LGBTQ activists are attempting to redefine infertility so that same-sex couples get medical coverage for surrogacy and IVF



They’ve already deconstructed gender, villainized motherhood, and made up some fun new pronouns, so why not go ahead and add “redefine infertility” to the list?

Allie Beth Stuckey and guest Katy Faust, founder and director of Them Before Us, discuss exactly what the Alphabet Mafia is doing to undermine and redefine infertility.

“California and other blue states are trying to redefine infertility to include gay couples that cannot have a child biologically so that insurance companies would then be forced to cover things like surrogacy for two men who want a child,” says Allie.

“The medical definition of infertility is unprotected heterosexual sex for 12 months that doesn't result in a pregnancy or live birth,” Katy explains, “and now what they're saying is … no matter how much unprotected sex the same-sex couple has, they are never going to be able to produce a child” and “what biology cannot accomplish, the law needs to provide.”

The indisputable truth is that same-sex couples “will never medically be able to be diagnosed as infertile because they're not participating in the activity that would lead doctors to conclude that infertility is the problem, and yet they want the same kind of access, and they want the same insurance coverage,” Katy tells Allie.

According to the feelings > logic state of California, “it's discriminatory for heterosexual couples to be able to be designated as infertile and then receive coverage from their insurance companies,” so in the name of DEI, they intend to “redefine what infertility means.”

“So now the California bill and similar other bills across the country are seeking to define infertility as not a medical status but really a relational status,” says Katy, so people can be deemed infertile because of “the relationship [they’re in] or…because [they’re] not in a relationship at all.”

“What are some of the repercussions of green-lighting a bill like this?” asks Allie.

“The California bill specifically said insurance companies can't discontinue services and there is in essence unlimited supply of IVF transfers,” says Katy, “and we already have a situation in this country where we've got one million frozen embryos in storage right now, and oftentimes the only thing that keeps that in check is cost.”

However, with “insurance funded IVF transfers … why limit the number of embryos that you're going to create?”

“It is only going to increase the amount of children who are suffering indefinitely in a freezer or who are going to perish in the gauntlet that children have to undergo between freezer and implantation and then ultimately birth,” says Katy.

Further, “it is going to massively increase the number of children that are screened for sex or for … potential genetic markers that don't seem as desirable to the adults; in essence, it is going to contribute to the increased commodification of children where they are thawed and discarded, donated to research, or spend their life forever in a freezer,” she explains.

To hear their full conversation, watch the video below.


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Should Christians do IVF?



In vitro fertilization has skyrocketed in recent years, which is no surprise considering infertility has risen dramatically, couples are intentionally delaying childbearing for a variety of reasons, and IVF has become the most effective infertility treatment on the market.

But there are many theological debates circulating around IVF, especially when it comes to Christians who adamantly believe it is sinful to assume the role of God.

Christians struggling with infertility may find themselves hesitant and wondering if it’s biblically sound to give IVF a go.

Allie Beth Stuckey is ready to unpack the issue from a biblical perspective.

First, she makes it clear that “every single one of us will enter into heaven with a … long list of ideas and held beliefs that we are wrong about.”

“I don't think someone loses their salvation because they are a Christian and they go through IVF,” she says.

However, she does have some opinions when it comes to the subject:

“I think the worst possible way to use IVF is to fertilize as many eggs as possible, get as many embryos as possible, and then implant a couple … hope that they take, and then put the rest of them on ice or destroy the rest of them,” she explains.

“Not really caring what happens to the other embryos that are fertilized – whether they are frozen in perpetuity or whether they are destroyed – like that is a form of abandonment of your offspring because [Christians] believe that life starts at conception,” she says.

“We understand that these embryos are tiny little image bearers of God in their first stages of life.”

Ultimately, Allie “[doesn’t] recommend IVF,” but “the less problematic form of IVF is when you implant all of the embryos, all of the eggs that you fertilize … [and] give them all a shot at life.”

However, that doesn’t mean that IVF is foolproof, according to Allie; it just means “there are fewer ethical qualms.”

“Whenever technology takes us away from what's natural to what's possible, there will always be questions, there will always be gaps to be filled,” she says.

“One of the issues with IVF is that there is a high attrition rate; you know going into it that it is very likely that the embryos that you create will not survive; they will be miscarried … [and] won't grow to fruition, so you are taking a risk with that little human being's life purposely.”

She does acknowledge that natural conception can also result in miscarriage, but the chances are much higher with IVF.

“We can't conflate what we desire with God's calling, so just because we want something and just because something is technologically possible does not mean that it's moral or biblical or right,” Allie says.

“That does not mean that I think that parents who have children through IVF [are] bad parents, that they're evil, that their kids aren't valuable,” she assures. “I'm not even asking you to regret your children,” but “these are uncomfortable questions that we all have to ask ourselves.”


Want more from Allie Beth Stuckey?

To enjoy more of Allie’s upbeat and in-depth coverage of culture, news, and theology from a Christian, conservative perspective, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.