Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

First Baby Born Via IVF In U.S. Pens Impassioned Essay Slamming Alabama Ruling

A newborn Elizabeth Carr with her parents
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Elizabeth Carr, who became the first baby in the U.S. to be born through in vitro fertilization in 1981, is speaking out about a recent Alabama Supreme Court decision stating that embryos are legally 'children.'

Elizabeth Carr, who became the first baby in the United States to be born through in vitro fertilization in 1981, penned an impassioned essay condemning a recent Alabama Supreme Court decision that labeled frozen embryos as legally equivalent to "children."

The ruling, which allows couples to sue for "wrongful death" in cases of destroyed frozen embryos, has raised significant questions about the legal and ethical implications surrounding reproductive health.


In an essay for WBUR-FM, Boston's NPR station, Carr noted that the ruling "was clearly written without a true understanding of the IVF procedure and a total disregard for the science of assisted reproductive technology."

She added:

“No one understands better than the infertility community that embryos are not children. Success in IVF means bringing home a baby, not solely creating embryos. The latter is simply one of many complicated steps one has to take in order to even have a chance of having a live birth."

Carr pointed out that "One in six people of reproductive age are impacted by infertility globally" and that about 8 million births in the U.S. annually are the result of IVF, a procedure that is also "used for a variety of reasons, including fertility loss after cancer treatment, a desire to delay having children, military deployments and the ability to screen for devastating genetic diseases."

She emphasized that IVF is an intricate multi-step procedure, involving hormone injections, egg retrieval, and embryo transfer. Additionally, it requires considerable financial resources, precise timing, coordination with scientific processes, and meticulous scheduling.

Carr also expressed concern that the court's decision has heightened the obstacles for Alabamians seeking to have an IVF baby in 2024 compared to the conditions her parents faced in 1981. She stressed that science "should move us forward, not backward."

She concluded:

"At its core, IVF is a miracle of modern medicine and a fulfillment of unwavering hope. The events we’ve seen unfold in recent days, however, have been motivated by fear — fear of prosecution of clinics and doctors, and fear of what might happen if embryos are transported across state lines." ...
"As I navigate these uncertain times, I remain steadfast in my belief that the power of science, coupled with compassionate legislation, will pave the way for a future where the dreams of parenthood through IVF are safeguarded, cherished and celebrated."

Many expressed their own frustrations with the ruling and condemned the GOP.



Following the court's decision, the University of Alabama at Birmingham health system took a significant step by pausing its Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility services. Concerns about potential criminal prosecution and punitive damages have led to the suspension of IVF treatments in various Alabama fertility clinics.

Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Tom Parker has contended that America was explicitly established as a Christian nation and lamented the perceived loss of government control by conservative Christians.

Parker said, “God created government, and the fact that we have let it go into the possession of others, it’s heartbreaking." His remarks came after he issued a concurring opinion in the case where he and fellow justices ruled that frozen embryos possess the same rights as living children under Alabama's Wrongful Death of a Minor Act.

More from Trending

Kristi Noem
Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images

DHS Tried To Discredit Reporter Who Exposed Their Shoddy ICE Hiring Practices—And She Brought The Receipts

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) was harshly criticized after it tried to discredit reporter Laura Jedeed, who detailed in an article for Slate how she applied and was accepted to become an ICE agent despite not filling out any of the required paperwork or going through a background check.

In her article, "You’ve Heard About Who ICE Is Recruiting. The Truth Is Far Worse. I’m the Proof.," Jedeed says her original intent at an ICE Career Expo in Texas last August was simply to see “what it was like to apply to be an ICE agent,” not to join the agency.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Jonathan Ross
Max Nesterak/X

Officials Ripped After Making Incredibly Dubious Claim About ICE Agent's Injuries From Renee Good Shooting

Two U.S. officials told CBS News that Jonathan Ross, the ICE agent who fatally shot Renee Good in Minneapolis, suffered "internal bleeding" after the incident—and the American people are crying foul.

Ross was identified after reporters looked through court records that closely align with the circumstances of a June 2025 incident in Bloomington, Minnesota, referenced by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Vice President JD Vance.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump, TJ Sabula
@thejtlewis/X / GoFundMe

GoFundMe Donations Soar For Ford Worker Who Was Suspended After Calling Trump A 'Pedo Protector'

TJ Sabula, a United Auto Workers Local 600 line worker at a Ford plant in Dearborn, Michigan, was suspended after he heckled President Donald Trump, calling him a "pedophile protector" during Trump's appearance there on Tuesday—but two GoFundMe campaigns started after he was taken off the job have now raised more than 800 thousand dollars.

Video of the incident shows Trump mouthing "F**k you" before walking off, as he flipped Sabula off after Sabula heckled Trump over his obstruction of the release of the files related to the late financier, sex trafficker, and pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshots of Grace Bennett of Bonjibon
@grace.bonjibon/TikTok

Owner Of Adult Store Stunned After Pentagon Demands She Stop Shipping Butt Plugs To Soldiers In Middle East

Grace Bennett is the co-founder of Bonjibon, an every-person sexual wellness shop and online magazine, based in Toronto, Canada. She's now also the proud recipient of two letters from the United States Department of Defense on behalf of the country of Bahrain.

The Middle Eastern island nation, neighbouring Qatar and Saudi Arabia on the Persian Gulf, is home of the U.S. Naval Support Activity (NSA) Bahrain in Manama and the 5th Fleet.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshots of ICE agent running on ICE
@comrade_casey/X

Viral Clip Of ICE Agent Absolutely Eating It On A Patch Of Ice In Minnesota Has The Internet Cracking Up

Anyone who lives in an area where snow might be on the ground by Halloween knows a thing or two about ice. Ideally, those things will keep them from falling down every time they leave their house between November and March.

Apparently, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents weren't briefed on ice before MAGA Republican President Donald Trump dispatched an estimated 2,000 of them to Minnesota in the winter.

Keep ReadingShow less