December 28, 2012

Abortion Expansion in Defense Bill Gets Troubling Support From Pro-Life Senators (2682)

Pro-life advocates worry that the November elections might have resulted in a weakening of congressional pro-life sentiment.



The unanimous passage through the Senate of a defense spending bill that expands abortion access for military personnel has generated concern that pro-life politicians are in retreat because of the November election results.

"It's extremely disappointing," Tom McClusky, vice president of the Family Research Council, said of the National Defense Authorization Act's almost certain endorsement by the House of Representatives after passage by the Senate. "And we're concerned that we've allowed the other side to frame the debate entirely in terms advantageous to helping women. Everyone wants to help women. But we also want what happens to the child to be part of the debate. The child is a human being."

But McClusky said he saw the passage of the bill as a result of a general failure by the pro-life movement. "We all have to take responsibility," he said. "If we point fingers, the pointing would go full circle."

The defense bill was passed by the Senate unanimously Dec. 4 with an amendment sponsored by Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., that provides medical coverage for military personnel to obtain abortions at military facilities in the case of rape or incest. It otherwise leaves in place the existing ban on funding or facility use for other abortions except when a servicewoman's life is in danger because of her pregnancy.

Since 1976, Congress has annually attached an amendment to all funding bills banning federal spending on abortions except when the mother's life is threatened by the pregnancy. The amendment is named after its initial proponent, Rep. Henry Hyde of Illinois. During the Clinton administration, congressional Democrats forced the rape and incest exemptions into the Hyde Amendments, and these have remained in place. But they were never added to military appropriation bills until now, said McClusky.

McClusky and other pro-life analysts said the House was almost certain to accept the inclusion of Shaheen's amendment when the Senate and House negotiate the final version of the defense bill.

Victimizing Unborn Children

In his 1995 encyclical Evangelium Vitae (The Gospel of Life), Pope John Paul II confirmed that "the direct and voluntary killing of an innocent human being is always gravely immoral."

Added Blessed John Paul II, "The deliberate decision to deprive an innocent human being of his life is always morally evil and can never be licit either as an end in itself or as a means to a good end" (57).

Marie Hilliard of the National Catholic Bioethics Center in Philadelphia said that politicians were wrong to vote for the bill, but pro-life Americans should have been contacting their congressional representatives to let them know "there are two victims or potential victims when there is a pregnancy resulting from rape or incest, the woman and the child."

Hilliard added, "It is a tragedy when a woman is sexually assaulted, but the unborn child should not be treated as a perpetrator. The child is innocent and should not become a victim too." Society, or, in this case, the military, should reach out to support women in this situation and offer them alternatives to abortion, she said.

As for congressional politicians, Hilliard rejected the idea that they had to vote for the bill because its good features outweighed the pro-abortion aspects.

"Pope John Paul II's teaching on incremental legislation allowed politicians to support laws that made abortion a little more difficult though not eliminating it altogether," she said. "But I don't think this teaching allows support for laws that make abortion a little bit easier."

Among supporters of the bill was a leading pro-life senator, Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H. Some pro-life observers were concerned about her support of the bill's inclusion of funding for military abortions, particularly in light of her previous 100% rating from the National Right to Life Committee and 0% from both Planned Parenthood and NARAL Pro-Choice America.

Ayotte's compromise on this pro-life issue came in the wake of a call from Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., to fellow Republicans to play down their beliefs about abortion and life issues.

Appearing on Fox News Sunday on Nov. 25, he suggested that, while "I can state my position on abortion," Republicans should, "other than that, leave the issue alone when we are in the kind of economic situation and, frankly, national security situation that we're in." McCain also voted in support of Shaheen's amendment to the defense bill.
 
'Complex Politics'

Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the Susan B. Anthony List, refuses to find any fault with the pro-life senators who supported the bill, given the "complex politics involved."

But Dannenfelser shares McClusky's concern about the impact of the election on pro-life advocacy in the corridors of power.

"I am concerned generally about the lack of courage shown by the Republican Party and about the wrong conclusions being drawn from the election results," Dannenfelser said.

What is worrisome to pro-life activists are the implications of the measure's passage unanimously through the same Senate that managed to muster 38 socially conservative votes early in December to defeat a U.N. disabled-rights treaty.

McClusky said the way the abortion issue played out in the November elections was problematic for the pro-life cause, especially in the case of Missouri Republican senatorial candidate Todd Akin, whose controversial use of the term "legitimate rape" to explain his opposition to abortion in the case of rape contributed to his loss.

Richard Mourdock similarly lost his bid for a Senate seat in Indiana after he said that a pregnancy resulting from rape was "something that God intended to happen." This was widely and deliberately misconstrued by Democrats and mainstream news media to mean that he thought God approved of rape when it resulted in pregnancy.

McClusky said, "The pro-life movement has failed to defend or argue well enough the position that we care about women, yes, but we care about children in all circumstances." He added that the Republican Party and the pro-life movement should have prepared its candidates better to advocate for life and not fall back into a defensive stance.

Another Washington activist for an organization with strong pro-life views who spoke with the Register on condition of anonymity said that Mourdock and Akin were known to stumble over explanations of pro-life positions and should have been better prepared.

The pro-life advocate was worried about a misperception growing within the Republican leadership that the party lost the presidential election and some other close races because of social issues and, consequently, should now tread softly with positions regarded as conservative in these areas, especially with life issues.

Dannenfelser agreed strongly that this is a misperception. "There is no data to support the idea that the Republicans suffered generally or in the presidential race from socially conservative positions," she said. It is true that in a few individual races they did suffer.

"But, overall, it was a wash; socially conservative issues helped in some areas and hurt in others."
 
Defensiveness Doesn't Work

But the Republican Party's pro-life position on abortion would have been more of an asset, Dannenfelser believes, if Republicans had been more willing to promote it during the campaign and if they had defended themselves less feebly against attacks that accused the party of being anti-women.

"The Republicans were on the defensive from the start," she said. "They let the other side slap the extremist label on them without response. They never tried to label the other side as extreme."

Contact: Steve Weatherbe
Source: National Catholic Register

Abortion-Breast Cancer Link Real, Widely Ignored



Though new studies confirm a link between abortion and breast cancer, that information is not being widely reported.

 Karen Malec of the Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer tells OneNewsNow the studies [PDF] conducted in France and China between 2009-2011 confirm that breast cancer cases are related to the number of abortions a woman has. LifeNews.com reports that the authors examined information on disease diagnosis, demographics, medical history, and reproductive characteristics of the patients involved. They also looked at a number of other factors.

"There have been 71 studies now that have been published, epidemiological studies showing a statistical relationship between having an abortion and having an increased breast cancer risk," Malec notes.

Even so, she says, most women remain uninformed about it because many cancer-related not-for-profit organizations look the other way.

"They are ignoring it, and they're misrepresenting the research," the pro-lifer laments. "It's simply not good for fundraising to tell women that their abortions may be responsible for their breast cancers. It's a very emotional issue."

At the same time, the standard medical text shows that childbearing protects women because it has a significant defensive effect. Dr. Joel Brind, a professor at Baruch College in New York City, has compiled a statistical review of previous studies confirming the link between abortion and breast cancer, and the French and Chinese studies of late tend to confirm his findings

Contact: Charlie Butts
Source: OneNewsNow.com

Supreme Court justice refuses to block HHS morning-after pill mandate



Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor has refused to block enforcement of that part of the HHS mandate which requires employers to provide insurance coverage for the morning-after pill.

In September, Hobby Lobby Stores, a private chain of over 500 arts-and-crafts stores with 13,600 employees in 41 states, and a sister company (Mardel, Inc.) filed suit against the HHS mandate. The chain is owned by an evangelical Protestant family whose members have no objection to the contraception provision of the HHS mandate.

"However, the Green family's religious convictions prohibit them from providing or paying for the abortion-inducing drugs, the 'morning-after' and 'week-after' pills, which would violate their most deeply held religious belief that life begins at conception," stated the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, which is representing Hobby Lobby Stores.

On December 20, a federal court denied Hobby Lobby's request to block enforcement of the mandate, and six days later, Justice Sotomayor denied Hobby Lobby's petition to block enforcement.

Beginning January 1, Hobby Lobby will face a fine of $1.3 million per day if it refuses to offer the insurance coverage. Justice Sotomayor ruled that the company may continue to challenge the constitutionality of the mandate in lower courts.

Source: CWN

Thomas More Law Center seeks to stop enforcement of HHS Mandate before January 1



The Thomas More Law Center (TMLC), a national public interest law firm based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, late Friday, December 21, 2012, filed an Emergency Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) on behalf of Tom Monaghan to stop enforcement of the HHS Mandate in order to prevent immediate irreparable injury to his fundamental rights.

The HHS Mandate requires employers to pay for health insurance that covers abortion-inducing drugs, contraception and sterilization under threat of draconian fines. It also requires employers to educate their employees about use of those drugs. Tom Monaghan is a staunch pro-life advocate and Catholic philanthropist. His religious beliefs prohibit him from paying for abortion-inducing drugs, contraception and sterilization.

TMLC attorney, Erin Mersino, asked Federal District Court Judge Lawrence P. Zatkoff to hear the Motion "at the earliest possible time" because the HHS Mandate takes effect against Monaghan and his Domino's Farms Corporation on January 1, 2013. If granted, the TRO would permit Monaghan to continue to provide insurance for his employees that does not violate his constitutionally and statutorily granted rights to free exercise of religion, free speech, and free association.

In a strongly worded brief, Mersino accuses the Government of blatant violations of Mr. Monaghan's constitutional rights to the Free Exercise of Religion and Free Speech guaranteed by the Constitution as well as a violation of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993.

Click here to read entire TRO Motion

The TRO motion is part of a lawsuit TMLC filed a week ago, December 14, 2012, in the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, on behalf of Monaghan and his Company. This is the second lawsuit challenging the HHS Mandate filed by the Thomas More Law Center.

Earlier in the year, the Thomas More Law Center filed a lawsuit on behalf of Michigan-businessman Daniel Weingartz and his Weingartz Supply Company, as well as the staff of Legatus, an organization of top Catholic business owners and CEOs. TMLC was successful in obtaining a Preliminary Injunction banning the Government from enforcing the Mandate against Weingartz and his company. Legatus also remains free of the Mandate's requirements under the Mandate's safe harbor provision.

Both lawsuits challenge the constitutionality of the HHS Mandate under the First Amendment rights to the Free Exercise of Religion, Free Speech and the Establishment Clause. Both lawsuits also claim that the HHS Mandate violates the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the Administrative Procedure Act.

Source: ProLifeBlogs

Michigan Abortion Clinic Shut Down, Boarded Up by Fire Marshall



The Muskegon Fire Department has posted closure notices on the Women's Medical Services in Muskegon, Michigan, and boarded up the abortion clinic until further notice, thanks to the work of Operation Rescue.

"We are happy to announce that the closure of Women's Medical Services is the twenty-fourth abortion clinic to close in 2012," said Troy Newman, President of Operation Rescue and Pro-Life Nation.

"There is a lot more to tell about this closure, but we cannot disclose further details at this time. Suffice it to say that there were serious violations at Women's Medical Services that made it unsafe to continue operating. This is one less abortion clinic that can prey upon vulnerable women and their pre-born babies, and for that, we are thankful."

Operation Rescue received photographs showing the closure notice, dated December 26, 2012. One of the clinic's doors was boarded up with a plywood panel.

"Abortion clinics are closing at a rate of about two per month," said Newman. "In 1991, there were 2,176 abortion clinics in America. Today, there are just 660. Nearly 70% of all surgical abortion clinics have closed for good. We look forward to the day when all abortion sites have been shut down and the pre-born baby is once again protected by law."

Contact: Troy Newman, President, Cheryl Sullenger
Source: Operation Rescue/Pro-Life Nation

Safety of Abortion Pill Questioned


Planned Parenthood has released a study that claims the abortion drug RU-486 is safe. But as one pro-lifer points out, a closer look gives a different conclusion.

 The study covering one year shows one death from RU-486 and 385 patients suffering serious complications. Cheryl Sullenger of Operation Rescue tells OneNewsNow more than 250 other women had to be hospitalized "to be treated with things like blood transfusions and intravenous antibiotics."

"So we see this as an indication that these abortion pills are not safe," she asserts. "And this is just a typical spin from Planned Parenthood, trying to make us think that up is down and that wrong is right -- and in this case, we're not buying it."

Sullenger reports that the study was not conducted by independent parties.

"In fact, the people who were involved in this survey were members of Planned Parenthood, were on advisory boards to Planned Parenthood," she relays. "In one case, one received financial compensation from Danco Laboratories, which is the sole distributor of the abortion pill in the United States. So these people all had a vested interest."

The Operation Rescue spokesperson emphasizes that RU-486 is dangerous. Even so, its use is becoming more common. In fact, Planned Parenthood plans to have all affiliates doing abortions and will promote "telemed" abortions, which does not directly involve a doctor.

Contact: Charlie Butts
Source: OneNewsNow.com

December 21, 2012

News Links for December 21st




How a Christmas carol saved one baby's life in Chicago

Appeals court directs Obama administration to rewrite HHS mandate

Federal appeals court sides with 2 colleges opposing HHS abortion-contraceptive mandate

HLI spokesman: Pro-abortion folks are all the same

Abortion or Bullets, Which Would You Choose?

Non Embryonic Pluripotent Stem Cell Human Trial Soon?

1 of 6 babies shows signs of life after late-term abortion

The Brutality of Late Term Abortion

AUL celebrates win in colleges' legal challenge to Obamacare's birth control mandate

Bork would have helped overturn Roe v. Wade

Weigel reviews the state of debate on the HHS mandate

"Paul Ryan" and "abortion" led Google's political topic trending in 2012

Louisiana bishops take issue with Gov. Jindal on contraceptive sales

Florida: Family Planning Vs. Family Belonging

Planned Bullyhood - Planned Parenthood's Attack on Komen

Irish leader says allowing some abortion promotes 'culture of life'

Irish bishops say legalizing abortion will harm care for moms

Irish pro-lifers: abortion legislation will have election consequences

Prelates lament Irish government's decision to draft legislation allowing some abortions

Filipino bishops will not concede to 'reproductive health' bill

Belgian Euthanasia to Expand to Minors

Italian pro-lifers demand taxpayers not be forced to pay for abortions

Achieving peace requires respect for all human life, Pope states

Young pro-life speaker makes waves in Canada

Domino's founder sues over contraception mandate




Tom Monaghan, the founder and former owner of Domino's Pizza, is suing the federal government over a controversial mandate that requires him to violate his Catholic faith in his business decisions.

The lawsuit described the contraception mandate as "an unprecedented despoiling of religious rights" that both "attacks and desecrates a foremost tenet of the Catholic Church."

It pointed to Thomas Jefferson's statement that "No provision in our Constitution ought to be dearer to man than that which protects the rights of conscience against the enterprises of the civil authority."

Filed Dec. 14 by Thomas More Law Center, the lawsuit challenges a federal mandate requiring employers to offer health insurance covering contraception, sterilization and early abortion drugs, even if doing so violates their firmly-held religious beliefs.

More than 110 business owners, non-profit organizations and religious charities have sued over the mandate, arguing that it violates their constitutionally-guaranteed right to religious freedom.

At age 75, Monaghan is best known for founding Domino's Pizza in 1960. He sold the pizza company in 1998 and no longer has any active affiliation with it. However, he remains the owner of Domino's Farms, the property management company for a Michigan office park that is home to more than 50 corporations, professional firms, non-profits and entrepreneurial businesses.

Monaghan and Domino's Farms were both listed as plaintiffs in the recent lawsuit, which explained that they are committed to "a common mission of conducting their business operations with integrity and in compliance with the teachings, mission, and values of the Catholic Church."

The legal challenge noted that Domino's Farms offers its tenants a Catholic bookstore and on-site Catholic chapel, which has Mass four times per day.
 
In accordance with Church teaching, Monaghan and his company believe that all human life is sacred, bearing the image and likeness of God from the moment of conception, it added.

They also agree with Church teaching on the nature and purpose of human sexuality, it said, explaining that they view contraception, sterilization and abortion as "gravely immoral practices" rather than true medicine or health care that provides for the well-being of persons.

The lawsuit observed that Monaghan is a pro-life Catholic who "has devoted his life and resources to Catholic philanthropic causes," including the promotion of Catholic education and charity.

He has founded numerous Catholic organizations, including Ave Maria University, Ave Maria School of Law and Legatus, a group for business leaders to bring together faith, family and business.
 
In his business practices, Monaghan "is guided by his religious beliefs" and "follows the teachings of the Catholic faith as defined by the Magisterium," the legal document stressed.

As part of this commitment to live out his "deeply held religious beliefs" in all aspects of his life, Monaghan offers a health insurance plan that specifically excludes coverage of contraception, sterilization and abortion, it said, noting that Domino's Farms has never offered coverage of these products and procedures.

However, the mandate threatens the ability of Monaghan and Domino's Farms to remain in business, since failing to comply with it would result in "ruinous fines that would have a crippling impact on their ability to survive economically," it explained.

Monaghan and his company are now asking the court to grant them an injunction blocking the enforcement of the mandate. So far, two for-profit businesses have been denied an injunction, while four have secured one.

Such an injunction is necessary, the lawsuit said, so that Monaghan and Domino's Farms may continue "to conduct their business in a manner that does not violate the principles of their religious faith."

Contact: Michelle Bauman
Source: CNA/EWTN News

They Said No


Nurses in a big city hospital never know what a day's shift will bring – straightforward cases or medical miracles, major crises or minor first aid. Whatever her station, whatever the duty of the moment, a nurse tries to ready herself for anything. But some things, you just can't see coming.

It was Beryl Otieno Ngoje's turn to work the desk in the Same Day Surgery Unit at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ), in Newark. She was busy with the usual administrative duties – filing charts, handing out forms to the patients, answering visitors' questions – when another nurse hurried up beside her.

"Oh, something just happened, you won't believe it," the woman said, visibly excited. "I have it in my hand." She held up a clenched fist, palm up. "I have it in my hand," she said again.

"What do you have in your hand?" Beryl asked, bemused at the woman's demeanor.

"Do you want to see?"

"Yes," Beryl said – and instantly regretted it.

The other nurse opened her hand to reveal the tiny, tiny form of a baby, just aborted.

"I felt like somebody had just hit me with something in my face," Beryl remembers.

She began to cry, to the consternation of her coworker.

"I'm sorry – I didn't know you were going to react like that," the woman said.

It was a moment that seared Beryl's soul and haunted her memory, and it would come back often, in the days ahead. For the other nurse was not just a co-worker, but her manager... with the power to hold not just an unborn baby, but Beryl's career in the palm of her hand.



The dozen-or-so nurses of the UMDNJ Same Day Surgery Unit – like nurses at any other hospital – are a lively mixture of backgrounds and personalities. Beryl, a native of Kenya, is a quiet ICU specialist who's been with the hospital for over 15 years. Fe Esperanza Racpan Vinoya, a veteran of the ER and ICU, is from the Philippines, and speaks with cheerful delight about her love for music and for her church. Lorna Mendoza has been a nurse for 25 years, at University for more than a dozen, and takes both her work and her Christian faith very seriously.

"We high-five each other," Beryl says, "Most of us are there 12 hours, and that is a good portion of your day. It is important that you get along and feel relaxed and free."

Because: "you get to socialize a lot," Fe says. "You're less busy here than in the ER."

The nurses of Fe's unit are responsible for monitoring, medicating, and placating patients going into and coming out of surgery. That means a lot of bedside comfort, encouragement, and interaction with both patients and their families, so conversations between coworkers tend to be quick exchanges in the hallway or on break. What the nurses share, more than close friendship, is delight in and commitment to a job they love.

"It's a noble job," says Fe. "Very fulfilling... a healing profession. Everything you do for the patient just makes them feel better, and satisfies my entire being, because I've helped someone."

"A lot of people don't realize... we usually see somebody at their worst," Beryl says. "They're not perky, happy – they're ailing and hurting. They just want somebody to be there. I can make a difference. I can help in whatever little way. I find that very gratifying."

All operations on this unit are elective – that is, the patient chooses to have a specific procedure done: a tonsillectomy, a hernia repair, the removal of cataracts. And, sometimes, an abortion.

Not the kind of abortion where the mother's life is in danger, Beryl says. "They just choose to end it. These are people who go to the doctor and say, 'Look, I don't want this pregnancy.' The age range is mostly teenagers – 13-, 14- and 15-year-olds – and a lot of times, they come back."

"To some, it's like contraception," Fe says. "Five or six times, you see them there."

If she ends up talking to those patients, she says, "I always tell them, 'I'll be praying for you, and I hope that this is the last time I'll see you doing this kind of procedure.' I can see in their faces how guilty they feel, the guilt in their hearts." Many say, "Yes, definitely this is my last time."

And yet, so often, they come back.

Fe knows, all too well, about that guilt in their eyes. Twenty years ago – still new to America, still learning the language and culture, just getting the hang of her first nursing job – she found she was pregnant. But her doctor said the number of rubella antibodies in her blood was too low, and posed far too great a risk for the baby. He urged her to get a therapeutic abortion.

Fe and her husband pressed the doctor repeatedly – was this absolutely necessary? He assured them it was, and, out of their depth in a new country, they didn't realize they had any choice. Fe soon found herself in a clinic, surrounded by half-a-hundred teenagers, all waiting their turn to abbreviate the life in their wombs. Fe sat with her husband and sister.

"We were the only ones crying," she says.

Right up until the moment of the procedure itself, Fe was on the phone with her doctors, trying to get their okay not to end her baby's life. But her pediatrician and the specialist were adamant, and she went through with what they told her to do. The decision has troubled her ever since.

"I wasn't able to sleep for a long time," she says. "It took me years to just feel that, okay, it's done. I asked for forgiveness. The Lord knows my heart, that I didn't want to have that happen."

Within a year, Fe was pregnant again. She is now the mother of three... yet her thoughts linger, sometimes, on the one she lost. The experience makes it that much harder, she says, to watch the young teenagers come through to eliminate a child just because it might complicate their lives. She knows how their hearts will be haunted in ways they can't imagine now.

Which is why she was horrified to learn that she was being ordered to help with their abortions.



The change came in September of 2011, with the news that a peer was being promoted. Though employed in the same unit as Fe, Beryl and the rest, this particular nurse had long been assigned to a special team that carried out the abortions without any involvement or assistance from other nurses on the Same Day Surgery floor. The abortion team had always drawn its staff from nurses who had expressed no qualms about helping end a child's life.

Promoted from that team to a supervisory position over all the nurses, the new assistant manager announced that – since she and others had to help with abortions – she saw no reason why every nurse shouldn't help. Hospital officials agreed, and passed a new, mandatory policy to make it so. The assistant manager quickly set up a training program that would give each nurse on the unit hands-on experience in how to assist with and clean up after abortions.

"As long as you work here," she told the 12 nurses who openly protested, "you're going to have to do it. If you don't, you're going to be fired or transferred out."

"We were all shocked," Fe says. "All these years I've been a nurse, I was never told to help kill children."

But the managers remained adamant. Hospital administrators supported them. When the nurses brought up a long-standing, in-writing agreement exempting them from taking part in abortions apart from a medical emergency, officials told them "an emergency" would hereafter be defined as any situation in which the patient was "bleeding." And every birth involves bleeding.

"I knew we were going to lose our jobs," says Lorna, who, at one point, amid the flurry of discussions with the managers, was asked to provide a patient with a bedpan. Retrieving it, she found an aborted baby inside. Horrified and sobbing, she called for help, telling the manager who responded, "I don't know what to do with this. I can't do this." She soon found herself in the office of the vice president of nursing, where she was accused of refusing to help patients and threatened with termination. She wasn't the only one called in.

"Our jobs were hanging by a string," Beryl says. "We were like, 'All right. If they're going to fire all 12 of us, fine. But this is against what we believe God wants us to do.' We didn't come into this profession to do [abortions]. We told them we weren't comfortable with it and didn't feel they should force us. And if that meant our jobs, well... God was going to provide."

When even their own union declined to help them, Fe wrote a letter to hospital officials saying that she and her coworkers would not participate in abortions. She passed it around for the other nurses; 15 signed it. She gave the letter to her manager, who took it to the director of nursing.. Response was swift. A meeting was called for the next day, with each of the signing nurses, the labor board, a union official, the managers, and "an expert on ethics" scheduled to be on hand.

The day of that announcement, Pastor Terry Smith, of Life Christian Church in West Orange, New Jersey, returned from a trip. A staff member told him that one of his parishioners – Fe – had called, shared what was happening at the hospital, and asked for advice. The pastor immediately phoned Len Deo, president of the New Jersey Family Policy Council.

"I'll be all over this," said Deo, who hung up and called Alliance Defending Freedom. Shortly afterward, staff attorney Matt Bowman was on the phone with a local allied attorney, Demetrios Stratis, enlisting him to help defend the nurses. The two immediately called Fe.

"I remember... I was driving and speaking to them three-way," says Fe, who had just been convincing herself the nurses' case was hopeless. "I didn't know a thing about conscience law – it was very, very new to me." The two told her she had a legitimate case, and offered to defend her. Best of all, Stratis said he could be on hand for her meeting with the managers the next day.

"Is there a catch?" Fe asked. Visions of sky-high attorneys' fees danced in her head.

"No catch," Stratis said. "We're pro bono lawyers." Fe drove home in a daze.

Next morning, she met Stratis at the hospital entrance. She took him upstairs to the Same Day Surgery Unit and introduced him to the nurses on duty and others waiting for the meeting. Twelve of the 15 immediately agreed to have him and Bowman represent them in the case.

"A godsend," Beryl says. "We had no idea which way to go. It was like something from heaven just dropped in our lap at the right time. It boosted our morale a lot." It did considerably less for the morale of the nurse managers and others gathered for the meeting, who had not reckoned with the nurses hiring outside counsel.

"Who are you?" a manager asked Stratis.

"He's our attorney, and he is going to speak on our behalf," replied Fe. Everyone split into huddles – Stratis and the nurses in one room, administrators in another. After a few minutes, the nurse manager came to cancel the meeting, but not before Stratis made it clear that he would be defending "my clients' legal right not to be forced to participate in terminating a pregnancy."

"It was like we had been talking to a brick wall, and that brick wall just got smashed," Fe says. "We were very happy after that. It gave us a sense of hope."

Stratis and Bowman reminded hospital officials – face to face and in writing – that their new policy transgressed both state and federal laws that make it illegal to compel medical professionals to violate their conscience by forcing them to help with a non-emergency abortion. With their actions, the hospital was not only risking a lawsuit, but more than $60 million in federal funding. Still, administrators stubbornly contended that all abortions in the Same Day Surgery area – each scheduled weeks in advance – were "emergencies."

"These surgeries are, by definition, elective, outpatient procedures," Bowman says. "If they weren't, the ER is just 30 seconds away." Plus, he points out, "these are pre- and post-operative nurses. They're not even supposed to be there for a surgery, whether it's abortion or not."

To get around that, he says, the abortion team "would give a woman a pill that induced labor, give it in the pre-op area, and leave her there. After a couple of hours, she'd start going into labor." And now, she was outside the surgical area – in a section for which the 12 pro-life nurses were responsible.

With the hospital unwilling to budge, Alliance Defending Freedom filed suit on behalf of the 12 nurses to defend their legally protected right of conscience. Their managers, meanwhile, insisted on including the 12 in abortion training, which included interactions with abortion patients and handling dead babies. Three were forced to take part before the nurses enlisted Bowman and Stratis. Once hired, though, the two quickly obtained an injunction that prevented other nurses from having to undergo training the following day.

One of the three forced to train did not quite accomplish, perhaps, what her managers had in mind. During her shift, a patient expressed reluctance to go through with the procedure. The nurse talked with her awhile, then – at her request – quietly brought in the woman's husband. After a bit, the woman dressed and they left... having decided not to have the abortion.

For weeks, the 12 nurses worked in a decidedly tense environment. "It was scary," Beryl says. "We prayed a lot. We came into work and stepped off the elevator and said, 'God just let the day go by well, without incident' – because we had our incidents. It was very, very uncomfortable." The 12 drew strength, she says, from each other, from praying friends, and from their faith that, "Our God is greater than this."

As a court date drew nearer, the hospital came up with another threat: if the 12 would not help with abortions, administrators would hire nurses who were willing to do so. Soon, officials intimated, there might not be work enough for everybody... in which cases those nurses willing to do anything might well enjoy greater job security than those only willing to do most things.

Amid all the tension, threats, and growing media coverage, the judge in the case stunned everyone by suddenly announcing, in a preliminary hearing, that a settlement had been reached.

"We had gotten everything [the 12 nurses] requested," Stratis says. "We'd gotten the hospital to agree not to force them to perform these abortions. There would be no retaliatory measures against them, and they could feel free and sleep at night, knowing that the next day they would not have to be trained on the abortion process or help a woman kill an innocent child."

"I was crying – really crying," says Lorna, who heard the news from one of the other nurses. "And very thankful. The next day, I went to work, and all of us were hugging and very happy."

"Before, I used to think that some prayers won't be answered," Fe says. "Sometimes, I'd feel very hopeless. But with this case, I saw how the Lord moves... providing the resources, the people who would help us out. It just strengthened my faith. I really thank God for Alliance Defending Freedom."

"I'm not sure I know where we'd be today if it wasn't for them, really," Beryl says. "We were up against some really big guns, and Alliance Defending Freedom was determined to support us."

"This case took an emotional toll on all of these nurses," Stratis says. "To stand up, to be part of a lawsuit against their employer, is very, very hard to do. There was a lot at stake. Some were the sole breadwinners for their family. Being faced with termination of their job or standing up for their faith... that is a very, very difficult decision, especially in these economic times."

But "I couldn't do what they were asking me to do," Beryl says. "I could not. You go against what you believe, what are you? What's left? Just a shell of what you are."

Spoken like a woman whose conscience is in good hands.

Source: Alliance Defending Freedom

Pro-Life Action League Goes Christmas Caroling at Chicago-Area Abortion Facilities

Musical Reminder of Christ Child Encourages Women to Choose Life for their Babies


 
Sometimes a song can save a life. That's what happened one year during the Pro-Life Action League's annual "Empty Manger" Christmas Caroling Day at abortion facilities in Chicago and the western suburbs.
 
"We were singing 'Silent Night' at American Women's Medical Center when a young woman came out of the clinic," said the Pro-Life Action League's executive director, Eric Scheidler. "She approached one of our pro-life counselors and said we got her thinking about Mary and Baby Jesus. She just couldn't go through with her abortion." The counselor directed the young mother to a nearby pregnancy center for help.
 
The Pro-Life Action League hopes for similar life-saving results during this year's 10th annual "Empty Manger" Christmas Caroling Day on Saturday, December 22. "These beloved Christmas carols remind us all of the hope and joy brought into the world by a newborn baby," said Scheidler. "We want to share that hope with the mothers entering these abortion clinics. We want them to know that just like Baby Jesus, their unborn babies are a gift, too."
 
Last year, 130 carolers participated in this annual event, and similar caroling tours were held at abortion facilities throughout the country, with even more groups signing on this year. "We encourage more pro-lifers to join this national event," said Scheidler. "Simply download and print out our caroling booklet and gather a few friends to sing carols at the abortion facilities in your area."
 
Two simultaneous caroling tours will take place the morning of December 22, one visiting five abortion facilities in Chicago and the other visiting four in DuPage County. Maps and more information, including other caroling sites across the country, are available at ProLifeAction.org.
 
At each abortion facility, pro-life carolers will gather around an empty manger, which symbolizes both the hope that new life can bring as well as the emptiness left behind when an unborn child is killed by an abortion—especially at Christmas time.
 
"Empty Manger" Christmas Caroling Tour, Saturday, December 22, 2012:
 
CHICAGO CAROLING TOUR:
• 9:00 Family Planning Associates, 659 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago
• 9:45 Planned Parenthood, 1200 N. La Salle Dr., Chicago
• 10:30 All Women's Health Center, 2000 W. Armitage Ave., Chicago
• 11:15 American Women's Medical Ctr., 2744 N. Western Ave., Chicago
• 12:00 Albany Medical Surgical Ctr., 5086 N. Elston Ave., Chicago
 
DUPAGE CAROLING TOUR:
• 9:00 ACU Health Center, 736 N. York Rd., Hinsdale
• 10:00 Aanchor Health Center, 1186 Roosevelt Rd., Glen Ellyn
• 11:00 Access Health Center, 1700 75th St., Downers Grove
• 12:00 Planned Parenthood Aurora, 3051 E. New York St., Aurora
 
VISUALS/AUDIO:
• Pro-life carolers gathered around Christmas crèche-style empty manger
• Christmas caroling
• "White Christmas" weather
• Pro-life signage
• Possible opposition counter-protest
• Backdrop of abortion facilities
 
More details available at ProLifeAction.org

Contact: Tom Ciesielka
Source: Pro-Life Action League

Federal appeals court sides with 2 colleges opposing HHS abortion-contraceptive mandate



A federal appeals court has delivered an important victory to religious nonprofit organizations that oppose the Obama administration's abortion/contraception mandate.

In the first ruling on the mandate at the appellate level, the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the federal government Dec. 18 to keep its promise to issue a new rule to protect the religious liberty of two colleges and other religious nonprofits. The three-judge panel told the Obama administration to report back every 60 days on its commitment to publish a notice of a proposed rule by March 31 and to issue a final rule before August.

The D.C. Circuit Court also said it expected the administration to fulfill its pledge not to enforce the current rule against Wheaton College, an evangelical Christian school in suburban Chicago, and Belmont Abbey College, a Roman Catholic institution in North Carolina, as well as other religious nonprofits.

"We take the government at its word and will hold it to it," the panel said in its three-page order.

The appeals court issued the order in response to lawsuits by Wheaton and Belmont Abbey against a rule by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) that mandates employers provide workers with health insurance covering contraceptives and abortion-causing drugs. The rule is part of the implementation of the 2010 health care reform law, which has been dubbed Obamacare.

The abortion/contraception mandate went into effect Aug. 1 of this year, but the Obama administration established a one-year "safe harbor" from that date intended to accommodate the concerns of nonprofit religious entities. Neither the "safe harbor" nor the D.C. Circuit Court's order applies to for-profit companies with owners opposed to the mandate.

Religious freedom advocates praised the court's order.

Richard Land of the Southern Baptist Convention called it "a tremendous day for religious freedom and freedom of conscience," adding he was "extremely pleased but not surprised" at the court's action.

"It shows clearly that when the federal government oversteps its bounds and denies the First Amendment free exercise and freedom of conscience rights of Americans that those citizens can successfully appeal to the federal court system to be the protector of those divinely endowed and constitutionally guaranteed rights," said Land, president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission which signed onto a friend-of-the-court brief on behalf of Wheaton and Belmont Abbey.

Kyle Duncan, general counsel of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, said the court "has now made it clear that government promises and press conferences are not enough to protect religious freedom. The court is not going to let the government slide by on non-binding promises to fix the problem down the road."

The D.C. Circuit Court's order came only four days after Duncan and government lawyers presented oral arguments before the panel of judges. During the arguments, the Obama administration lawyers promised the judges the government would not enforce the current rule against religious nonprofits and would provide a new rule to guard their religious freedom.

Wheaton and Belmont Abbey appealed to the D.C. Circuit Court after federal judges dismissed their lawsuits separately, partly because they ruled neither school had standing to sue. The appeals court, however, ruled the schools had standing. The three-judge panel also decided not to return the cases to the federal judges for further action but to hold them until a new rule is issued.

In addition to the challenges by the two colleges, 40 other lawsuits have been filed against the HHS for a rule that requires employer coverage of drugs defined by the Food and Drug Administration as contraceptives, even if they can cause abortions. Among such drugs are Plan B and other "morning-after" pills that can prevent implantation of tiny embryos and "ella" which -- in a fashion similar to the abortion drug RU 486 -- can even act after implantation to end the life of the child.

While the religious exemption to the rule provided by HHS covers churches, it is insufficient to protect religious hospitals, schools and social service ministries, as well as some churches, critics have pointed out.

Four Baptist schools -- Louisiana College, Houston Baptist University, East Texas Baptist University and Criswell College – are among the institutions or businesses that have filed lawsuits against the mandate.

Among others suing the federal government are Hobby Lobby, Christian publisher Tyndale House, Colorado Christian University, Geneva College, Priests for Life and the EWTN Catholic television and radio network.

The ERLC joined 10 other evangelical organizations in a brief filed by Christian Legal Society in support of the appeals by Wheaton and Belmont Abbey on religious liberty grounds.

Contact: Tom Strode
Source: Baptist Press

Hobby Lobby turns to Supreme Court for mandate relief


A Hobby Lobby store. Photo courtesy of the Becket Fund.

Arts and crafts giant Hobby Lobby will appeal to the nation's highest court after an appeals court ruled the federal contraception mandate does not impose a "substantial burden" on the owners' religious freedom.

"The Green family is disappointed with this ruling," said Kyle Duncan, general counsel for the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, which is handling the case.

He explained that the Christian family that owns and operates Hobby Lobby must now "seek relief from the United States Supreme Court."

"The Greens will continue to make their case on appeal that this unconstitutional mandate infringes their right to earn a living while remaining true to their faith," Duncan said.

On Dec. 20, an appeals court denied the plaintiffs' request for a temporary injunction to block the federal contraception mandate from being enforced against them while their case moves forward in the court.

The mandate requires employers to offer health insurance covering sterilization and contraception, including drugs that may cause early abortions. As Christians, the Greens are morally opposed to funding any type of abortion, including those caused by "morning after" and "week after" pills.

In its decision, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said that the mandate did not impose a "substantial burden" on the Greens' religious freedom because it only forces them to fund "someone else's participation" in an activity that their religion condemns.

Started in a garage in Oklahoma City in 1972, Hobby Lobby now has more than 500 stores in 41 states. Its owners, the Greens, have said that they seek to serve God through all of their endeavors, including their business decisions.

The company donates considerable amounts to charity, maintains a minimum wage that is much higher than the federal requirement and closes all of its stores on Sundays, sacrificing profit to allow its employees to rest and worship with their families.

A lower court ruled last month that as a "secular, for-profit" corporation, Hobby Lobby does not have a constitutional right to freedom of religion, even if its owners see its management as part of their call to Christian stewardship.

Forty-two separate lawsuits challenging the mandate have been filed on behalf of religious schools, hospitals and charities, for-profit businesses and individual states. Rulings in the cases have been split. Among for-profit businesses, four have been granted preliminary injunctions and two have been denied them.

Hobby Lobby is the largest business to file a lawsuit challenging the mandate. If it is not granted relief from the regulation, it will be forced to pay $1.3 million per day in fines for refusing to comply with the objectionable provision.

The company will now turn to the Supreme Court to ask for an injunction protecting its right to religious freedom.

"It is by God's grace and provision that Hobby Lobby has endured," said David Green, founder and CEO of the company. "Therefore we seek to honor God by operating the company in a manner consistent with Biblical principles."

Contact: Michelle Bauman
Source: CNA/EWTN News

DC appeals court rules new contraception rule must be issued




Religious freedom advocates applauded a federal appeals court's decision to hold the government accountable for revising its controversial contraception mandate.

Kyle Duncan, general counsel for the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, called the decision "a win not just for Belmont Abbey and Wheaton, but for all religious non-profits challenging the mandate."

"The D.C. Circuit has now made it clear that government promises and press conferences are not enough to protect religious freedom," he said in a Tuesday statement responding to the ruling.

On Dec. 18, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals said that it will hold the government responsible for following through on its promises to issue a proposed revision of the federal contraception mandate for objecting religious organizations by March 2013.

The mandate requires employers to offer health insurance plans that cover sterilization and contraception, including some drugs that may cause early abortions. Exemptions to the mandate were only granted to a small number of religious employers that meet the government's requirements of existing to teach religious values and primarily hiring and serving members of their own faith.

After a wave of protest from non-exempt individuals and organizations, the government announced a one-year "safe harbor" to delay the enforcement of the mandate against objecting non-profit religious groups. It said that it would create an "accommodation" for their religious freedom during this time.

However, critics have said that the early suggestions put forth by the Obama administration are inadequate. And while the plan for an accommodation was announced in February, the government has not yet issued its formal proposal with the details of the new rule, and its promise to create one was not legally binding.

More than 40 lawsuits have been filed against the mandate, drawing split rulings from district courts. Among for-profit businesses that are not protected by the safe harbor period, four out of six have been granted a preliminary injunction blocking the mandate from being enforced against them.

Several lawsuits filed by religious non-profit groups – including Belmont Abbey and Wheaton Colleges – were dismissed by district courts as premature because of the government's promise to amend the mandate.

However, a federal judge in New York determined on Dec. 6 that a case by the local archdiocese was mature despite the government's promise, noting, "There is no 'Trust us changes are coming' clause in the Constitution."

In making its Dec. 18 decision, the appeals court observed that the government had said during oral arguments that it would "never" enforce the mandate in its current form against morally objecting religious institutions.

"There will, the government said, be a different rule for entities like the appellants," the court noted, "and we take that as a binding commitment."

The judges also pointed to the government's statement that it would issue a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for the new rule by the end of March 2013 and would publish the Final Rule before August 2013.

"We take the government at its word and will hold it to it," they said, ordering the Obama administration to report back every 60 days on the progress of the accommodation. The colleges' lawsuit will be postponed during this time.

The ruling was hailed by supporters of religious freedom around the country.

Maureen Ferguson, senior policy advisor for The Catholic Association, applauded the court for fighting the "disinformation" surrounding the mandate and showing the serious threat to religious freedom facing religious employers.

Charmaine Yoest, president of Americans United for Life and a graduate of Wheaton College, called the decision "a first step toward halting the anti-life coercion in the healthcare law."

Duncan, who argued the case before the appeals court, explained that the decision offers hope to all of the religious plaintiffs throughout the country.

"The court is not going to let the government slide by on non-binding promises to fix the problem down the road," he said.

Contact: Michelle Bauman
Source: CNA/EWTN News

Abortion-breast cancer link real, widely ignored




Though new studies confirm a link between abortion and breast cancer, that information is not being widely reported.

Karen Malec of the Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer tells OneNewsNow the studies [PDF] conducted in France and China between 2009-2011 confirm that breast cancer cases are related to the number of abortions a woman has. LifeNews.com reports that the authors examined information on disease diagnosis, demographics, medical history, and reproductive characteristics of the patients involved. They also looked at a number of other factors.

"There have been 71 studies now that have been published, epidemiological studies showing a statistical relationship between having an abortion and having an increased breast cancer risk," Malec notes.

Even so, she says, most women remain uninformed about it because many cancer-related not-for-profit organizations look the other way.

"They are ignoring it, and they're misrepresenting the research," the pro-lifer laments. "It's simply not good for fundraising to tell women that their abortions may be responsible for their breast cancers. It's a very emotional issue."

At the same time, the standard medical text shows that childbearing protects women because it has a significant defensive effect. Dr. Joel Brind, a professor at Baruch College in New York City, has compiled a statistical review of previous studies confirming the link between abortion and breast cancer, and the French and Chinese studies of late tend to confirm his findings.

Contact: Charlie Butts
Source: OneNewsNow.com

Nobel Prize Scientist Supports Human Cloning


Sir John Gurdon, who won the Nobel Prize for early work on cloning frogs, has come out in favor of human reproductive cloning.

James Watson, the co-discoverer of the DNA double helix demonstrated that just because one is a brilliant scientist, that doesn't mean he or she is also a good ethicist.

And now, we have another example: Sir John Gurdon, who won the Nobel Prize for early work on cloning frogs, has come out in favor of human reproductive cloning. From the Daily Mail story:

    'I take the view that anything you can do to relieve suffering or improve human health will usually be widely accepted by the public – that is to say if cloning actually turned out to be solving some problems and was useful to people, I think it would be accepted,' he said. During his public lectures – which include speeches at Oxford and Cambridge Universities – he often asks his audience if they would be in favour of allowing parents of deceased children, who are no longer fertile, to create another using the mother's eggs and skin cells from the first child, assuming the technique was safe and effective.

    'The average vote on that is 60 per cent in favour,' he said. 'The reasons for "no" are usually that the new child would feel they were some sort of a replacement for something and not valid in their own right. 'But if the mother and father, if relevant, want to follow that route, why should you or I stop them?'

I don't know why so many scientists take such a crass utilitarian view of things, but let's unpack this for a moment. First, polls show overwhelming opposition to reproductive cloning. Be that as it may, note how Gurdon doesn't appear to care about the impact on the future cloned child of being a "replacement." Only the feelings of the parents matter. This is in keeping with the growing belief that people not only have the right to a baby, but to have a baby by any means they want, and indeed, the baby they want–in this example, custom manufactured.

But let's dig a little deeper. What kind of experiments would it take for reproductive cloning to be "safe?"  Here's how biologist and stem cell researcher, David Prentice (now with the Family Research Council). put it back in 2003 when I interviewed him for my book Consumer's Guide to a Brave New World:

    Scientists would have to clone thousands of embryos and grow them to the blastocyst stage [one week] to ensure that part of the process leading up to transfer into a uterus could be "safe," monitoring and analyzing each embryo, destroying each one in the process.  Next, cloned embryos would have to be transferred into the uteruses of women volunteers [or implanted in an artificial womb].  The initial purpose would be analysis of development, not bringing the pregnancy to a live birth.  Each of these clonal pregnancies would be terminated at various points of development, each fetus destroyed for scientific analysis.  The surrogate mothers would also have to be closely monitored and tested, not only during the pregnancies but also for a substantial length of time after the abortions.

    Finally, if these experiments demonstrated that it was probably safe to proceed, a few clonal pregnancies would be allowed to go to full term.  Yet even then, the born cloned babies would have to be constantly monitored to determine whether any health problems develop.  Each would have to be followed (and undergo a battery of tests both physical and psychological) for their entire lives, since there is no way to predict if problems [associated with gene expression] might arise later in childhood, adolescence, adulthood, or even into the senior years.

Does that sound moral or ethical to anyone?  It is manufacturing human life and then treating it as if it were nothing more meaningful than potter's clay.

Contact: Wesley J. Smith
Source: National Review

December 14, 2012

News Links for December 14th




Illinois Court decision gives pharmacists' freedom of conscience

Lisa Madigan forced to allow faith in Illinois pharmacies

Faith allowed in Illinois pharmacies

Planned Parenthood sees Wisconsin law as obstacle

Louisiana governor supports over the counter contraceptive sales

San Francisco officials accused of discouraging pro-life rally

Pro-choicers hyperventilate as drycleaner puts "pro-life" message on hangers

Ethics Case Progresses Against Two Kansas Officials that Bungled Planned Parenthood Criminal Case

Several pro-life bills may pass Michigan legislature

Vermont Gov. vows to pass assisted suicide in 2013

North Carolina bishops rue judge's decision on 'choose life' license plates

Pro-lifers plan to appeal guilty verdict

State's 'choose life' license plate declared unconstitutional

Senate Rejects U.N. Convention on Persons with Disabilities and Abortion Expansion

"Right to Live" Case Before Canada Supreme Court

Int'l Human Rights Day: Open Letter to Chinese President Xi Demands Immediate End to Forced Abortion

Stopping forced abortion

Sudan Advocates to Demonstrate Against Ongoing Genocide

Euthanasia by dehydration

Over Church objections, family-planning bill advances in Filipino legislature

Uruguayan doctors say abortion norms fail to respect conscience rights

Birthrate Lowest in America's History



The birth rate in the United States continues to fall -- and that could have an adverse effect on the future of the country.

 The birth rate last year dropped to the lowest level in history in the United States, with the heaviest drop among immigrants. The rate dropped eight percent, and Elizabeth Crnkovich of the Population Research Institute discusses the significance of that.

"We already dropped below replacement level," points out the Institute's media coordinator. "And when a country's fertility drops below replacement, the future generations suffer more and more and it's harder and harder for them to support the economy -- and so the economy would keep declining."

According to Crnkovich, that also impacts the aging part of the population.

"The young generations, they're also the ones paying the Social Security taxes," she explains. "And if you don't have as many young people as old people, then they're paying way more than they would need to support their elders."

The drop in the birth rate is not just because many families are opting for fewer children. Other factors include abortion, which has a major influence, as well as the state of the economy, which influences how many children people will have.

Contact: Charlie Butts 
Source: OneNewsNow.com

Rape Conception Panel Formed



CHOICES4LIFE, founded February 2012 is devoted to bringing awareness to the rape conception issue and has formed a panel addressing the issues of rape pregnancy. This powerful team speaks personally on every aspect of this issue in a private or public forum. One woman speaks on regretting aborting her baby, another was pregnant by her father at twelve, another was conceived in incest, still another mother raised her child and Juda Myers, founder of CHOICES4LIFE was conceived in an eight man gang rape. No longer does society have to speculate what mothers and children of rape conception think or feel. They can hear it straight from the victims.

CHOICES4LIFE, also reaches out to mothers struggling with society's stigma. Mothers who want their babies face rejection. CHOICES4LIFE offers emotional and financial support. Currently pregnant by rape a young woman expresses joy that this organization exists. Contemplating adoption and asked why she said, 'Finances.' CHOICES4LIFE is raising funds to give her a hand up so that she can find a job and raise her much loved baby boy - because no one should have to lose their child for lack of finances, especially in a temporary situation.

When threatened by her rapist, one woman was relocated to a safe place. Rent and food are some of the other ways CHOICES4LIFE has helped mothers. For rape conceived children struggling with value, Juda Myers offers logic as well as a higher purpose. "There's no difference between a human conceived in rape and one conceived in love. We are all created in God's image. You certainly can't pick us out of a crowd. For 48 years I didn't know I was rape conceived but when I found out it was devastating. I almost believed society. But I am no different than any other human."

Myers, having spoken to hundreds of mothers pregnant by rape, knows these women love their babies. Their babies are now doctors, lawyers, teachers, pastors, musicians, chemists, and professors, just like any other child.

Myers, international speaker also hosts a blog talk radio show. She's interviewed over 20 persons with powerful rape conception stories. Some spoke of being suicidal after aborting. Myers believes education will help both the victims and society.

Contact: Juda Myers
Source: CHOICES4LIFE

U.N. Blog Celebrates Prosecution of Pro-Life 'Violence'




The United Nations Foundation is bashing American pro-lifers.

The U.N. has a website section called Reality Check, which includes a blog by Jessica Mason Pieklo praising the re-election of President Obama because now Attorney General Eric Holder can continue to prosecute what the author refers to as violent attacks by pro-lifers.

"Holder has been a consistent target of the radical right as DOJ has turned closer attention to domestic terrorism and hate crimes enforcement," writes Pieklo. "And if this last election cycle showed us anything, it's that anti-choice radicals feel both empowered and threatened, which is a dangerous combination for [abortion] providers and women who need reproductive health care."

Dana Cody, head of the Napa, California-based Life Legal Defense Foundation, says Pieklo's statements are far from reality.

"If she would do her homework instead of pandering to the abortion lobby, she'd find out that Eric Holder's record is dismal," Cody tells OneNewsNow. "For practically everybody that he's prosecuted, the evidence shows that they weren't being violent."

Pieklo cites National Abortion Federation statistics to justify prosecution, but if one goes to that organization's training resource guide, it can be seen that the list of alleged "violent activities" is greatly exaggerated.

"It characterizes things like holding signs and handing out leaflets and participating in boycotts and huge posters -- these are their instances of unlawful violent conduct," Cody explains. "I mean, it's ridiculous."

Cody says that means the government would actually like to see the free speech and civil rights of peaceful pro-lifers suppressed.

In one case in Florida, prosecuted by Holder's Department of Justice, the judge scolded federal prosecutors for taking the case to court in the first place and even awarded the pro-life demonstrator damages. There was a similar case in Denver.

Contact: Charlie Butts
Source: OneNewsNow.com

Fr. Pavone is Named 2013 'Defender of Life'



Students for Life of America announced today that it will honor Father Frank Pavone, National Director of Priests for Life, with its 2013 Defender of Life award.

The award will be bestowed Jan. 26 during SFLA's annual National Youth Conference in Bethesda, Md.

"Throughout Father Frank's ministry he has been a leader, a visionary, and a courageously outspoken voice for the preborn," the organization said in a statement announcing the award. "His ground-breaking work exposing the true horrors of abortion through images of the aborted child, his countless hours standing and praying outside of abortion facilities offering women in crisis real help, and his great compassion for the women and men left with the heartache of abortion have inspired a generation to enter into the pro-life movement."

Father Pavone has been the National Director of Priests for Life since 1993. He is also the president of the National Pro-Life Religious Council. The New York native was ordained by Cardinal John J. O'Connor in 1988. After serving five years in parish ministry, the Cardinal released him to do pro-life ministry full-time. He has been involved in the pro-life movement since he was a teenager and attended his first March for Life in D.C.

"I am so honored and so happy to be receiving this award," Father Pavone said. "We know that youth are not only the future of the pro-life movement, they are vital to its work right now. I have met so many of the Students for Life across America, and they inspire me! Priests for Life and our Youth Outreach Director Bryan Kemper have been working closely with Students for Life and we expect this partnership to grow and flourish."

Contact: Leslie Palma
Source: Priests for Life