August 28, 2013
ACLU helping underage girls circumvent Illinois' new parental notification law
August 27, 2013
52 abortion clinics close nationwide, none shutter in Illinois
Illinois Abandons Abstinence-Only Program
August 23, 2013
Quest for ethical stem cells prompts moral questions
Proponents of Plan B restriction undeterred
Living a double life? Doc balances pre-natal work with abortions
August 22, 2013
Federal dollars flow to Planned Parenthood to trumpet ObamaCare
U.S. Supreme Court Orders Oklahoma Supreme Court to Answer Two Certified Questions Regarding State Regulation of Medicated Abortion
Attorneys from the Jubilee Campaign's Law of Life Project (JC-LOLP) yesterday afternoon, as authorized by the Oklahoma Supreme Court, filed a "friend-of-the-court" brief in that court on behalf of Oklahoma doctors specializing in obstetrics and gynecology in the case of Cline v. Oklahoma Coalition for Reproductive Justice. 82 Oklahoma legislators were also permitted to file their "friend of the court" brief supporting Oklahoma's law regulating medication abortions.
In 2011, Oklahoma passed a law banning "off-label" use of the abortion-causing drug regimen known as RU-486. The law was challenged by the abortion industry and made its way up to the United States Supreme Court, who granted certiorari to review the case this past June. This past April, representing thousands of medical doctors from around the country, JC-LOLP submitted a "friends of the Court" brief to the United States Supreme Court supporting Oklahoma's law regulating RU-486, as well as Oklahoma's request that the United States Supreme Court grant certiorari and reverse the Oklahoma Supreme Court's cursory memorandum decision, rendered late last year without analysis or discussion, that Oklahoma's law regulating RU-486 constituted an undue burden on women's access to abortion as proscribed in the United States Supreme Court's 1992 decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey.
When the United States Supreme Court granted certiorari, it directed the Oklahoma Supreme Court to answer the following two certified questions regarding Oklahoma's law:
Whether H. B. No. 1970, Section 1, Chapter 216, O.S.L. 2011 prohibits: (1) the use of misoprostol to induce abortions, including the use of misoprostol in conjunction with mifepristone according to a protocol approved by the Food and Drug Administration; and (2) the use of methotrexate to treat ectopic pregnancies.
The U.S. Supreme Court has stayed further proceedings in this case until they receive a response from the Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
In response to the Oklahoma Supreme Court's schedule for briefing these certified questions and the invitation to submit a "friend of the court" brief in that court by the Oklahoma Attorney General, who has also filed his own brief, a group of Oklahoma doctors specializing in obstetrics and gynecology, represented by attorneys from JC-LOLP and the Alliance Defending Freedom, yesterday submitted their brief. These Oklahoma doctors advise the Oklahoma Supreme Court that the challenged law is a reasonable medical regulation enacted to protect women's health by requiring that RU-486 be administered consistently with the protocol approved in 2000 by the FDA. The brief sets forth the substantial medical literature document that the abortion industry's off-label use of RU-486 poses significant well-documented health risks for women. Based upon the existing state of medical knowledge, the law is rationally related to the protection of a pregnant woman's health and neither bans the use of misoprostol nor restricts the use of methotrexate in the treatment of an ectopic pregnancy. Thus, the challenged statute does not on its face impose a substantial "undue burden" on a woman's access to abortion since it neither bans the use of RU-486 as approved for use by the FDA, nor does it ban the use at any time of surgical abortion that is always safer than RU-486 to terminate a pregnancy.
As documented by Oklahoma's Attorney General before the United States Supreme Court, eight women have died from bacterial infections following an RU-486 medical abortion administered according to one of the off-label protocols, whereas no women have died from such infections following use of the FDA-approved protocol. Thus, the Oklahoma Legislature properly acted to address this serious health and safety problem by requiring that RU-486 and other abortion-inducing drugs be administered according to the FDA's prescribed protocol.
JC-LOLP's General Counsel, Sam Casey, said yesterday afternoon at the time the brief was filed:
"The abortion industry's longstanding opposition and ignorance of any reasonable safety regulation of two powerful drugs never intended by their manufacturers to be used for abortion, because of the industry's selfish desire to make more money while providing less than safe medical supervision for abortion is unconscionable. Hopefully, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma will accept our Oklahoma Doctors' 'friend of the court' advice that Oklahoma law properly reflects the sound medical evidence which demonstrates that the FDA-approved Mifeprex Regimen, including the use of misoprostol as prescribed in the FDA-approved Mifeprex Regimen, is safer than off-label uses of mifepristone and/or misoprostol to induce a medical abortion. Since surgical abortion is always available as an option throughout the first trimester, and since it is safer and faster than medical abortion, the State's restriction of medical abortions from 63 to 49 days poses no undue burden on access to abortion. Further, since treatment of ectopic pregnancy and medical abortion are considered separate procedures by the medical community, the Act's restrictions on medical abortions in no way restrict the use of methotrexate to treat ectopic pregnancies. Consequently, this Oklahoma law best protects women's health while constitutionally posing no undue burden on women's access abortion, as required by the United States Supreme Court."
Contact: Amy Pedagno, Jubilee Campaign's Law of Life Project (JC-LOLP)
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August 8, 2013
The ten dumbest things said in defense of abortion
The past few years haven't been great for abortion. More and more people are calling themselves pro-life, including more young Americans than ever before. Pro-life laws are being passed in record numbers each year. While it would be foolish to say that pro-lifers are winning the war on abortion, it wouldn't be wrong to say that we're making progress — and that has the pro-aborts panicking. Some pretty crazy statements are being made in their desperate attempt to keep abortion on demand legal at any time, for any reason. Some are flat-out ridiculous, some are insulting, and others chilling. These are ten of the dumbest things said in defense of abortion.
10. Women shouldn't have to choose between their cell phones and birth control.
In a stunning display of entitlement, students at the University of New Mexico got upset because the school would no longer be subsidizing birth control. While pro-aborts often try to give sad, sad stories about women who need birth control out of medical necessity, or need abortion because they will DIE without it, the truth is, it's often merely a matter of convenience. The reason women should get free birth control? Because otherwise, students might be forced to choose between their birth control and… their cell phones! Or their gym memberships! Oh, cruel world! It is just an unthinkable notion that a college student be forced to work out for free at the icky gym on campus, or go with a cheaper cell phone model — or, even worse, pay for the ultra-cheap generic brand birth control at Wal-Mart. Worst of all is the notion that they might be forced to abstain from sex, since they can't afford birth control and aren't ready for a baby. Because in the pro-abort world, women are merely animals, incapable of controlling their sexual urges, right?
9. Pro-lifers need a lesson on the birds and the bees.
Nancy Pelosi makes her first appearance on our list, where she responded to laws limiting (but not outlawing) abortions in North Carolina and Texas by saying that pro-life politicians needed "a lesson on the birds and the bees". Because the only people who understand sex and pregnancy are the pro-aborts, right? Unfortunately, that has turned out to be less and less true over the years. Pro-lifers have embryology on their side, as well as the science of pregnancy and fetal development. Meanwhile, pro-aborts just try to insist that a baby is just a clump of tissues, or that fetal pain laws are dumb because fetal pain doesn't exist, or that there are no adverse risks that come with abortion. It doesn't matter that the science isn't on their side — they'll still keep claiming, like Nancy Pelosi did, that it's pro-lifers who are the idiots in need of educating.
8. Women should go into debt to have an abortion.
Abortions are often expensive, costing thousands of dollars when late-term. Ripping babies into pieces is hard work, after all. But this can mean finding the money for the abortion is difficult for some women. Thankfully, pro-aborts like Leela Yellesetty are here to help! What does she do when women are struggling to afford an abortion? Why, help put them into debt, of course! Yellesetty bragged about how she would talk women into taking about payday loans with interest rates over 300%, pawning their valuables, and putting the money for their procedure onto already maxed-out credit cards. Who cares that these women will be breaking their backs to pay off a $3,000 abortion funded by a payday loan with a 322% interest rate? The abortionist got their money, and that's all that matters.
7. White people are trying to eliminate abortion to "build up the race".
Pro-lifers have long since spoken out about the overwhelming number of black babies that are aborted. We speak out against the fact that black babies are being aborted at higher rates than other babies, or that many abortion clinics intentionally target minority neighborhoods. And why is this? According to CBS analyst Nancy Giles, this is all because white pro-lifers want to build up the white race. Yep, that's right. Our dastardly plan is to build up the white race by opposing abortions of black babies, therefore leading to… erm… the births of more black babies. Makes perfect sense.
6. Men don't deserve to have a voice on abortion.
According to many pro-aborts, men shouldn't be allowed to talk about abortion, at all (unless they're for abortion, in which case it's totally cool). This is because men can't get pregnant, so as one pro-abortion blogger said, male voices should be silenced in the abortion discussion. Nevermind that the baby is half the father's. Men need to just shut up about abortion! And meanwhile, anyone who isn't black can't speak about slavery, and anyone who isn't Jewish can't talk about the Holocaust. Right? It's the same logic, after all.
5. You're only a person if you can play tennis.
A few years ago, Choice USA released a video about pregnancy that was just hilarious. To show how ridiculous the idea of a fetus being a person is, a pregnant woman is told that she has to play doubles tennis instead of singles, must pay for two tickets to see a movie instead of one, and must split a bill between two people three ways — because her unborn child is a person. Get it?? Because everyone knows that a person is defined by what they can or cannot do. In a wheelchair and can't play tennis? Well, clearly this means you aren't a person worthy of life.
4. As a Catholic, abortion is sacred ground.
Nancy Pelosi makes her second appearance on our list, where she talks about her wackadoodle version of the Catholic faith. Pelosi defended not only abortions, but late-term abortions, by saying that as a practicing Catholic, keeping late-term abortions legal was sacred ground. Abortion may be a sacrament for pro-aborts, but in the actual Catholic church, protecting all human life is what's actual sacred ground. Pelosi's fight to keep abortion legal goes against Catholic teachings, and pretending she's a pro-abortion warrior because she's a Catholic does nothing more than make a mockery of the Church.
3. Women who don't support abortion are men with breasts.
It's not unusual to hear a pro-abortion feminist say that women can't be feminists unless they support abortion. Unless you fall in lockstep with their abortion worship, you can't be a part of their club. But they also insist that they're pro-choice, not pro-abortion. Actually exercise a choice they don't agree with, though, and they'll turn on you before you can blink. Case in point: Pennsylvania State Representative Babette Josephs, who smeared pro-life women by calling them men with breasts. Because you can't be a real woman unless you're willing to advocate for the brutal murder of your unborn child!
2. Women would be nothing without abortion.
Carly Manes is 19-years-old, and defines herself as an abortion activist. She's able to do all kinds of cool stuff, and so are other women. Why? Because of abortion! According to Manes, it is only because abortion is legal that women are able to devote their energy to do things like go to school, work as an activist, be an athlete, or decide to be vegetarians (like Manes!). Women owe everything to abortion. Without the ability to kill our unborn children, women would be able to accomplish nothing. Girl power!
1. Abortion takes a life, but it's a life worth sacrificing.
Salon blogger Mary Elizabeth Williams takes the number one spot on our list, with easily the most chilling statement. According to Williams, abortion is taking a life — but that's OK because it is a life worth sacrificing. Williams claims that an unborn child is a life, just not one worth as much a mother's feeling that a pregnancy is inconvenient. For Williams, some lives simply have more worth than others, with the "others" being disposable. It takes a truly depraved mind to argue that it's acceptable to take a life merely because that person isn't worthy of life.
Contact: Cassy Fiano, Source: Live Action News



















