Wednesday, September 27, 2006

It's Time For Transoption

In 1986, science fiction writer Victor Koman was asked by his friend, magazine writer Samuel Edward Konkin III, "Why do abortion opponents spend their time trying to outlaw the procedure instead of rescuing as many viable fetuses as they could and raising them?" After pondering this question, Koman wrote Solomon's Knife, a novel about a doctor who devises a surgical procedure to transfer an embryo from the womb of a pregnant woman who wants to terminate her pregnancy, to the womb of an infertile woman who wants to be pregnant, thus serving the needs of both women and perserving the life of the unborn. Koman called the procedure "transoption", a blend of the words transfer and adoption. Transoption would be a way of giving both sides in the abortion debate what they say they want: the ability to end a pregnancy and yet preserve the prenatal human life.

Now that this idea has been around for 16+ years, why haven't thousands of activists latched onto it and demanded a research program to make transoption possible? Why doesn't the Department of Health and Human Services begin a "Fetus Defense Initiative" to bring it about? Could it be that there are more than two factions debating abortion? Victor Koman identifies four in his novel:

1. Pro-Lifers who only want to save the lives of the unborn.
2. Pro-Choicers who only want women to be able to escape unwanted pregnancies.
3. Pro-Lifers who want the same as Faction 1, plus the power to control the women and their wombs as well.
4. Pro-Choicers who want the same as Faction 2, plus the power to kill the unborn as well.

The extremists occupying Factions 3 and 4 never publicly admit their desire for power over women and fetuses, respectively, but the advent of transoption would force them to do so. Could it be that these tiny minorities, knowing that transoption could solve the problem motivating most abortion-issue activists, and knowing that it could reduce or eliminate their power bases, have been working to suppress the very idea of transoption? If this is not the case, then why has this brilliant idea received no attention from the media, the medical, health-care and religious communities, and the communities of activists focusing on abortion?

My personal experience suggests that the transoption idea is being suppressed. I first stumbled across Solomon's Knife while browsing in the Sunnyvale Library back in 2000. Last month while preparing for a sermon on transoption, I tried checking it out again, but it was no longer even listed in the library catalog. I tried other nearby libraries but the book was nowhere to be found. The Santa Clara County Library System had it listed, but the number of copies was zero. Don Phillips of the Milpitas Public Library explained that the book was lost or stolen, but hadn't yet been purged from the online catalog. After hearing about my efforts to find Solomon's Knife and reading about it online, Don heroically rush-ordered a copy for me, because he loves controversial books and hates censorship.

With a little help from like-minded people who become aware of these mysterious book disappearances, I'm hoping Solomon's Knife will once again grace the shelves of libraries all across the Bay Area. I'm hoping the transoption idea will bubble up to the chattering class, gain traction in the blogosphere, start a conversation bridging political and religious divides, energize the medical community to develop transoption technology, and finally eliminate the demand for abortions and abortion-issue activists.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Blogland

Hello World of Blogland. I am Michael Alexander Pelizzari, but you can call me MAP. I work as a physicist in the aerospace industry, putter around with the universe and its contents, and sometimes speak up on matters that are being ignored by practically everybody. Every now and then you can expect to stumble across some new and mindbogglingly profound musing here. Hence the Blog Title "MAP's Musings" (get it? Ha, ha!!). Frequency of posting to be determined in the fullness of time.

Bye for now. Catherine, my wife of almost 2 years, says I better get started making the salad. She'd never get her raw botanicals if it weren't for me. <(-:P