April 27, 2012

Adult Stem Cell Researchers Ask Federal Appeals Court to Reverse Ruling that Federal Law Does Not Ban Federal Funding of Illegal, Unnecessary, and Unethical 'Research in Which' Human Embryos are 'Knowingly Subjected to Risk of Injury or Death'

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia asked to reverse federal district's ruling dismissing action to enjoin federal funding of human embryonic stem cell research.

      

On behalf of the adult stem researchers it represents, the Jubilee Campaign's Law of Life Project and their co-counsel at the Alliance Defense Fund and Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, having filed their opening Appellants' Brief and Appellants' Reply Brief, will appear for oral argument asking a panel of the United States Court of Appeals, composed of Chief Judge David Sentelle, Judge Karen Henderson and Judge Janice Rogers Brown to "reverse the district court's judgment in favor of Defendants, reverse the grant of Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment and the denial of [Appellants'] Motion for Summary Judgment, and remand with directions to enter summary judgment for [Appellants]." Appellants argue that The National Institutes of Health (NIH) Guidelines for funding human embryonic stem-cell research "are invalid because they violate [the federal law known as] the Dickey-Wicker Amendment" and because they were promulgated in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act. Accordingly, Appellants will argue that they--"not Defendants--are entitled to summary judgment."

Appellants are appealing the United States District Court for the District of Columbia's July 27, 2011, decision dismissing their challenge to the Obama administration's unprecedented and unlawful federal funding of destructive human embryo research. Appellants argue that the district court erroneously interpreted and applied the Court of Appeal's April 29, 2011, ruling vacating the district court's August 23, 2010, preliminary injunction of the NIH Guidelines that the Obama Administration promulgated to permit the federal funding of "research in which" human embryos are "knowingly subjected to risk of injury or death." While again affirming the standing of adult stem-cell researchers to challenge these regulations, the federal district court dismissed the case saying that it had no choice under the "mandate rule" but to follow the Court of Appeal's April 29 ruling that Congress' ban on human embryonic research was written in a sufficiently "ambiguous" fashion to ban the use of federal funds that risked the "injury or death" of human embryos, but not the use of federal funds to do research on the embryonic stem cells that were derived from such injury or destruction. In the words of U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth explaining his July 27 decision: "While it may be true that by following the Court of Appeals' conclusion as to the ambiguity of 'research', the Court has become a grudging partner in a bout of 'linguistic jujitsu', Sherley, 2011 WL 1599685, at 22 (quoting Henderson, J. dissenting), such is life for an antepenultimate court."

The case began almost two years ago when, in response to President Obama's March 9, 2009 Executive Order, the NIH published and noticed for public comment regulatory guidelines allowing federal funds to be used for the first time for the creation of new stem cell lines (hESC) requiring the destruction of living human embryos. Before these guidelines became law, the Law of Life Project's General Counsel, Sam Casey, with his co-counsel Tom Hungar of Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher, representing the DO NO HARM Coalition, formally filed over 140 pages of legal and scientific comments objecting to what many people saw as the grossly irresponsible use of public funds to support research which is illegal, unnecessary, and an unethical breach of long-standing Congressionally-acknowledged principles barring such human subject experimentation. When NIH patently ignored and prejudged these comments and approximately 30,000 other comments opposing federal funding of destructive human embryonic stem cell research, the ongoing legal action was required.

LOLP's General Counsel, Sam Casey, who has been arguing the issues in this case for more than a decade, said: "Each time grant-awarding officials and federally funded scientists support or engage in hESC research, living human embryos are 'knowingly subjected to risk of injury or death,' in violation of the federal law known as the Dickey-Wicker Amendment. The federally sponsored hESC research that the Guidelines support inevitably creates a substantial risk—indeed, a virtual certainty proven by the evidence in this case--that more human embryos will be destroyed in order to derive more hESCs for misdirected research purposes at the unwilling taxpayers' expense. Congress first enacted the Dickey-Wicker Amendment to avoid this exact result, as an instructive "friend of the court" brief filed by 16 bioethics scholars in support of this appeal so clearly demonstrates."

"The NIH chose to ignore both our DO NO HARM et. al. Comments, as well as approximately 30,000 other comments--60% of those received in the mandatory guideline review process—which raised serious and highly relevant questions about the ethics and scientific merits of human embryonic stem cell research," said Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher partner, Tom Hungar, Mr. Casey's co-counsel. Hungar added, "the challenged NIH Guidelines clearly violate the Dickey-Wicker Amendment, but NIH's decision to turn a blind eye to tens of thousands of comments demonstrating that human embryonic stem cell research can't be justified even under the government's own criteria means that the NIH's guidelines were promulgated in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act and must be struck down for that reason as well."

After the NIH took any real consideration of the merits of hESC research "off the table" during its pre-ordained review process, effectively pushing a very specific and controversial policy despite laws designed to prevent exactly that action, the Law of Life Project and its co-counsel were left with no recourse but direct litigation, and the hope that the judicial system will ultimately rectify the injustice the NIH continues to unlawfully perpetrate at the taxpayers' expense. Since that time, after going to the Court of Appeals the first time in 2009 to establish their clients' "standing" to assert their claims, and a second time in 2010 unsuccessfully defending a preliminary injunction entered by the District Court on the strength of only the first of their three claims for relief, Casey says, "the Law of Life Project now must return to the Court of Appeals to respectfully ask it to give full consideration to all of plaintiffs' arguments, including those that it has not previously addressed. Given the legislative intent and legal history involved in this case and the enormous destruction of human embryonic life costing hundreds of millions of dollars Congress never intended to permit in passing the Dickey-Wicker amendment banning such expenditures, we have no choice but to now exhaust all of our judicial remedies before returning to the Congress, if necessary."

Contact: Samuel B. Casey
Source: Law of Life Project

Obama Lawyers Desperately Try to 'Dismiss' Lawsuit by Pro-Life Catholic Group Against ObamaCare

     

Priests for Life, a New York-based international pro-life organization of Catholic clergy and laity, has announced that the Obama Administration's lawyers are trying desperately to "shut down" the lawsuit that's been filed to stop ObamaCare from violating the conscience and morals of America's Catholics.

The lawsuit, Priests for Life v. Sebelius, seeks to permanently block the implementation of the HHS mandate that imposes clear violations of conscience upon any and all citizens who morally object to abortion and contraception.

"Since the HHS mandate directly affects Priests for Life -- and every U.S. citizen -- through compulsory funding of contraception and abortion-inducing drugs and devices, our lawsuit is 100 percent legitimate," says Priests for Life's lead attorney Charles LiMandri.

LiMandri elaborates: "And yet, the Obama lawyers are trying to say that we don't have 'standing' because the abortion mandate 'doesn't go into effect' for PFL for several months. This is a thoroughly ridiculous and embarrassing argument for Obama's attorneys to make. It shows how desperate they are to dismiss our lawsuit -- even to the point of resorting to outrageous arguments such as the ones they're using now."

LiMandri points out that the HHS 'Abortion Mandate' forces Priests for Life to either pay for abortion-causing pills... promote them... or be heavily fined if their employee health-care plan doesn't comply with the audacious dictatorial decrees of ObamaCare.

"According to the ObamaCare law as it's written, Priests for Life would be fined as much as $100 per day, per employee. This could cost Priests for Life over $1 million a year in fines. And we're not going to accept this at all."

Priests for Life is preparing its response, which must be filed with the court by April 30, with the assistance of the American Freedom Law Center. The group's attorneys are working overtime to respond so quickly.

Fr. Frank Pavone, National Director of Priests for Life, said, "As our attorneys do their work, I ask our supporters to join in our prayer campaign and our Citizens' Amicus brief. Of this I am confident: We will prevail, life will prevail!"

Contact: Leslie Palma
Source: Priests for Life

Chuck Colson, 1931-2012

     
 
On Saturday afternoon, Prison Fellowship Ministries Founder Charles Wendell "Chuck" Colson died. He was 80 years old.

Colson collapsed while giving a speech in late March, and had emergency surgery to remove blood that was pooling in his brain. Though his death was expected — Prison Fellowship announced on its Web site Wednesday that he had taken a turn for the worse during a lengthy hospitalization, and his family had gathered by his bedside — his loss rocked the evangelical Christian world nonetheless.

"America has lost a gentleman and statesman of the highest integrity and character," said Focus on the Family President Jim Daly. "I've lost a dear friend and mentor who, most importantly, modeled for me how to stand for God's truth with Christ's heart. Chuck was an endlessly selfless man, whose love for and ministry to those in prison made him one of the great modern-day lions of the faith."

Colson rose to prominence as special counsel to President Richard Nixon, but fell from grace during the Watergate scandal in 1972. As one of the "Watergate Seven," he was the author of the president's infamous "enemies list," and later said he was willing "to be ruthless in getting things done."

Colson was indicted for covering up the Watergate break-ins. While the charges were pending against him, a friend gave Colson a copy of the C.S. Lewis book Mere Christianity — forever changing the course of his life. Colson became a committed Christian, which led him to plead guilty to obstruction of justice while a judge was considering dismissing the case against him. He served seven months of a one- to three-year prison sentence.

In 1976, Colson founded Prison Fellowship Ministries, which now operates in 113 countries around the globe. Colson personally visited 600 prisons in the U.S. and 40 other countries over the last four decades of his life.

"God uses prisons," Colson once said, "to train people for future roles of leadership or martyrdom."

The number of lives Colson touched is inestimable: In addition to sharing the Gospel with prisoners, Prison Fellowship grew to include the Angel Tree program, which coordinates with churches and volunteers to care for prisoners' children; Justice Fellowship, which advocates for criminal justice reforms; BreakPoint, a worldview ministry that airs on 1,400 outlets each week; The Centurions Program, which is an intensive Bible study program for people seeking to leave their stamp of faith on the culture; and the Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview, a resource ministry.

At one point, 50,000 church volunteers worked with Prison Fellowship Ministries. This year alone, 220,000 prisoners in 1,367 prisons across the country have attended one of its Bible studies.

Colson wrote 30 books, selling more than 5 million copies total. In 1993, he won the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion — the largest in the world — and donated the $1 million check to Prison Fellowship. The bestseller Born Again was made into a feature film, and to date, more than 600 Christian leaders have completed the Colson Center's Centurions Program.

From his own personal trial, Daly said, Colson "emerged as a shining example of the redemptive power of Jesus and spent the rest of his life setting aside his own ego for the sake of others, investing his time and energies in those besides himself.

"Chuck was never threatened by anyone else's success, especially those of the 'next generation,' " he noted. "He was actually energized by it. That is the mark, and the legacy, of a great man."

Colson spent his early career in the 1950s with U.S. Marine Corps, eventually becoming assistant to the Secretary of the Navy. He started his own law firm in 1961, joining the Nixon administration in 1969.

He was married twice: to Nancy Billings in 1953, having three children before the marriage ended in divorce in 1964. Colson married Patricia Ann Hughes that same year.

He is survived by her, as well as three children and five grandchildren.

Contact: Karla Dial
Source: CitizenLink

April 20, 2012

News Links for April 20th

      

Chicago doctor discusses how faith led him to abandon IVF

Advice to Komen: Drop the 'middle man'

Imagine the Elder Exploitation in an Assisted Suicide World

Pushing "The Pill" leads to loss of liberty

Planned Parenthood challenged on drug policy

Arizona Governor Signs More Pro-Family Legislation

Urgent action needed TODAY to ensure Alabama abortion mill closes as ordered

Troubled Virginia Abortion Clinic Puts Bleeding Botched Abortion Patient in Hospital

New MS law will protect women from shoddy abortion practices

Pro-life group wants answers re: SB 1338

Law could shutter state's only abortuary

Multinational Prayer Event for Unborn Babies

One less Penn. abortuary

Abortion group desperate for taxpayer money

California Considers Allowing Non-Physicians to Perform Abortions

Reason to inspect Jackson, MS abortuary

Sparse info re: RU-486 risk harms women

Romney support among women increases, CBS News/NY Times poll shows

      

The new CBS News/New York Times poll which came out in the morning, shows pro-life Mitt Romney and pro-abortion Barack Obama deadlocked at 46%. For reasons best known to these news outlets, the "internals" were not released until later. What do we see?

Long-term, by far the most important consideration is found in the headline of a CBS News story: "Poll reveals gap between married and single women" and one sentence by Jan Crawford: "A month ago, President Obama had an 11-point lead over Mitt Romney among women voters. Today's poll, taken after Hillary Rosen's comments and the subsequent firestorm, puts the gap at six points."

It is true that Romney trails among ALL women just as he leads among men. But Mr. Romney actually is running ahead among married women, 49% to 42% while Obama has a large lead among single women, 62% to 34%.

Crawford's story has one other piece of particularly chilling news for President Obama.

"The poll also shows that Romney has a real opportunity to introduce/define himself with voters–or Obama campaign has an opening to do that for him. Despite the tough Republican primary, 37 percent of voters say they are undecided or need to know more about Romney before expressing a view on him.

"On the other hand, voters know the incumbent–only 13 percent say they're undecided or need to know more on President Obama. Of those who have a view, 45 percent now view the President unfavorably, compared to 34 percent with an unfavorable view of Romney."

Romney leads in two polls– Gallup and Rasmussen—by 2 points and 4 points, respectively. The two that Obama is ahead in—CNN  by 9 points and Reuters by 4 points—have huge flaws. All this while (a) Republicans presidential candidates harshly criticized one another and Mr. Obama faced no primary challenge; and (b) Mr. Obama's support among Independents continues to sink by the week.

Contact: Dave Andrusko
Source: National Right to Life

Protecting Unborn Children from Pain

     

All citizens should support Pain-Capable Child Protection Acts because the unborn can feel pain prior to birth, and laws protecting them from pain are constitutional.

The United States Congress and the state legislatures of Michigan and New Hampshire are considering Pain-Capable Child Protection Acts. These acts would prohibit almost all abortions at twenty weeks post-fertilization and beyond. Five states—Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Alabama, and Idaho—already have such laws on the books. These laws are premised on the idea that an unborn child's capacity to feel pain, independent of fetal viability, is sufficient to establish the humanity of the child and to sustain a limited prohibition on abortion. Like partial-birth abortion bans, these laws advance public recognition of the unborn child's humanity and should be supported.

Objections to Pain-Capable Child Protection Acts generally fall into two categories. First, some philosophers and doctors dispute that the unborn child can "feel" pain prior to birth. Second, many abortion-rights advocates argue that, even if fetal pain exists, the Constitution does not permit states to limit access to abortions merely to prevent inflicting pain on a pre-viable fetus. Upon close examination, neither of these objections is persuasive.

Can Unborn Children Feel Pain?

At the heart of the debate over whether the unborn child feels pain is the definition of "feels." Some physicians and philosophers restrictively define "feels" to mean only those responses that reflect some self-awareness or "conscious appreciation of pain." If consciousness is absent, they argue, researchers can at best conclude that the human fetus "reacts to physical stimulation."

Years ago similar arguments persuaded doctors that newborn children could not feel pain because they evidence no self-consciousness. It was common practice to perform early post-natal surgeries such as circumcision with no pain relief, notwithstanding the child's screams and struggles. Thankfully, the medical profession now recognizes the capacity of newborns to feel pain, and newborns are regularly anesthetized prior to surgery.

A second group of doctors and scientists supports recognition of fetal pain on the basis of physiological and behavioral responses to painful stimuli. They argue that self-awareness is not the standard used to determine whether comatose or profoundly disabled individuals feel pain. In these cases observed physiological and behavioral responses to stimuli are accepted as reliable indicators of pain. Similarly, physiological and behavioral responses to noxious stimuli observed in the unborn should be accepted as evidence that they feel pain.

Unborn children have been observed to move away from needles and other sharp objects inserted into the womb, as stress hormones flood their tiny bodies. Scientists have also discovered that prolonged intrauterine exposure to painful stimuli is associated with long-term harmful neurodevelopmental effects, such as altered pain sensitivity and increased risk of emotional, behavioral, and learning disabilities later in life. For these reasons use of fetal anesthetic is now routine for perinatal surgeries. Use of fetal anesthetic renders the unborn child more compliant during surgery and facilitates post-operative healing.

A third group of physicians and scientists answers the question whether the unborn feel pain by pointing to the nervous system's development. From this perspective, the development and function of various brain regions is the key to determining whether the unborn experience pain. While simple reflex responses can be observed as early as nine weeks of gestation (or seven weeks post-fertilization), most scientists believe that the brain is too immature at this early time to detect and respond to pain. But just a few weeks later, at fourteen weeks of gestation or twelve weeks post-fertilization, physicians argue that pain perception begins when the lower brain stem and thalamus have developed. These scientists point to evidence that children born without the bulk of the cerebral cortex, those with hydranencephaly, nevertheless experience pain.

Other physicians assert that there must be a cortex-thalamus connection to experience pain, placing fetal pain perception at somewhere between twenty and twenty-four weeks of gestation or eighteen to twenty-two weeks post-fertilization. The Pain-Capable Child Protection Acts are premised on this last and more conservative theory, which means that the first objection noted above—that these acts are based on inconclusive scientific evidence—is not compelling. These acts seek to limit abortions only at or after twenty weeks post-fertilization, based on brain development, and not at earlier stages of development when physicians can observe fetuses' physiological reactions to painful stimuli but can question the involvement of the brain.

Is it Constitutional to Protect Unborn Children from Pain?

Now to the second objection: opponents of Pain-Capable Child Protection Acts routinely assert that even if an unborn child can feel pain, it is unconstitutional to limit abortion prior to the child becoming capable of living independently outside the womb for any reason other than protection of the woman's health. Even if fetal pain exists, they argue that the pain is constitutionally irrelevant, and point to the absence of any case to the contrary.

Opponents are correct when they say that the Supreme Court has never upheld an abortion ban on the basis of an unborn child's pain while being aborted. Yet it is equally true that the Court has never been asked whether the state's interest in protecting unborn children who can feel pain is sufficiently compelling to support a limited ban on abortion.

The Court has always recognized the state's compelling interest in protecting viable unborn children. In Webster v. Reproductive Services the Court identified viability as occurring at twenty-three to twenty-four weeks of gestation. In Roe v. Wade the Court explained why the state could prohibit abortion of viable unborn children:

This is so because the fetus then presumably has the capability of meaningful life outside the mother's womb. State regulation protective of fetal life after viability thus has both logical and biological justifications. If the State is interested in protecting fetal life after viability, it may go so far as to proscribe abortion during that period, except when it is necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother.

This viability rule remains the law today.

Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Acts do not seek to challenge this holding in any way. Rather these acts seek to establish a separate and independent state interest in preserving the lives of unborn children at the point when they are capable of feeling pain. While the outcome of potential litigation is by no means certain, there is reason to believe that limited protection of pain-capable unborn children may be constitutional.

The Case of Justice Kennedy

Abortion cases typically divide the Court, with many of the most significant rulings being 5–4 or plurality opinions with no single opinion endorsed by a majority of the justices. In recent abortion cases such as Planned Parenthood v. Casey, upholding informed consent and mandatory reporting laws, and Gonzales v. Carhart, upholding the federal partial-birth abortion ban, Justice Kennedy's views determined the outcomes of the cases. This suggests that whether fetal pain is accepted as an independent developmental marker of the humanity of the child may turn on Justice Kennedy's position on the issue.

Justice Kennedy's opinions in the two cases involving partial-birth abortion bans provide valuable insight into his possible ruling on the constitutionality of Pain-Capable Child Protection Acts. In Stenberg v. Carhart, the first partial-birth abortion case, Justice Kennedy emphasized that it was "inappropriate for the Judicial Branch to provide an exhaustive list of state interests implicated by abortion," and that "Casey is premised on the States having an important constitutional role in defining their interests in the abortion debate." Justice Kennedy described the state's interest in protection of fetal life as substantial at all points. He wrote, "Casey struck a balance that was central to its holding, and the Court applies Casey's standard here. A central premise of Casey's joint opinion . . . is that the government has a legitimate, substantial interest in preserving and promoting fetal life …"

In Gonzales v. Carhart, the second partial-birth abortion ban case, Justice Kennedy wrote the majority opinion for the Court, upholding the federal law banning partial-birth abortions in both the second and third trimesters of pregnancy. The law made no distinction based on viability. "The Act does apply both previability and postviability because, by common understanding and scientific terminology, a fetus is a living organism while within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb." Justice Kennedy again emphasized the state's interest in the fetus, repeating his earlier statement in Stenberg v. Carhart that "A central premise of Casey's joint opinion . . . is that the government has a legitimate, substantial interest in preserving and promoting fetal life."

Even Justice Stevens, who during his tenure on the Court repeatedly voted to strike down abortion regulations, listed the "organism's capacity to feel pain" as a reason why "the State's interest in the protection of an embryo increases progressively and dramatically." He noted that "the development of a fetus—and pregnancy itself—are not static conditions, and the assertion that the government's interest is static simply ignores this reality."

Activists argue that it is unconstitutional for legislatures to limit abortion in the absence of unanimimous scientific opinion on whether the unborn child feels pain. Even though (as suggested above) there is a growing body of research that unborn children can feel pain at twenty weeks of gestation, scientists' disputes about whether this is true do not imply the correctness of abortion activists' claim that this disagreement makes the Pain Capable Child Protection Acts unconstitutional. Their second objection to these acts also turns out to be a weak one.

As Justice Kennedy observed in Gonzales v. Carhart, laws can stand even if medical or scientific uncertainty prevents consensus about when the unborn feel pain:

The question becomes whether the Act can stand when this medical uncertainty persists. The Court's precedents instruct that the Act can survive this facial attack. The Court has given state and federal legislatures wide discretion to pass legislation in areas where there is medical and scientific uncertainty.

This traditional rule is consistent with Casey, which confirms the State's interest in promoting respect for human life at all stages in the pregnancy.

There is a substantial body of scientific and medical evidence that an unborn child feels pain at twenty weeks post-fertilization. The fact that the existence of fetal pain is disputed does not preclude legislative action. As Justice Kennedy noted, "Medical uncertainty does not foreclose the exercise of legislative power in the abortion context any more than it does in other contexts."

Anaesthetize or Protect from Killing?

Defenders of abortion argue that even if the previable child can feel pain, the proper response is to anaesthetize the fetus, not ban the abortion. They maintain that this response to fetal pain eliminates the harm of unnecessary suffering while preserving the woman's ability to obtain an abortion. This response by abortion activists reveals the fundamental conflict that underlies abortion jurisprudence—the conflict that the Court was unwilling to resolve in Roe and has avoided resolving in each case since—the question of which characteristics necessarily compel recognition of the unborn as members of the human family.

Is the pain that the unborn child may endure during abortion similar in nature to the pain a dog or horse or some other domesticated animal feels when it is put down at the will of the owner? If so, then we must surely act to mitigate that pain, but merely mitigating that pain need not limit the woman's ability to kill her unborn child.

But if we consider human pain unique and something of greater moral import than the pain of animals, even the pain of a beloved family pet, we may, in fact must, seek to eliminate the pain through limiting the action that causes that pain. Opponents of the death penalty commonly argue that executing a convicted criminal is unnecessary and cruel given the capacity of society to protect itself in other ways. If our common capacity to suffer is a moral underpinning of our prohibition of torture and cruel forms of deadly punishments, we must at least extend similar protections to the unborn members of the human family.

Recognition of a compelling state interest in the protection of pain-capable unborn children does not require the Court to reject a woman's liberty interest in obtaining an abortion or the balancing framework of Casey.  It only asks the Court to recognize the legislature's ability to use new scientific evidence that supports a strong state interest in regulating abortions at twenty weeks after fertilization. Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Acts modestly expand upon the states' interests in the protection of fetal life and affirm the value of unborn life as recognized in the latest Supreme Court cases addressing abortion.

Contact: Teresa Collett
Source: The Witherspoon Institute

Susan G. Komen for the Cure Causes More Breast Cancers by Funding Planned Parenthood, Ignoring Breast Cancer Risks

      

The Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer notes that Susan G. Komen for the Cure -- which attempted earlier this year to withdraw from its long-standing relationship with Planned Parenthood, but was subsequently subjected to an orchestrated mafia shakedown -- will resume funding the abortion giant, according to the Washington Post. [1-3]

"Women will die, as Komen violates its supposed mission to fight breast cancer," asserted Karen Malec, president of the Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer.

"Planned Parenthood sells cancer-causing abortions and oral contraceptives (the birth control pill). According to medical texts, increased childbearing, starting before age 24, substantially reduces breast cancer risk. Fifty-two of 68 studies and biological and experimental evidence link abortion with increased risk. [4,5] The World Health Organization lists estrogen-progestogen oral contraceptives as a risk factor for cancers of the breast, liver and cervix. [6] Oral contraceptives are strongly linked with the deadly triple-negative breast cancer. [7,8]

"It's unfortunate that Komen founder Nancy Goodman Brinker lacks the strength of character needed to protect women from Planned Parenthood's war on their health. Brinker wilted under fire from Planned Parenthood's orchestrated mafia shakedown. Shockingly, even Big Media journalists and 26 members of Congress participated in it."

"Planned Parenthood does not provide mammograms and breast cancer treatment. It provides manual breast exams and refers women elsewhere for mammograms."

The Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer is an international women's organization founded to protect the health and save the lives of women by educating and providing information on abortion as a risk factor for breast cancer.

References can be found online at:
www.abortionbreastcancer.com/press_releases/120416/index.htm

Contact: Karen Malec
Source: Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer

Fr. Pavone to LCWR: Priests for Life will Work 'Side by Side' with Women Religious to Proclaim a Pro-Life Message

      

Father Frank Pavone, National Director of Priests for Life, issued the following comment today on the Vatican's assessment of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR):

"As a pro-life ministry dedicated to fully activating the Church to end abortion and euthanasia, Priests for Life is grateful to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith for the assessment it has issued of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, and in particular for pointing out the problem of silence regarding abortion and the right to life."
 
Following a two-year investigation into the LCWR, the Vatican concluded, in part, that, "while there has been a great deal of work on the part of LCWR promoting issues of social justice in harmony with the church's social doctrine, it is silent on the right to life from conception to natural death."

Responding to that finding, Father Pavone said, "Priests for Life has the highest regard for the women religious in the Church and the consecration they have made to God of their lives. We want to work side by side with them and support them in the pro-life dimensions of their life and ministry. We therefore encourage the LCWR and all its members to make the right to life a clear and constant aspect of the message they proclaim to the world."

Father Pavone concluded: "As we have often pointed out, the very act of consecrating one's life to God strikes at the heart of the culture of death. While the culture of death proclaims, 'I have the right to choose,' the religious life proclaims, 'My life and choices belong to God, and there is where I find true freedom.'"

To read the statement from the Vatican, go to
www.priestsforlife.org/CDF-LCWR-Assessment.pdf

Contact: Leslie Palma,
Source: Priests for Life

Komen still giving to Planned Parenthood

Komen still giving to Planned Parenthood

     

Susan G. Komen for the Cure's coffers remain as open as ever for Planned Parenthood, even as they appear to be taking a hit.

The world's leading breast cancer charity will fund about the same number of Planned Parenthood affiliates this year as it did last, according to an April 12 report by The Washington Post. That news follows various accounts that giving to Komen and participation in its popular fund-raising races have declined since early February.

The latest report follows by 10 weeks Komen's tumultuous place in the spotlight of public attention over whether it would stick with its plan to defund the country's leading abortion provider. Only three days after its defunding decision went public, Komen backtracked Feb. 3 in the face of an onslaught of Planned Parenthood-fueled outrage.

Komen will fund at least 17 affiliates of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America this year, The Post reported. Last year, Komen gave money to 18 Planned Parenthood affiliates, according to an analysis by the pro-life American Life League. The total given to Planned Parenthood this year has yet to be determined, according to The Post. Last year, Komen's grants to Planned Parenthood affiliates totaled $680,000, the Associated Press reported.

Since the report of Komen's on-off defunding of Planned Parenthood, there have been reports of declines in support of the breast-cancer foundation. For instance:

-- Six of Komen's Race for the Cure fundraisers had been held since the controversy, when National Public Radio (NPR) broadcast a report March 26, and the charity acknowledged it had struggled to meet its goals in about half of the events.

-- Registration for the Komen Race for the Cure March 25 in Tucson, Ariz., fell short of 7,300 in contrast to about 10,000 participants in 2011, according to NPR. Donations totaled $585,000 toward a goal of $700,000, The Post reported.

-- The Los Angeles (Calif.) County race March 24 raised about $950,000, far short of the $1.3 million goal, according to The Chronicle of Philanthropy.

-- Komen fell from No. 2 to No. 56 in the yearly Harris Poll that ranks the "brand health" of nonprofit organizations, The Chronicle reported. The online survey was conducted in February.

While news reports have at least implied the decline is based on the reaction of pro-choice women who are disillusioned with and untrusting of Komen, pro-life blogger Jill Stanek questioned the conventional wisdom. She pointed to a report that donations to the charity increased by 100 percent in the two days after its defunding of Planned Parenthood became news.

"It would have gone the other way had liberal types withdrawn enough support to make a dent," Stanek wrote March 29. "In fact, pro-lifers who had withheld from Komen [in the past] started to give. And then stopped, of course. An objective [mainstream media] would have more likely concluded Komen's new fundraising woes were due to its continued connection" to Planned Parenthood.

Komen has problems with both abortion advocates and opponents, Stanek said.

"In reality, Komen has alienated both ends of the ideological spectrum now," she wrote. "But it would have fared better sticking with pro-lifers."

Some pro-life advocates had refused before the uproar of early February to give to Komen or participate in its five-kilometer runs/walks that typically draw more than 1.6 million participants each year. Komen had defended its grants to Planned Parenthood affiliates by saying they were not for abortions but for breast screenings and breast health education. Planned Parenthood affiliates, however, do not offer mammograms, though Komen said grants to the organization may pay for mammograms at other sites.

The widespread news coverage of Komen's original decision to halt funding, the Planned Parenthood-orchestrated reaction and Komen's subsequent policy change served a couple of educational purposes for the public:

1) More Americans, including pro-life advocates, learned the breast cancer foundation gives to Planned Parenthood, increasing the likelihood pro-life support of Komen would decline further.

2) More Americans found out Planned Parenthood centers do not offer mammograms but refer women to other clinics for the screenings.

Planned Parenthood is a cultural lightning rod primarily because of its massive abortion business. Its clinics reported 329,445 abortions in 2010, which made up more than one-fourth of the lethal procedures performed in the United States for the year. Planned Parenthood compiled those kinds of statistics while it, as well as its affiliates, received $487.4 million in government grants, contracts and reimbursements in 2009-10, the most recent year for which statistics are available.

Planned Parenthood's notoriety has mounted also because of its proclivity for scandal.

An updated February report by the Alliance Defense Fund to Congress suggested 20 percent of the abortion provider's affiliates could be guilty of waste and fraud involving government funds. The report showed that audits of seven of 79 affiliates over a 14-year period found nearly $8 million of fraud, waste and abuse.

Secret investigations in recent years by pro-life organizations have uncovered Planned Parenthood workers demonstrating a willingness to aid self-professed sex traffickers whose prostitutes supposedly are in their early teens, seeking to cover up alleged child sex abuse and agreeing to receive donations designated for abortions of African-American babies.

The House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Committee is investigating Planned Parenthood. Rep. Cliff Stearns, R.-Fla., who is leading the investigation, asked Planned Parenthood President Cecile Richards in September to provide audits, documentation, policies and procedures regarding such issues as improper billing, segregation of federal funds from abortion services and reporting of suspected sex abuse and human trafficking.

Contact: Tom Strode
Source: Baptist Press

Teen birth rate drops; deeper issues remain

     

The teenage birth rate in the United States has fallen to the lowest level since 1946, according to the latest data from National Center for Health Statistics.

In 2010, babies born to women between ages 15 and 19 numbered 367,752. The previous year, there were 409,802 such births.

An overall rate drop of 9 percent from 2009 to 2010 was accompanied by decreases in the rates of all racial and ethnic groups and virtually every state, according to the data released April 10. The rate reflects a variety of factors, said Valerie Huber, executive director of the National Abstinence Education Association, "including family structure, parental expectations, socio-economics and type of sex education."

While the decrease constitutes positive news, Huber and Richard Ross, cofounder of the True Love Waits abstinence movement, both caution that the numbers hide other problems.

"While teen birth rates have reached historic lows," Huber said, "[sexually transmitted disease] rates among teens are at historic highs."

Ross called the death of unborn babies and those that arrive without married parents an "incalculable tragedy" and said "those pregnancies are not the core issue. Sexual behavior itself is the issue."

Teenage births had a recent peak in 1991 of 61.8 live births for each 1,000 women between the ages of 15 and 19. The most recent historic drop to 34.3 births per 1,000 continues a steady downward trend.

Those previous high rates in the early 1990s were accompanied by a dangerous attitude toward teenage sex, said Ross, professor of student ministry at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

Ross recalls adults wanting to protect teenagers from AIDS and other diseases but assuming that nothing could be done to stop teenagers from having sex.

"I remember the surgeon general of the U.S. saying on television, 'The American teenager is incapable of controlling his or her sexual behavior,'" Ross said.

This led many to an increased emphasis on the use of contraceptives by teenagers, Ross said. He and others, however, saw this as the right moment -- in 1993 -- to begin True Love Waits, a message of sexual purity and abstinence until marriage.

The teen pregnancy numbers began to drop and abstinence education became a national movement influencing teenagers and governmental leaders.

"A congressman once told me, 'Richard, a number of us stood outside and looked at those TLW cards covering the National Mall. It made an impact on us and our policies. It was a wakeup call that there are millions of teenagers who would respond to a positive call to abstinence,'" Ross recounted.

Millions continue to heed that call today. The National Center for Health Statistics released another report last year that showed an overall decline in teenage sex for the last 20 years.

"We know that abstinence is a message that resonates with teens," Huber said. "The targeted age group for sex education are 15- to 17-year- olds. About 75 percent of these teens have never had sex, despite the increasingly sexualized culture."

Even though the STD rate among teenagers is at an all-time high, the NAEA found a 1:24 disparity in federal funding of abstinence education compared to contraceptive-centered programs. From 2007 to 2012, the funding gap between the two is more than $4.2 billion -- $675.9 million to $4.9 billion. The most recent budget proposal by President Obama recommends only 4 percent of sex education dollars be spent on abstinence-based programs.

Half of unintended pregnancies were conceived when partners said they used contraception, Huber noted, and two of the four most common STDs are easily transmittable with a condom.

In February, the NAEA reported on an analysis sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention which found that comprehensive sex education programs in school did not significantly increase teen condom use or reduce teen pregnancy or STDs.

"It is disappointing that an administration that prides itself in supporting evidence-informed programs would ignore the evidence in this arena," Huber said.

Despite the federal funding, Ross said devoted Christian parents can make a difference regarding their teenagers' choices. In a study released last year, the National Center for Health Statistics found that teenagers who have been raised by both parents are less likely to have sex. The study also indicated that the most common motivation for teens to embrace abstinence is religious reasons.

"Parents who are just nominally religious have little influence," Ross said. "But here is the good news: The most powerful predictors of a teenager living in moral purity are a mom and dad who deeply love Jesus and have embraced His lordship and supremacy. The second most important factor is the willingness of those parents to communicate often how their supreme love for Christ is impacting their own choices about purity."

Contact: Aaron Earls
Source: Baptist Press