This is witnessed when Mrs Moore, a mother in labour is left without attention from the nurses or doctors while they prepare expensive machines to impress the hospital administrator. A doctor in the operating room says, "We"ll soon have you cured" in reference to the birth. This implies the insignificance of the wonder of birth to someone who isn't Catholic. .
More ignorance is seen further on involving the mother in labour. She asks "Is it a boy or girl" and the doctor in a grumpy manner replies, "Now I think it's a bit early to start imposing roles on it, don't you?" This notion implies that as Catholics, not in birth but they impose roles on their children without the consent of the children themselves, in regards to going to mass and further religious traditions. This religious feeling expressed does imply that Christians deliver ultimatums on their children, but of course this statement is irrelevant as it is delivered from a Monty Python film and so displays a comical perspective. .
In the second section of "The Miracle of Birth", we are taken to a third world country to witness the living conditions of a typical Roman Catholic family, alongside with the values and beliefs of their religion. .
In the opening, we see a man of low income, hard work and no transport struggle up a road to what is a cottage where he lives. A Stork bird drops a baby through the chimney into his cottage, and his emotions reveal "bloody hell". The baby is seen as a gift from God, a surprise, but obviously it came at the wrong time. Why? We find out that Dad is a father to over twenty children and that he has been made redundant from the mill he works at. This scene presents a stereotypical view of Catholics. .
With drawn back emotions, the father claims to his children that he's "got no option but to sell you all for scientific experiments". The father "Blames the Catholic Church for not letting me wear one of those little rubber things.