctity of Human Life Act declares that: “the right to life guaranteed by the Constitution is vested in each human being, and is the paramount and most fundamental right of a person; and the life of each human being begins with fertilization, cloning, or its functional equivalent, irrespective of sex, health, function or disability, defect, stage of biological development, or condition of dependency, at which time every human being shall have all the legal and constitutional attributes and privileges of personhood.” This is not a statement of religious belief but rather the logically consistent application of sound philosophical and biological reasoning.

Some new human entity is created when the human sperm and human ovum unite. That new entity begins a whole new form of living from the moment of fertilization. That new entity does not evolve into something else over the period he or she develops. He or she does not evolve from plant matter to animal matter or to a human being after passing through the birth canal. He or she undergoes no essential changes from what he or she possesses at the beginning. That which is granted to the baby who has been fully born is based legally on a number of accidents when it ought to be based on that which is essential.

The Sanctity of Human Life Act does not seek to introduce some inane legal fiction, but rather seeks to overturn a faulty legal fiction. The fiction, in which we are presently living, inanely pretends that human beings are not really human beings unless the Supreme Court passes judgment on them and declares them to be so. African slaves were always human beings and the Supreme Court decisions said or did nothing to change that. It simply recognized the truth. The Sanctity of Human Life Act seeks legal recognition of the same truth.

Watch the Entire Title Board Hearing Here

Colorado Secretary of State’s Title Board Unanimously Approves Proposed Personhood Amendment Language

Colorado Secretary of State’s Title Board Unanimously Approves Proposed Personhood Amendment Language

For Immediate Release

 August 5, 2009 Denver, Colorado – The offices of the Colorado Attorney General, The Secretary of State, and Legislative Legal Services voted 3-0 that the proposed 2010 Personhood Amendment meets the required single subject rule and also voted 3-0 that the language is not misleading.


Personhood Colorado Director, Gualberto Garcia Jones J.D., and Colorado Right to Life V.P., Leslie Hanks, explained the technical difference between the 2008 Personhood Amendment and this year’s. 


“Our decision to use the words ‘the beginning of biological development of a human being’ as opposed to ‘the moment of fertilization’ allows us to protect all human beings, even those originating from asexual forms of reproduction,” said Leslie Hanks.


 Several changes were suggested by members of the Title Board to the draft submitted by Legislative Legal Services; these changes were welcomed by the proponents. “The language suggested by the Title board reinforced our most fundamental  civic principle,” noted Gualberto Garcia Jones.  “While the state has no authority to grant inalienable rights, it has the obligation to protect them, and we believe the 2010 Personhood Amendment language accomplishes that ,” said Garcia Jones.

 

The Title as designated and fixed by the board now reads, “An amendment to the Colorado Constitution applying the term “person” as used in those provisions of the Colorado Constitution relating to inalienable rights, equality of justice, and
due process of law, to every human being from the beginning of the biological development of that human being.”

 

In 2007, the Colorado State Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision upholding a similar ruling by the Title Board.

 

Proposed changes in the language prompted a discussion and concern that the language could be interpreted as allowing the inclusion of apes as “persons” just as other nations are currently considering.  The proponents were pleased to accept language that excludes that possibility. 

 

“Today the Attorney General’s office, The Secretary of State’s office and Office of Legislative Legal Services made it clear that the language of the 2010 Personhood Amendment satisfied their statutory requirements,” said Garcia Jones, “we are pleased that the amendment will extend the protections of our constitution to all human beings.”

 

The proponents of the 2010 Personhood Amendment are looking forward to an unprecedented grass roots campaign to collect the necessary signatures to put the 2010 Personhood Amendment on the ballot.

 

 For interviews with Colorado Right to Life V.P., Leslie Hanks please contact Donna at Colorado Right to Life: 303 753-9394

For interviews with the Director of Personhood Colorado, Gualberto Garcia Jones J.D. please call 303 456 2700

JOIN A PRO-LIFE LEAFLETTING TEAM!

Weekly Lit Drops till the Election!

 Come on out and join a weekly literature drop! Or arrange a weekly lit drop in your own town and we'll add you to this list. At each event we have a great time passing out the A62 literature in a neighborhood. So let's meet at...
WEEKLY LIT DROPS

Arvada: Sat. 7:30am / Wed. 5:30pm McDonald's, Kipling & 58th 303-463-7789
Northglenn: Tue. 6:00pm  McDonald's at 104th & Huron 303-550-8170
Thornton: Thu. 6:00pm McDonald's at 120th & Colo Blvd 720-936-3742
Arapahoe County: Wed. 6:00pm McDonald's at Parker & Arapahoe 303-489-9203

ONE TIME LIT DROPS:

When: Saturday, August 28th, 7 a.m.

Where: 7-11 on Quebec and 6th Ave.

What: Leafletting houses with personhood literature

 

When: Monday, August 30th, 7 a.m.

Where: 7-11 on Quebec and 6th Ave.

What: Leafletting houses with personhood literature

The above times are DEPARTURE TIMES, so if you can come 15 minutes early, have a coffee, enjoy fellowship, and help with the planning as the team divides the  precinct (neighborhood) maps into sections so that the group can cover the entire precinct relatively quickly. Many hands make for light work, so you are greatly needed!

Each area's lit drop organizer will have the Amendment 62 Personhood Talking Points fliers, door hangers, and a precinct map for each person. We'll have a great time working as a team. And if you'd like to have us help do a lit drop to cover your precinct, then join us for a couple weeks, and we'll try to put your neighborhood on the schedule!

So just come on out and meet the group, or call to let your area organizer know that you're coming. And if you'd like to read a simple list of DOs & DONTs for distributing fliers, just check out this Lit Drop page on our campaign tracker! organize your own weekly literature drop for precincts in your town, then just call CRTL at 303-753-9394 and we'll post your weekly meeting place and times here!

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