Page 2/The Battalion/Thursday, February 11,1988 Opinion Outlawing surrogate motherhood seems unfair The New Jersey Supreme Court, with its ruling last week in the Baby M case, has put re strictions on sur- rogate moth- erhood contracts that could discour age the use of sur rogacy by infertile couples. “Baby M ” is Amy Couvillon what the courts dubbed a little girl born two years ago under a $10,000 surro gate contract in New Jersey who has spent most of her life as the object of a bitter, emotional custody battle. On Feb. 3 the New Jersey supreme court, in a 7- 0 decision, declared the surrogacy con tract illegal and rendered it void, award ing custody to the child’s father, William Stern. In a surrogacy contract, a woman car ries and delivers a baby for a another in dividual or a couple who cannot have a baby. In some cases, the woman is im pregnated by artificial insemination and is the natural mother of the child she gives up, and in other cases a fetilized egg or embryo is implanted into the womb of the surrogate mother, and she delivers a child not her own. The court opinion sharply criticized commercial surrogacy contracts, saying that paying a woman to have a baby amounts to illegal baby-selling. “This is the sale of a child, or at the very least, the sale of a mother’s right to her child,” the New Jersey justices wrote. The justices said a woman can volun teer to be a surrogate mother as long as the agreement allows the mother to change her mind about giving up her parental right to the baby. But they crit icized the concept of surrogacy, saying that it is “potentially degrading to wo men.” The Baby M case got the courts and the nation talking about surrogate motherhood and discussing ways to re strict and regulate it. But it never would have gone to court if the mother of the child, Mary Beth Whitehead-Gould, hadn’t been such a fruitcake — the court condemned her as an impulsive and manipulative woman and heard a secretly recorded conversation in which Whitehead-Gould threatened to kill herself and the baby if Stern did not let her keep her daughter. “The unfortunate events that have unfolded illustrate that its unregulated use can bring suffering on all involved,” the justices wrote in the opinion, which was the First state supreme court ruling on a broken surrogate contract. It would be sad if the antics of one im mature, hysterical woman could cast a bad light on surrogate contracts, or cause them to be outlawed. Surrogate contracts are a dream come true for infertile couples who would like the baby to be a natural child of at least one of them, for couples where the woman can conceive a child but cannot carry it to term and for cou ples who cannot conceive at all and face years of waiting to adopt a healthy in fant. The decision is not binding on any state except New Jersey. Both sides of the Baby M case say they will not appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, which is good; obviously, the best thing for the little girl is for her to remain with the Sterns. But if the Supreme Court hears a similar case, it may rule the contracts illegal or severely restrict their use. And this is not good. The restriction of surrogate arrange ments seems bitterly ironic when com pared with the legal status of abortion. If commerical surrogate contracts were declared illegal, a woman could agree before she gave birth to give the baby to someone else, but she could ac cept no money for this, because this is “baby selling.” If a fetus can be the sub ject of a pre-birth surrogate contract, and the mother can choose to give up her parental right before birth, then isn’t the fetus considered “alive?” The court said a woman’s carrying a fetus for money is “baby selling.” If the subject of the contract is a “baby,” then for the purposes of surrogate contracts, an un born baby is still a baby. But since Roe v. Wade in 1973, a woman can choose at I -WINK NWESStHG THESE ALLEGt&nOHS HENJ-OH IS ^ FINE 1PEA, S»R- tAY ONLY SOGCrESTtOH KMGWTBE Humanism reflects religious ideals The “Humanist Manifesto” has some notable and positive ideals; in terestingly, these ideals have their roots in religion. There must be Dalton Garis Guest Columnist an appreciation of the differfence be tween the essential message of religion as revealed by the Prophets themselves and the attempts to follow these teach ings as embodied and interpreted by the various religious sects. What better examples of this differ ence can there be than that which is seen in Islam and Christianity today? Vir tually no religious communities’ actions are justified in their own Book. Be that as it may, the religious message of their own scriptures is as strong and vital as ever. Two points should be considered: (1) how much more bestial would we all be now were these messages of peace and promise never to have been delivered; and (2) that the authorship of the most noble and high-minded philosophical thinking has as its first source the Prophets of God. While historical examples of this abound (legal codes in every land incul cate the Ten Commandments of Moses) I shall give a contemporary example. Inspect the following list for points of agreement with the more far-reaching articles of the “Humanist Manifesto”: The equality of men and women; the abolishment of all forms of prejudice; the essential harmony between science and religion; the necessity of universal compulsory education; a call for the es tablishment of a universal standard of weights and measures; the need for a common universal money system; a call to establish a world executive and the creation of a world federation of sover eign nation states for the establishment of collective security; the need to select or create a universal auxiliary language; the elimination of gross extremes of wealth and poverty. The above principles are each the verbatum tenants of belief of the Baha’i Faith, one of the divinely revealed world encompassing religions. It seems that what the humanists do is analogous to their reflecting the sun in a hand-held mirror, declaring that their light originates from their own creation and denying the existence of the sun! All attempts to upraise the standard of nobility of humankind must be ap plauded; but it cannot be forgotten that both our best teachings and ourselves have been created of an Intelligence and Essence, the unsearchableness and the manifestness of which is admitted to by all the greatest scientists, philo sophers and thinkers who have ever lived. Dalton Garis is an graduate student. The Battalion (USPS 045 360) Member of Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Conference The Battalion Editorial Board Sue Krenek, Editor Daniel A. LaBry, Managing Editor Mark Nair, Opinion Page Editor Amy Couvillon, City Editor Robbyn L. Lister and Becky Weisenfels, News Editors Loyd Brumfield, Sports Editor Sam B. Myers, Photo Editor Editorial Policy The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting newspa per operated as a community service to Texas A&M and Bryan-College Station. Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the editorial board or the author, and do not necessarily rep resent the opinions of Texas A&M administrators, fac ulty or the Board of Regents. The Battalion also serves as a laboratory newspaper for students in reporting, editing and photography classes within the Department of Journalism. The Battalion is published Monday through Friday during Texas A&M regular semesters, except for holiday and examination periods. Mail subscriptions are $ 17.44 per semester, $34.62 per school year and $36.44 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request. Our address: The Battalion, 230 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-1 111. Second class postage paid at College Station, TX 77843. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Battal ion, 216 Reed McDonald, Texas A&M University, Col lege Station TX 77843-4 111. BLOOM COUNTY will to kill the embryo or fetus in her uterus, because the baby is not consid ered to be a baby until birth. There’s a contradiction here. You can kill your fe tus, but you can’t sell it. Now, abortion is a sticky, emotional subject, a subject on which I’m deeply divided. I consider an embryo or fetus “alive,” because it would be ridiculous not to. Is your baby any more “alive” when it kicks the outside of your abdo men than when it was kicking from the inside? And ending a human life is mor ally and ethically wrong. But this life, this future human being, happens to be inside another human be ing, who must retain some privacy, and some right to her body and her life plans. And it would be extremely diffi cult, if not impossible, to enforce an anti-abortion law. How can you regulate and police something that happens in side a person? I was raised Catholic, and the subject of abortion hurts to think about, but I don’t think such a law would do any good. But if the Supreme Court has de clared that a baby is not a baby until it’s born, then how can it in conscience uphold a decision like the New Jersey one? And isn’t the crime of baby-selling (or fetus-selling or whatever they call it) preferable to abortion? Paying a woman to have a baby (whether her own or someone else’s) seems inherently wrong, Mail Call A few bones to pick with Jill EDITOR: Great article Jill! Your expertise on poverty shows that you have greatly studied this subject. Where did you receive your PhD? In that UPPER-MID DLE CLASS NORTH DALLAS neighborhood! Well, as you can tell, I have a few bones to pick with you and your reliable resource, Megan. First, the Rio Grande Valley is not the only low-income area. I’ve been to Dallas and have seen poverty stricken areas there. Where have you been? Why have you confined yourself to that bubble? Areyouhid ing from something? Get out and look around. Look in your own backyard! It’s not just in the valley. It’s in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta,It's all over the United States. Second, your and Megan’s stereotype of Mexican-Americans, not Mexi cans, is just wrong. There are many Hispanics — Prank Lozano, Martin Sheen, Henry Cisneros and Katherine Ortega — who prove that your ant Megan’s idea of Mexican-Americans is unrealistic and sad. One person’sin terpretation does not mean that it is factual. Don’t be judge, jury and pros ecutor. Third, Megan’s statement about questioning the moral decency of young i Hispanic girls is totally ridiculous. Don’t tell me your and Megan’s moral stan dards are above anyone else’s. Just because there is a small percentage of pre gnancies does not mean everyone is expecting a child. Look at your own higl school and don’t tell me that it hasn’t happened there. I’m not being unrealistic. I realize that these areas exist and there are peo ple of that description, but I object to how you presented them in your article Megan’s attitudes are bigoted, and they only perpetuate themselves. I resent how they were expressed in the article. Is this the article of a truly responsible journalist? Is this the investigative reporting that the Department of Journa lism is teaching you? If this is the quality of articles that appear in At Ease then I’d rather not have an At Ease section at all. Marcus A. Salinas ’89 A guy named Floor Sweep EDITOR: Picture this: There once was a Mechanical Engineer named Floor Sweep. Becauseof his incredible talent as a student, he was on a full scholarship which included: a special dorm, a special dining hall and a special parking space for mechani cal engineers only. One day, Floor Sweep was walking across the Stonewood | parking lot when he encountered three student athletes named Bar, Clayand Manvoigt. . Clay was a member of the women’s golf team, and Bar was a very impor-1 tant player on the football team. His participation on the team the nextsea- son was very important to his coach and himself, being that he was career minded and a good performance his senior year could land him a positionia the pros. Suddenly, for no apparent reason, Floor Sweep assaults the three ath letes. Floor Sweep threw Bar against the rear of a car, threw Manvoigt against an open door and then hit Clay in the face. Bar, the career-minded athlete sustained a possible career-ending shoulder injury and broken collarbone while Clay missed several golf tournaments because of her injuries inflicted | by Floor Sweep. This is the first and last part of the one-part series: STEREOTYPING PLAGUES A&M MECHANICAL ENGINEERS Steve Ihnen ’89 Letters to the editor should not exceed 300 words in length. The editorial staff reserves the right to edit lelttn for style and length, but will make every effort to maintain the author’s intent. Each letter must besig must include the classification, address and telephone number of the writer. by BerRe Breathed m coulp use a ume 0coop cusr, a?ew. urs so on we ters oo 0FF£N5(ve. w/pe our we BRAIN SUCKERS OF JO. , WEN \ LET'S 60 ; FUEA/ BLASVN6. TOO M5HY- keep WINKIN'. I'M Mem hie &ASHIN6? LET'S \ pm. "< < and it could theoretically lead tos kind of “baby-for-profit” industry,b a woman has the right to herbodyj Roe asserted) then she should have! right to choose to bear a baby forsooJ one else, and to be compensated. I| court did not address whether thesl rogate mother should be able to ad money for medical expenses, would assume that there are no led problems with that. But being pregnant involves than medical bills. It is a responsibi and an inconvienience, no matterli you look at it. It sometimes cankee. woman from working, especially ini later stages when moving around isi ing and difficult. Some monetary! pensation f or this does not seem ton to he unreasonable. Some couples simply cannot children normally, and getting at through adoption takes years of waitiad Ads run regularly in The Battalionl;, I’m sure in other college papers),f by couples who are trying to finds one who can provide them withal “Happily married financiallysecurj couple wants to adopt white newboirl Expenses paid.” The need is there. And if givings kind of compensation to surrogaij mothers will help to fill that need,ik| outlawing it seems unfair. Amy Couvillon is a senior jour, major, city editor and columnist I The Battalion. U)| Elio po Ibai lie po kit of nit Ca tio Re 1 sh( vet ow j An mi: we oth litit oft do! pa ref ove life liev beg the it is tliss sait tert nos cho nati