Trump administration refers to frozen embryos as children in grant guidelines
The Trump administration has referred to frozen embryos as "children" in a call for grant applications for a nearly 20-year-old program, according to a report from The Guardian. The Department of Health and Human Services used the terms "child" and "children" in a document related to the Embryo Adoption Awareness and Services grant, which was created in 2002 under the George W. Bush administration. The document calls for screening standards for frozen embryo purchasers to be raised to those applied to parents seeking to adopt actual children, and refers to frozen embryos as "children who already exist and are in need of a family." The Guardian describes this as a dramatic escalation of the Trump administration's pursuit of fetal personhood, the doctrine that fertilized eggs be granted constitutional rights as persons. The article notes that the new guidelines reorient the grant's priorities away from helping people become parents and toward what it calls "the best interests of the child," meaning embryos. The Guardian reports that this represents a significant new integration of fetal personhood language into federal government operations.
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Sources: The Guardian
