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Vindicator ago

@Nomochomo, this is missing a couple of key pieces of information. First, where is the source that supports this statement?

Now, parents are even encouraged to carry their children to term so they can be harvested.

Second, you say this is related to PG because "the biomedical industry is legally abusing and harvesting the organs of living children" yet the supporting link you provide for the AMA statement on this is decades old and also refutes the claim, stating:

Courts have said that anencephalic babies fall under the purview of the Americans With Disabilities Act, deserving all the medical care that society can provide.

You're missing any information at all about the current position of the AMA or what the current legal situation is, and your three last links of actual tissue donations all emphasize how difficult and rare it was for parents to attempt to donate their children's organs.

Pizzagate as defined for this sub is an organized attempt by a corrupt group of wealthy, globalist powermongers who use the abuse of kids to keep their chokehold on power. You've demonstrated no connection between that and parents who want their terminally ill kids' lives to help other terminally ill kids. It's certainly likely that biomed profiteers would try to take advantage of such parents, but that is speculative. This thread needs to be posted in v/pizzagatewhatever.

However, I'll give this the 24 Hour Grace flair in case you have more evidence that actually establishes a connection to PG.

Gothamgirl ago

From experience an anecheplic child can never survive long after birth. A few days maybe a few months at max, so doctors normally give an option to terminate pregnancy. They're placed on life support from birth, as far as organ harvesting/donating, I was told not possible but that was in 1999.

NOMOCHOMO ago

They definitely can't survive. However, this practice is actually killing the children prematurely.

http://everydaybioethics.org/resource/anencephalic-babies-are-now-“wanted”—-their-organs

A physician’s first duty is to his patient—even if that patient is a baby born dying—and to do her no harm. That would include not declaring her dead prematurely and not killing her by removing a vital organ. As Dr. Edmund Pellegrino, a virtuous physician by any standard, reminds us in the context of organ transplantation, “No person should be sacrificed for the good of another.”