Canada Legalizes
Infanticide
Government-sanctioned child sacrifice returns to the Western hemisphere
By Rob Taylor
The title isn’t
fair — in Canada infanticide is a serious crime that can land you a tough five
year sentence. That’s five years maximum, by the way. After all, it’s
only killing a baby, nothing people need to really be punished for doing.
People in Canada
who think killing an infant is the act of a morally bankrupt monster who
deserves more time than the average murderer are getting another kick in the
teeth, courtesy of Judge Joanne Veit. She let a woman convicted of murdering
her newborn baby then throwing the body over her neighbor’s backyard fence walk out of court with a
suspended sentence and probation [2].
According to Veit
the murderess is the victim:
Queen’s Bench
Justice Joanne Veit rejected the Crown’s call for a four-year prison term —
which she described as “essentially” seeking the maximum five-year punishment
when taking into account the time Effert has already spent behind bars and
under strict bail conditions.
Based on the fact
infanticide has not been struck from the Criminal Code and it has no minimum penalty,
Veit said she feels Canadians “understand, accept and sympathize with the
onerous demands pregnancy and childbirth exact from mothers, especially mothers
without support.
“Naturally,
Canadians are grieved by an infant’s death, especially at the hands of the
infant’s mother, but Canadians also grieve for the mother,” said
Veit.
I’m sure. The
mother in question is Katrina Effert. In 2005, she gave birth to the child
alone in her parent’s basement and when the baby started to cry, she strangled the boy
with a pair of thong underwear and threw his body into her neighbor’s yard [3].
When police investigated after finding the boy’s body, she initially claimed
she was a virgin, but when caught in that lie she told cops she had given the
baby to her boyfriend.
She strangled her
newborn baby, threw the body into her neighbor’s yard, and then tried to frame
her boyfriend for the murder. She did all this because, at 19, she was hiding
her pregnancy from her mother.
During her first trial [4] her
behavior — specifically her attempts to cover up the crime and frame an
innocent man — was used by prosecutors to show this wasn’t “infanticide” but
murder. In Canada, infanticide is
assumed to be the product of a temporary mental illness [5] –
brought on by having a baby or by that mind-searing horror we call lactation.
In Canada a woman commits infanticide if she murders a newborn before she has
“recovered” from the effects of child birth, a process billions of women were
able to handle for millions of years without losing their sanity.
In that first
trial, Effert was sentenced to life in prison. But her defense lawyers appealed
and we have this ruling, in which a judge very cavalierly suggests that
Canadians should be grieving for the mother as well as for the helpless child
who was murdered with a pair of thong panties and dumped like a bag of garbage
into some unsuspecting neighbor’s backyard. Obviously many people in the
pro-life movement see this as the natural
progression of a culture that wholeheartedly accepts the most liberal positions
on abortion [6]. And they may have a point:
Pro-life advocates
have warned for years that widespread acceptance of abortion will open the door
to greatersocietal acceptance of infanticide, beginning with the euthanizing of
disabled newborns. Infanticide proponent Peter Singer, a top ethicist at
Princeton University, has said, for example, “there is no sharp distinction
between the foetus and the newborn baby.”
Though he once was
considered to be on the radical fringe, Singer’s views are becoming more
mainstream. For example, the world’s most prestigious bioethics journal,
The Hastings Center Report, published in 2008 an enthusiastic defense of the
Netherlands’ practice of euthanizing newborns.
However, it is a
classic case of putting the cart before the horse to assume that acceptance of
abortion is the driving factor in the culture of death Canada and the United
States have both developed over the years. Canada’s acceptance of late-term
abortions is a symptom of a much deeper problem, one that also leads to a
criminal justice system that gives women who murder newborns slaps on the
wrist.
Leftism sanctions
and encourages criminality by changing societal views of criminals and victims.
We see this clearly when Veit speaks of the onerousness of childbirth, as if
the child is a parasite erupting from the womb of some innocent victim in a
scene slightly less gory than the chest bursting dinner scene in Alien.
Meanwhile, Veit presumes to speak for all Canadians when she claims they grieve
for Effert, the woman who strangled a baby and then tried to frame an innocent
man for the murder.
Collectivist
ideology sees people as essentially interchangeable; they do not accept the
idea that a child’s life is more precious than an adult’s. The Western leftist
tradition also sees all people as victims and criminality as an expression not
of moral weakness or lack of character, but of frustration and lack of
opportunity. Canada, with its much beloved welfare state and universal health
care, still wasn’t doing enough for poor Katrina Effert and that’s why she
killed her son. It has nothing to do with selfishness, immorality, or evil.
For the left,
“income inequality” causes crime and the criminal is actually a victim of an
unfair and unjust system created by the only true evil in the world: Western
civilization. More than 5,000 years of philosophy and moral tradition has led
to the West being (until recently) the light in a benighted world. In a little
less than 200 years, Karl Marx and his spiritual heirs have overturned those
traditions and now we are a people who slap the wrists of child murderers while
supposedly grieving for them. Now we blame the newborn for his murder by
insinuating that his birth was such an ordeal it literally drove the mother
mad.
About eight
years ago I took a class in Meso-American art with an archeologist who had two
decades in the field under his belt. One of the things I learned was that in
some of those famous pyramid temples each corner had a sacrificed infant placed
under the foundation. The first Europeans to come into contact with the Aztecs
were rightly disgusted by people who killed their own children in religious
ceremonies. Now their descendants suspend the sentences of child killers who
didn’t want to get in trouble with their parents.
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