Rosa Acuna vs. Sheldon Turkish

Rosa Acuna vs. Sheldon Turkish

I just didn’t have the time or motivation yesterday to blog about this, although the story appeared in the Star-Ledger and got me all riled up. Mrs. Acuna had gone to her gynecologist, Dr. Turkish, complaining of abdominal pains, and Dr. Turkish informed her that she was about 6-8 weeks pregnant. Acuna has had a kidney problem since she was in high school (she is now 29 years old). Now, what she says Dr. Turkish said was that she’d be dead in 3 months if she didn’t get an abortion, and that she wasn’t carrying a baby, just a bunch of blood. What Dr. Turkish testified was that Acuna asked him specifically about getting an abortion, and an assistant concurred that she had made a statement that it was just too soon to be pregnant again, as she had two children already under the age of three. Dr. Turkish also said that while he might refer to a 6-8 week old embryo as “tissue” rather than a baby, the “bunch of blood” statement is not one that he would have made.

So, what was the point of all this? This woman wanted a law established that would order doctors to tell women that they are carrying a complete individual human being and that aborting would be tantamount to killing a member of their families. In addition, this woman who didn’t even know she was pregnant when she went to the doctor, gave the aborted fetus a name, post-mortem, and filed additional complaints related to its pain and suffering and her post-abortion trauma. Now, of course, this could all have been engineered by her lawyer, in order to further an anti-abortion agenda, although it looks more like someone trying to make a buck off her rich doctor, but either way it’s a scam, and the NJ State Supreme Court did right by dismissing it.

My thought is that a 29-year-old who doesn’t know what an abortion does is in no position to be telling doctors how to do their job. And someone who is that ignorant of what has been common knowledge since before she was born should probably rethink the whole parenting thing, as well. Sorry, that was snark, but I couldn’t help it. Finally, someone who files suit against a doctor on behalf of a child she wasn’t aware she was carrying and wants compensation for a procedure she agreed to in writing but regretted later should probably be paying Dr. Turkish and the NJ taxpayers back all the money that was spent on this frivolous lawsuit.

The Summary of the case is here
Her Lawyer presents his position here, and it does not in any way improve my opinion of him.

This is Gonna be Hellish!

This is Gonna be Hellish!

Last night, after dropping Audrey off for band, I went to three pet stores in search of an electronic dog door. We had decided that two cats disappearing was more than enough, and this seemed to be the way to let Judy do her business while keeping the cats inside.

I met a friend who volunteers for an animal group, and told her I wanted to join. She had told me of her misgivings about the group I’d contacted before, and asked me if I had given them my address. I told her no, just my street. Her concern about the other organization was that they trapped animals and brought them to the shelter for euthanization. It hit me like a ton of bricks that Rhonda and Dave might not have been trapped by a neighbor, but by this person after I’d told her what neighborhood I was in. After this, after seeing all the cats in the store, after the frustration of finding no electronic doors in all my driving and shopping, I came home and finally cried about the cats.

I’ve been keeping it in, not wanting to make the girls any more upset than they are, but it finally had to come out, and I feel much better now. Guilty, Angry, Frustrated, but not bursting with repressed grief.

So I spent a lot of time searching for electronic doors. One determining factor was how well it would fit into the existing opening, and this was a bigger problem than I expected. Even the company that made the door we have doesn’t make an electronic one that comes close to fitting. The only door that would work cost $450. O.M.G. . . I began checking other options – electronic fences for the cats (the collars for three cats brings the cost up close to the dog door price) barriers (impractical because of the placement of the current door), and finally we came to the conclusion that we’re going to have to keep the cats indoors. This means manually letting Judy in and out when we’re home, and closing the cats in a room with food, water, and litter when we’re not.

This isn’t going over well with Toby and Calvin, both of whom made rushes for the front door a couple of times already. Calvin has been meowing at the dog door quite a bit, and it’s only 9:30AM. It has to be done, though. It’s one thing to let a cat out and take your chances that it’ll get hurt or killed. It’s another to send it out knowing someone is out there waiting for it. They don’t know that, and they’ll do their best to make me let them out, but they have to face the fact that they are now indoor cats.

Math and Music

Math and Music

I should be sanding. I should be exercising. Heck, I should be dressed! I really am going to get my day started, but I had to share this with you.

You know how “experts” are telling new parents how music improves their babies’ math skills? Well, this might just be proof that it works. Enjoy!