November 15, 2013

Two stories from New York Magazine unintentionally reinforce the pro-life case against abortion

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I try always to give credit where credit is due. In the space of less than a week New York magazine (by no means in our corner) has published two hugely revealing stories about abortion.

The first we talked about yesterday. The title of the piece is "One in three women has an abortion by the age of 45. How many ever talk about it? New laws, old stigmas. 26 stories." Our take on the story—"The abortion accounts of 26 women weep pain and regret and remorse" can be read here.  (I will talk about another of the stories below.)

The second, "Why the Abortion Pill Didn't Change Everything," was written by Ann Friedman.

The former could have been put together by someone intending to prove how abortion is no answer to anything, indeed creates a multiple of new and worse problems. Yet the goal was to "destigmatize" abortion. In that objective, it failed…miserably.

The latter, by Friedman, begins by quoting from two over-hyped articles, which posited that clearly RU-486 would "change everything" (TIME magazine, 1993) and constituted a "little white bombshell" (The New York Times, 1999).

Friedman's thesis is, "By 2013, though, it's become clear that the pill hasn't revolutionized the way most women get abortions; it's become just another front in the legislative and legal battles over reproductive rights, one more method pro-choice activists must fight to defend."

Let's dig into that a bit. We should not overlook that according to Friedman "one quarter of abortions prior to nine weeks " were chemical abortions (or "medication abortions," as pro-abortionists like to call them). Nor should we miss something we will write about tomorrow.

Whereas the FDA wanted use of chemical abortions confined to the first seven weeks, abortionists are already using the two-drug RU-486 regimen through the ninth week—and are agitating to use these powerful combination into the second trimester! Never mind that at least 14 women have died after having ingested RU-486.

So where is Friedman correct–and why—and what should she be credited with acknowledging? We'll alternate that with misstatements.

*Surely there was and is and will be immense opposition to "webcam" abortions in which the abortionist is not even on site when by remote control he opens a drawer from which the woman extracts the two drugs. This is such a profit center for the abortion industry—one abortionist can (once removed) abort dozens of women in a single day, women who may be hundreds of miles away—that they will fight like the dickens.

*Where Friedman misleads the reader is in assuring them that at "some veterans of the abortion wars" never bought into the hype. "It wouldn't be a panacea for women and for abortion rights, nor would it be as easy as popping a pill. It was so hard to get that across," former Planned Parenthood president Gloria Feldt told Friedman several years ago. "Because people just want the abortion debate just to go away."

I'm sure there must be "some [pro-abortion] veterans of the abortion wars" who didn't swallow the company line. But in fact, if you go back to NRL News's coverage, you'll find pro-abortion leader after pro-abortion leader singing hosannas to the wonderfulness of chemical abortions. They really did see a new day dawning.

*Where Friedman is most to be commended is for her brutally honest assessment of how much more complicated chemical [medication] abortions are in reality. Here's a long paragraph worth quoting in full:

Then there's a general false perception among women that medication abortion will be quicker and easier than a surgical procedure. "The majority think, 'Hey, I'm gonna pop a pill and that'll be it,'" the receptionist at an abortion clinic in Nebraska told me. With an early surgical abortion, a woman goes into a clinic and is sure she's no longer pregnant when she comes out a few hours later. With medication abortion, the process can take up to 48 hours. Even after counseling at a clinic, many women are unprepared for the experience. "I took one pill at home, and I remember at one point actually feeling my cervix open. It was a terrifying feeling," says Katie, who had a medication abortion in 2004. Another woman described pain that was "so intense that it's hard to really remember. You sort of feel like you're tripping or something." A nurse at an abortion clinic once told me, "Women who have done both will go back to surgical. I've never had anyone who's done both go back to medical.

But even that understates how ghastly the experience can often be. From the 26 accounts we talked about yesterday there is this from "Abby, 28." After she took the first drug (mifepristone) she tells us that she vomited and emptied her bowels. She then writes

"After the contractions started, my hands turned into claws. I was dehydrated. I had this underlying feeling that I was being made to suffer, to repent for my situation. I called my boss. He took me to the ER. It cost $2,000. When I stood up, the bed was covered in blood. … When I went home, I got up to pee, and this gray golf-ball thing came out. I thought, So I just flush the toilet?"

*Back to the less-than-accurate observations: Contra Friedman, there are not eight women who've died after taking the two-drug regimen but (at least) 14—and that's data from several years back. "The anti-choice movement has been quick to publicize them — most recently, an anti-abortion site carried an exhaustive report of a British woman who died after taking mifepristone." The implication here is that somehow it's not good form to point out that women die. And then "And every few years, a woman makes headlines after she orders abortion pills illegally and administers them herself at home." We've covered that case in great detail. If what happened doesn't enrage you, you must be working for a pro-abortion outlet.

*Friedman ends with this:

"For those of us who are pro-choice, it can be easy to forget that our task isn't just to push back against abortion restrictions and, as the classic stickers say, keep abortion legal. It's to be educated about abortion options — after all, one in four women American under age 30 has already had one — and talk fearlessly about the pros and the cons. It means knowing the statistics about how safe early abortions are, but also acknowledging the possibility that something could go awry. It means telling women frankly that the price of a private, non-surgical, at-home abortion is that it may take longer and be more painful. Open, fact-based dialogue — not a little white pill — is what has a real chance of moving the abortion debate forward."

As important as it is to tell women these truths—for example, that chemical abortions can be unbelievably painful and "take longer"—there is much more, as we have outline above, that she overlooks. Women do die after taking the abortifacients. It will expand—perhaps greatly—the number of abortions, which only PPFA and its ilk could applaud. And the siren call of chemical abortions—it's not really like a surgical abortion—can and has enticed doctors who should know better into abortion's web.

Contact: Dave Andrusko, National Right to Life

November 14, 2013

A simple drug-store test: Can a teen buy cold medicine and abortion pill?

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Students for Life conducted an undercover video probe about sales of Plan B, the morning-after pill, to minors. 

The drug is now sold over the counter to anyone regardless of age after the FDA followed through on a federal court order earlier this year. Even a 6-year old-can purchase Plan B if they can pay for it.  

Kristan Hawkins, who heads Students for Life, says Plan B One-Step is more powerful than a birth-control pill.

"What a lot of people don't realize is this drug is 10 times more powerful than a normal birth control pill, which requires a doctor's examination and prescription, but this drug doesn't require any of that," Hawkins says.

"You can walk in and buy it multiple times during the month, misuse the drug, and no one would be any the wiser," she adds. "There's no parental involvement."

So Students for Life sent a 15-year-old volunteer into pharmacies to buy Plan B and also buy a common cold drug, Sudafed, to see what would happen.

To view the video, visit: http://youtu.be/6-mDs_CPIKo

"Could she get the cold medicine as well as this drug, which is potentially cancer-causing, potentially life-ending and abortion-inducing?" Hawkins asks. "And what we found was every place she could buy the Plan B but she wasn't allowed to buy the Sudafed."

There are legal restrictions on Sudafed in some states because it is an ingredient in making meth.

Hawkins says what their undercover investigation found didn't border on the absurd. "It is the absurd," she says.

Hawkins is asking people to go to website exposeplanb.com to sign a petition asking pharmacies not to sell Plan B because they don't have to.

Students for Life found that Walmart does not. 

Contact: Charlie Butts , OneNewsNow.com

World Premiere of New Film Featuring Pro-Life Leaders and Youth Who Stand Up for Life Opens in Park Ridge, Illinois

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The Most Important Human Rights Issue of Our Time

To coincide with and the upcoming 40th March for Life and  the recent 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, Pro-Life Champions, Spirit Juice Studios and Movie to Movement are honored to announce the world premiere of a new powerful pro-life documentary 40.  The film which began production at the 2012 March for Life in Washington D.C., presents abortion as the most important human rights issue of our time. 

Directed by the producer of the award winning film Champions of Faith: Baseball Edition, John E. Morales, and from Executive Producer and Movie to Movement Founder, Jason Jones, 40 will feature inspiring stories and deeply personal interviews with champions of the pro-life movement. The film will also address some of the strongest arguments for the pro-choice position such as when life begins and "it's my body, my choice" countered by pro-life answers from a wide array of pro-life activists, leaders and youth. Twenty-eight year-old actress Jennifer Cadena, who stared in The Roomate, Crescendo, and the upcoming film, Little Boy, narrates the 40 film.
 
40 features over 40 of the biggest names in the pro-life movement such as Joe Scheidler, founder of the Pro-Life Action League, Investigative journalist Lila Rose, the President of Live Action, Star Parker, Founder and President of CURE, Rebecca Kiessling, Pro-life Speaker and Conceived in rape, Serrin Foster, President of Feminists for Life, Ryan Bomberger, Founder of Radiance Foundation, Abby Johnson, Former Planned Parenthood Abortion Clinic Director and Founder of And Then There Were None, Keith Mason, Co-founder of Personhood USA, Dr. Monica Miller, Director of Citizen for a Pro-Life Society, David Bereit, National Director of 40 Days for Life, Fr. Frank Pavone, National Director of Priests for Life, Dr. Alveda King, Director of African-American Outreach-Priests for Life, Jeanne Monahan, President of March for Life Education and Defense Fund, Dr. Day Gardner, President of the National Black Pro-Life Union, Troy Newman, President of Operation Rescue,  Kelsey Hazzard, President of Secular Pro-Life, and many more!

What: 
World Premiere of 40 

When: 
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
7p.m. - Exclusive Premiere featuring numerous Pro-Life Leaders and special guests.
 
Where: 
Pickwick Theatre
5 S. Prospect Ave. Park Ridge, IL 60068

Visit www.the40film.com or call 847-803-4003 


Contact: Cindy Morales, the40film.com

November 13, 2013

Tiny number of people have enrolled through Healthcare.gov


Healthcare .govIt was like pulling teeth, only harder, but the Obama Administration today reported on the number of people who enrolled in the new health-insurance plans that are offered through the Healthcare.gov website.

Predictably the numbers were a mess, as was the assurance—qualified under questioning—that the snafu-ridden website would be smoothly running by December 1.

First, the overall total, according to HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, was 106,000 for the first month. But only 27,000 came from the 36 states where the federal government is running the exchange. (The remaining 79,000 came from the 15 states and the District of Columbia which have their own marketplaces.)

As the blogger Allahpundit wrote,

"To put that another way, over the 31 days of October, each of the 36 states served by Healthcare.gov managed to enroll … 24 people per day. …

"The target for total ObamaCare enrollments in October (not including Medicaid) was just shy of 500,000. They got slightly more than 20 percent of the way there."

Second, The Washington Post reported that "Software problems with the federal online health insurance marketplace, especially in handling high volumes, are proving so stubborn that the system is unlikely to work fully by the end of the month as the White House has promised, according to an official with knowledge of the project."

But it gets worse because the "solution" is crippled by the same fundamental problem:

"Government workers and tech­nical contractors racing to repair the Web site have concluded, the official said, that the only way for large numbers of Americans to enroll in the health-care plans soon is by using other means so that the online system isn't overburdened."

Which, as I asked my wife this morning, are what? According to the Post story, written by Amy Goldstein, Juliet Eilperin, and Lena H. Sun, they "include federal call centers and insurance companies that sell policies directly to customers." The problem here is that these are "paths that are hobbled for now by some of the same technical problems affecting the federal Web site."

Getting back to the promise/vow/assurance [fill in the blank] made by President Obama in Dallas last week that the "Web site is already better than it was at the beginning of October, and by the end of this month, we anticipate that it is going to be working the way it is supposed to, all right?"

Actually, no. Todd Park is the chief U.S. technology officer in the executive office of the president. According to Goldstein, Eilperin, and Sun,

"Under questioning later in the hearing from Rep. Blake Fahrenthold (R-Tex.), Park would not guarantee that the Web site would be completely fixed by the end of November.

"Park said the goal is to have HealthCare.gov working 'smoothly for the vast majority of Americans,' but he indicated that it would not necessarily work for everyone.

"When asked directly if the site would be ready, Park said, 'The team is working really hard to meet that goal."

Contact: Dave Andrusko, National Right to Life

ObamaCare Key to Planned Parenthood Expansion


Pro-abortion President Barack Obama

Pro-abortion President Barack Obama

They were in on it from the beginning, so it is hardly surprising to see Planned Parenthood now not just promoting, but standing poised to reap the financial benefits of ObamaCare.

After working and spending a great deal to get Obama elected, Planned Parenthood was one of the privileged groups invited to the President's "health care summit" at the White House early in Obama's first term in March of 2009. Though it was unknown what final shape the healthcare plan would take at the time, Planned Parenthood President Cecile Richards offered her organization as a model of what the Planned Parenthood website termed "a safety-net health care provider and entry point into the health care system for millions of men and women."

Planned Parenthood fought for and defended the health plan, pushing to get it passed in March of 2010, and then helping to keep in office the politicians needed to keep it from being modified in any significant way that would threaten either the plan or their abortion empire. Obama and his Senate allies responded in kind, defending and promoting the abortion giant and making federal funding of Planned Parenthood the one non-negotiable in high stakes budget talks.

It has been a very profitable relationship for Planned Parenthood.

Today, as ObamaCare begins it rollout, Planned Parenthood stands poised to bring in hordes of new customers, rake in even more money, and further expand its already massive abortion empire.

Lest anyone forget, Planned Parenthood is already America's largest abortion chain and is flush with cash, much of it taken from the pockets of taxpayers, performing 333,964 abortions in 2011, more than a quarter of all abortions done in the U.S., and bringing in nearly $1.2 billion in revenues for the fiscal year ending 6/30/12.

Planned Parenthood is, of course, doing the standard thing that political groups do, issuing press releases, sending spokespeople out to talk to the press, penning op-ed pieces, but as someone who stands to gain from new legislation, has gone much further.

Go to the website today and you'll see a box in the main graphic on the front page declaring "OBAMACARE + PLANNED PARENTHOOD HEALTH CENTERS A perfect match!" You can click a link to "GET THE FACTS." Before leaving the front page, though, just below the place where you can enter information to "Find a Health Center" in your area, there is a box where you are offered the opportunity to "Find a HEALTH PLAN in the marketplace that includes Planned Parenthood." All you need to do is type in your Zip Code.

Both links on the health plans appear to go to section of the website which will talk up what visitors to Planned Parenthood's website might identify as popular benefits of the law, such as kids staying on parents' health care plans until age 26, coverage for those with pre-existing conditions, and subsidies for health insurance.

Some explanation of the new bureaucracy with "exchanges," "navigators," different categories of plans, etc. is given, but little to nothing about problems with the ObamaCare website, or the possible cancellation of current policies. There is a cost calculator on at least one of Planned Parenthood's pages on the health plans connected to a group called "Get Covered America" which is part of "Enroll America," but it is unclear how the numbers are generated or how reliable they may be.

Over and over, of course, there are links to "find a Planned Parenthood health center near you" or to find plans that include Planned Parenthood.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. As NRL News Today reported on September 5, 2013, three Planned Parenthood affiliates have qualified to serve as "Navigators" under the new health plan, receiving federal funding to the tune of over $655,000 (www.nationalrighttolifenews.org/news/2013/09/obamacare-takes-planned-parenthood-to-a-whole-new-level/#.UoOflfnrzf4).

Navigators are employees paid to help people pick a health plan and complete their applications. In the process, they will help consumers figure out if they qualify for subsidies to cover their insurance premium costs or for other government assistance such as Medicaid.

Though Navigators are supposed to "[p]rovide information and services in a fair, accurate, and impartial manner," that they work through Planned Parenthood will be hard for applicants to miss and it seems difficult to imagine that those Navigators won't share about all the "wonderful" services that Planned Parenthood offers.

States that operate their own exchanges may fund "in-person assisters" that perform many of the functions done by Navigators. Minnesota is one such state and gave the regional Planned Parenthood affiliate a grant to help enroll residents in the exchange.

Planned Parenthood affiliates in Arkansas, Tennessee, North Carolina, Illinois, Florida, Idaho, Nebraska, Missouri, Pennsylvania, and Ohio have also been designated as "Certified Application Counselor" (CAC) organizations, meaning that, though they will not be paid by the exchanges, as the Navigators or in-person assisters may be, these affiliates can certify paid staff or volunteers as official counselors to help people through the process according to what the CACs see as the "best interest" of the applicant.

Even if one somehow believed, against all the evidence, that these new health insurance enrollment plans really did serve the "best interests" of the uninsured (and the previously insured now joining their ranks), and even put aside their radical abortion agenda, it would still be difficult to see Planned Parenthood's motives as pure here.

Let Paul Knepprath, vice president for policy and public affairs for Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California make some of Planned Parenthood's less well advertised motivations plain for you.

Speaking before a California Building Standards Commission meeting considering higher building standards for health care clinics (i.e., requirements stipulating that only union plumbers can do the work) on November 5, 2013, Knepprath said the following:

The Affordable Care Act is being implemented as we speak, on January 1, people getting coverage.

There's an expectation of expansion of facilities statewide to take in the new people who have insurance, but also those who will be in expanded Medi-cal program here in California.

Thus, there will be a redevelopment and building of new clinic facilities across the state.

At what pace I don't know but the issue of an exemption for some of the building standards is a very important one to Planned Parenthood.

The cost associated with meeting the higher standards are significant in some cases and they are important especially for organizations like ours that are serving the very poorest of Californians and trying to get them the health care that they need.

What Knepprath has done here is to explicitly connect the roll out of ObamaCare to the "redevelopment and building of new clinic facilities" to address the influx of new patients brought in by the expansion of insurance coverage.

The more people that Planned Parenthood signs up for ObamaCare, the more patients they expect to have coming to their clinics. And, in California alone, they anticipate such significant numbers that they are already thinking in terms of the "redevelopment and building of new clinic facilities across the state."

California, as regular readers of NRL News Today know, recently passed legislation to allow nurse practitioners (and other non-physicians) to perform abortions, thereby significantly expanding the pool of potential abortionists in that state.

Now, with a steady stream of new patients and new money flowing in from ObamaCare, one expects that Planned Parenthood is anticipating opening and staffing countless clinics, not only in California, but throughout the U.S.

And given that abortion has long been one of their biggest money-makers and a "service" that Planned Parenthood has been adding to so many of its "health centers" across the country, you can bet that a lot of those new centers will be abortion clinics, funded by dollars generated by the "Affordable Care Act."

Should you expect any different when you tag the largest abortion chain as a legitimate promoter and provider of "health care?"

Contact: Randall K. O'Bannon, Ph.D. NRL-ETF Director of Education & Research

November 12, 2013

Take Action Now! Demand that the U.S. Senate vote on protecting pain-capable unborn children!

WASHINGTON (November 12, 2013) — At a press conference on November 7, I joined U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) in announcing introduction of the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act (S. 1670) in the U.S. Senate.

This bill would protect unborn children from abortion, nationwide, beginning at 20 weeks fetal age, based on scientific evidence that by this stage of development (if not earlier), the baby will experience excruciating pain when subjected to typical late abortion procedures. This is the most important single pro-life bill to be proposed in Congress since the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act was enacted ten years ago.

This new bill (S. 1670) is based directly on the model legislation crafted by National Right to Life, which has already been enacted in 10 states. With strong backing from National Right to Life, a virtually identical bill (H.R. 1797) has already passed the U.S. House of Representatives. Now, it is time to demand that the U.S. Senate vote on this landmark legislation. But that won't happen without your help.

Thirty-six (36) senators have already joined Senator Graham as co-sponsors of the new legislation. Please act today! Click here to go to the National Right to Life Legislative Action Center. There you will find tools that make it easy for you to send e-mail messages to your two U.S. senators in just a couple of minutes. You will be shown a suggested message, which you can modify or replace as you see fit.

If your senators have already cosponsored S. 1670, thank them. If they have not done so, urge them to sign on as cosponsors immediately. In either case, please express your strong support for S. 1670 — and ask them to urge Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid (D-Nv.) to allow an early Senate vote on S. 1670.

To view an up-to-date list of all of the co-sponsors of S. 1670, arranged by state, click here.

To see a video of National Right to Life Senior Legislative Counsel Susan T. Muskett go toe-to-toe with two critics of the bill on MSNBC's "Hardball With Chris Matthews" (November 8), click here.

The forces that are opposed to legal protections for unborn children have financial resources that are far greater than ours. Already, the radical pro-abortion group "NARAL Pro-Choice America" is running a TV ad against our bill! If you can possibly help us in our campaign to bring this issue before the American people and force the Senate to vote on it, please use the "Contribute now." button below — and I thank you.

Fighting with you to protect innocent human lives,

carol-tobias-sigpicCarol Tobias
NRLC President

U.S. Supreme Court declines to review decision striking down Oklahoma Ultrasound Law

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Without comment, the United States Supreme Court this morning declined to review a decision by the Oklahoma Supreme Court that declared the state's 2010 ultrasound law unconstitutional.

HB 2780 requires that the abortionist position the ultrasound screen at an angle so that the mother can view the images, if she chooses, and that as part of the informed-consent process the abortionist "provide[s] a medical description of the ultrasound images, which shall include the dimensions of the embryo or fetus, the presence of cardiac activity, if present and viewable, and the presence of external members and internal organs, if present and viewable."

"While it is true the U. S. Supreme Court most often doesn't grant a petition, we are disappointed that they failed to do so in this case," said Mary Spaulding Balch, J.D., NRLC director of state legislation. "We strongly believe the State's Supreme Court misconstrued the 'Casey' decision in striking down the Ultrasound law. Casey clearly upheld the right of the states to provide for informed consent before an abortion–and Oklahoma's Ultrasound law did just that."

The law, passed by the Oklahoma legislature in April 2010, was challenged by the New York-based Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR) on behalf of Nova Health Systems, operator of Reproductive Services of Tulsa, and Dr. Larry Burns, who provides abortions in Norman, Oklahoma. A temporary restraining order was issued against HB 2780 by a district court judge in May 2010 and the same judge permanently enjoined the law in March 2012.

In December 2012, the Oklahoma Supreme Court upheld the lower court's ruling. This past March the Oklahoma Attorney General filed a petition asking the United States Supreme Court to review that decision—Pruitt v. Nova Health Systems–which the justices chose not to do this morning.

"The medical necessity of pre-abortion ultrasounds was not at issue in this case since both of the abortion-provider plaintiffs acknowledged that they require ultrasounds prior to performing abortions," Tony Lauinger, State Chairman, Oklahomans for Life, told NRL News Today. "The only question was whether Oklahoma could require that the results of these ultrasounds be shown and explained to women. The Court said no, and the losers are the mothers of Oklahoma who will be deprived of the ability to give truly informed consent before undertaking this irrevocable act, and their babies who will be killed."

Lauinger added, "In the long run, the ongoing debate over ultrasounds will benefit the pro-life cause in the same way that the protracted fight over partial-birth abortion did: more and more people will come to understand the humanity of the unborn child. That's why the abortion industry opposes sharing the ultrasound information with mothers: they know the power that truth conveys."

Contact: Dave Andrusko, National Right to Life

Protecting the unborn from pain

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Editor's note. This op-ed appeared in Thursday's Washington Times.

Carol Tobias, President of National Right to Life, speaking at Thursday's press conference where pro-life Senator Lindsey Graham (left) introduced in the Senate the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, the law National Right to Life has helped pass in 10 states.  Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images.

In June, the U.S. House of Representatives voted 228-196 in favor of the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act. On Thursday, Sen. Lindsey Graham, South Carolina Republican, announced that he would introduce the bill in the U.S. Senate. Appearing on "Fox News Sunday" last weekend, Mr. Graham noted that protecting pain-capable unborn children from the horror of abortion "is a debate worthy of a great democracy."

There is substantial medical evidence that unborn children are capable of experiencing pain by at least 20 weeks post-fertilization. Abortions performed at this stage of pregnancy use a variety of techniques, including a method in which the unborn child's arms and legs are twisted off by brute manual force, using a long stainless steel clamping tool.

While most of us can hardly imagine undergoing a dental procedure without the benefit of anesthesia, the law of the land under Roe v. Wade condones this violent dismemberment of unborn children without any regard for their rights or humanity. Common decency demands that this be changed and that these unborn babies be protected.

Based on a 2008 study from the Guttmacher Institute (which was originally founded as a special research affiliate of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, currently the nation's largest abortion provider), we estimate there are at least 140 abortionists in the United States who perform abortions on unborn children who are at least 20 weeks of fetal age.

When the Supreme Court handed down Roe v. Wade in 1973, our understanding of pain and the development of the unborn child was so primitive that even a newborn undergoing surgery did not receive anesthesia — only a paralytic to keep them still.

Medical advancements have changed the way we view unborn children. Today, unborn children undergo surgery in utero. Ultrasound technology has allowed a baby's first pictures to adorn the refrigerators of parents and grandparents long before they meet their newest family member face-to-face. Yet under current law, the same arms and legs seen in ultrasound images can be brutally torn apart during an abortion.

Just how many late abortions are performed in the United States on pain-capable unborn children? While we don't have a good handle on just how many late abortions are really occurring, there is growing evidence that they are far more common than most people want to think.

The case of Pennsylvania abortionist Kermit Gosnell and hidden-camera videos issued by the organization Live Action provide further evidence that a great deal of the late-abortion iceberg is below the water. Some of the jurisdictions with the most liberal abortion policies have no reporting requirements — for example, California, Maryland and the District of Columbia — or do not collect data on the stage of pregnancy (Florida, for example).

Other jurisdictions have reporting requirements, but don't enforce them. The grand jury report on Gosnell said that between 2000 and 2010, he reported only one second-trimester abortion to the state. Yet it appears that Gosnell probably performed thousands of second-trimester and third-trimester abortions during that decade. Multiple other practitioners who perform large volumes of late abortions have also failed to report them or have not been required to report them.

Enough is enough. It's time to revisit Roe v. Wade's policy of allowing unrestricted abortion.

Ten states have already enacted laws protecting pain-capable unborn children based on National Right to Life's model bill. Just last week, language protecting pain-capable unborn children went into effect in Texas. The pain-capable unborn child language was written into a larger omnibus pro-life bill that brought on a pro-abortion media frenzy during Texas state Sen. Wendy Davis' filibuster in June. Late last Friday, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals cleared the way for the challenged provisions of the Texas law to take effect. The language protecting pain-capable unborn children went unchallenged by pro-abortion activists.

A nationwide poll conducted in March 2013 by The Polling Company found that an overwhelming majority of Americans — 64 percent — would support a law such as the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act; only 30 percent opposed such legislation. Female voters split 63 percent to 31 percent in support of such a law, and among independents, it enjoyed 63 percent support as well.

Speaking on "Fox News Sunday," Mr. Graham said, "The government has a legitimate interest to protect the child after the 20-week period of development because they can feel pain. That is what a rational, humane society should do — protect the child that can feel pain from an abortion."

One-fifth of the states, nearly two-thirds of Americans and the U.S. House of Representatives agree. Now it's time for the U.S. Senate to do its job and act to protect these vulnerable members of our human family.

Contact: Carol Tobias, President, National Right to Life

November 8, 2013

Adoption: the option everyone can live with

Editor's note. Melissa is the survivor of a "failed" saline abortion in 1977. She speaks all over the world including at the last three National Right to Life Conventions.

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Melissa Ohden (right) and Lisa Andrusko, NRLC 
Yearbook Editor, at the 2013 National Right to Life 
Convention

November is Adoption Awareness Month. Adoption is the option that everyone can live with–the mother, the father, the extended families, and, literally, the child.

Over fifty-five million lives ended through abortion in our nation have left countless women, men, and their families wounded. Adoption, by contrast, brings a legacy of life and love into this world. Both create a ripple effect for generations to come, one for ill, one for good.

Yet we live in a world today that often talks about adoption in disparaging

terms: Adoption is a burden on women. No right person would ever "give up" their child.

I've had women state that because they could never 'give up' their baby, they would abort them, instead.

I've even been told that it's adoptees like me, who search for our biological

families that make adoption an unappealing option in the face of an unplanned pregnancy. I am certainly not buying that or any of the other

misconceptions about adoption in our world.

What I am going to do, though, is continue to fight for abortion to be abolished and adoption to be looked at as the positive choice that it is. I will do my best to encourage people to have conversations that encourage others to do likewise.

Take advantage of Adoption Awareness Month this November, and have the conversation, in person with people or via social media and the Internet.

Together we can change the lens through which adoption is looked at and talked about in our world.

Contact: Melissa Ohden, National Right to Life

Pro-lifers in Iowa applaud Board of Medicine for banning webcam abortions

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An Iowa judge has called for a full trial before deciding whether to end webcam abortions in the state, which is where the procedure originated. 

The Iowa Board of Medicine made the decision to ban webcam or telemed abortions effective this week prompting Planned Parenthood to file a lawsuit.

Jenifer Bowen, who heads Iowa Right to Life, says the Judge Karen Romando placed a temporary injunction on the Board of Medicine's decision, which was made in August.

Romano is also likely to preside at the trial.

After the decision, Bowen checked social media and chatted with ardent pro-aborts who were lauding the decision and pushed back against Bowen's warnings.

Bowen
"You know, when I mentioned that there were at least 14 women who have died from complications of chemical abortions, I was accused of using those women as props," Bowen tells OneNewsNow.

Bowen also noted on social media that more than 2,200 women have been injured or have severely hemorrhaged, and again she was  accused of using women as "props."

The Iowa Right to Life spokesman suggests that shows a lack of concern, since there are grieving families because of the deaths and serious injuries, and babies that were killed because of chemical abortions.

Bowen says abortion chemicals are dangerous, and she is looking forward to the trial date. 

Contact: Charlie Butts, OneNewsNow.com

Texas pro-life law goes before Supreme Court justice

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Texas Planned Parenthood has gone to the U.S. Supreme Court, according to one expert, in a desperate move to avoid complying with a new state law. 

The new law, which requires abortionists to have admitting privileges in a local hospital and to follow federal guidelines in using RU486, has gone into effect after the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals refused to halt the law.

The American Civil Liberties Union has filed an emergency appeal with the U.S. Supreme Court, though the current law is currently in effect and enforceable.

Saenz, Jonathan (Texas Values)Jonathan Saenz of Texas Values says Planned Parenthood clinics are closing because they "refuse to follow state laws" that were approved by a majority of the Texas legislature.

"So Planned Parenthood is choosing themselves to close their clinics because they don't want to follow the law," he adds.

The Texas Planned Parenthood appeal is being decided by Justice Antonin Scalia, who handles emergency appeals from Texas. He is also pro-life.

"Justice Scalia has asked the state to respond by next week so we know there's not going to be a decision before then," says Saenz, "but I seriously doubt that we're going to see anything happen."

He says it's "quite extraordinary" for the U.S. Supreme Court to take a decision like this.

"And if Scalia is the one that's driving this issue," he adds, "that makes it even more unlikely to do anything to help Planned Parenthood."

The state faces a deadline of next Tuesday to respond. 

Contact: Charlie Butts , OneNewsNow.com

Science benefits from ethical standards

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Stable human embryonic stem cell lines, or hESCs, were first reported and described for scientific research in 1998. To some, these cells promised an ideal source of testing material for new drugs and therapies because they could be grown in the lab indefinitely without losing their characteristics and turn into any cell in the body. 

However, the ethical roadblocks for using hESCs -- destroying human embryos is required to isolate the cells -- cannot be overlooked.

Though embryonic stem cells have vocal supporters in the scientific community, most researchers take the ethical problem seriously, and the majority of medical research has advanced without their use. Adult stem cells -- regenerative cells taken from consenting adults -- are used in the vast majority of clinical trials, with only 2 of the 1,750 ongoing trials in December 2012 using embryonic cells.

Despite the success in using adult stem cells, there are limits to their functionality. For example, they do not incorporate themselves into any repaired tissue or create new tissue on their own. Adult stem cells mainly affect an injury or defect by releasing helpful proteins and controlling inflammatory responses but ultimately die or are removed by the immune system within a few weeks.

The journal "Human Molecular Genetics" recently published a review of the advances made using a new type of stem cell called induced pluripotent stem cells, or iPSCs. The author of the paper believes that over the last seven years this new type of cell has transformed not just regenerative medicine but biology as a whole. 

Discovered in 2006, iPSCs are just as versatile as embryonic cells, and they are able to create any cell type in the body. This new class of stem cells was created by taking skin cells from an adult and treating them with molecules called transcription factors that alter which genes are active within a cell. 

Researchers were able to use these transcription factors to induce the adult cells into an embryonic state, meaning they behave similarly to cells derived from embryos. Not only has this discovery replaced the perceived need for embryonic stem cells, their origin also has opened up several new opportunities for research and medical practice.

Induced pluripotent stem cells taken from patients with genetic diseases can reproduce important features of that disease in the lab setting. This allows researchers to develop disease modeling techniques that can observe disease progression and effectiveness of new drugs, not just in approximate models, but with real human genetic disorders. 

Neural cell types are easily created from iPSCs, and a functional model of Huntington's disease is already in use. Therapy with iPSCs also opens up the possibility of using a patient's own cells as part of a treatment that replaces tissue destroyed by disease and injury, reducing the chance of the immune system killing therapeutic cells derived from another source.

New possibilities for reducing age-related disorders also are on the horizon due to the research involving iPSCs. Skin cells from a 100-year-old person have been induced back to a stem cell-like state and behave like cells acquired from young individuals. 

Evidently, we can rejuvenate our cells and renew stem cell activity no matter our age. Macular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa are two age-related disorders that, at least in the lab, can be repaired with iPSC therapies.

Induced pluripotent stem cells have not solved all of the challenges found with embryonic stem cells. There are still the shared problems with tumor formation in some applications and immature development of many cell types. However, these are challenges to current scientific protocols, not ethical challenges. 

Predictions of when new therapies will be available are difficult to make, but the possibilities already include disease modeling, simple organ generation and cellular rejuvenation.

These developments should be encouraging to those who have stood against the destruction of human embryos and the use of human embryonic stem cells even when no alternative had yet been found. 

The discovery of induced pluripotent stem cells shows that science does benefit from being held to ethical standards. 

The ethical roadblocks to using embryonic stem cells guided scientific research into a new direction, meeting the functionality of embryonic stem cells with an ethical alternative and, at the same time, opened up new areas of application.

Contact: Joshua Bush, Baptist Press

Joshua Bush, son of the late seminary professor L. Russ Bush, has a Ph.D. in chemical engineering. He is a deacon at First Baptist Church Park Street in Charlottesville, Va.

“Americans are becoming aware that abortions are frequently performed late in pregnancy, on babies who are capable of being born alive, and on babies who will experience great pain while being killed”

Editor's note. The following statement is from Carol Tobias, president of the National Right to Life Committee, delivered at a press conference this morning where Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) announced he would introduce the landmark legislation that would provide nationwide protection for unborn children who are capable of feeling pain, beginning at 20 weeks fetal age (equivalent to "22 weeks of pregnancy," the beginning of the sixth month).

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NRLC President Carol Tobias 
[photo credit: Elizabeth Spillman]

We thank Senator Graham for his leadership in introducing the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act and eagerly lend our support to this landmark legislation.

A nationwide poll conducted in March by The Polling Company found that an overwhelming majority of Americans, 64%, would support a law such as the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act; only 30% opposed such legislation. Women voters split 63%-31% in support of such a law, and among independents it enjoyed 63% support. This legislation reflects the views of the overwhelming majority of both men and women.

When the Supreme Court handed down Roe v. Wade in 1973, our understanding of pain, and the development of the unborn child, was so primitive that even a newborn undergoing surgery did not receive anesthesia – only a paralytic to keep them still. Today, pain-capable unborn children are treated as patients, being operated on in-utero.

Despite substantial medical evidence that unborn children are capable of experiencing pain by at least 20 weeks post-fertilization, late abortions are still a regular occurrence in the United States. Abortions performed at this stage of pregnancy use a variety of techniques, including a method in which the unborn child's arms and legs are twisted off by brute manual force, using a long stainless steel clamping tool.

Through the Gosnell case, and subsequent revelations about other abortionists in Texas, Maryland and beyond, Americans are becoming aware that abortions are frequently performed late in pregnancy, on babies who are capable of being born alive, and on babies who will experience great pain while being killed.

Not unexpectedly, pro-abortion organizations are raising the battle flag. EMILY's List, which supports only the most radical of pro-abortion Democratic women candidates, sent out an email this week saying, "… Republican Senator Lindsay (sic) Graham and his anti-woman GOP buddies are gearing up to introduce a bill that would prevent abortions after just 20 weeks." "Just 20 weeks" ?? Do any of these people know how big and how developed a "just 20 weeks" baby is? Marjorie and I, and the other women here, are here today to lend our support to Senator Graham's efforts which are certainly not anti-woman. We are real women, protecting big, very well-developed babies– half of whom are women.

In a country divided by politics, it's unusual that almost two-thirds of the American public agree on something, like they do this legislation. Thank you, Senator Graham, for your leadership in introducing this legislation. We call on Majority Leader Harry Reid to bring the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act to the floor for a vote.

Source: National Right to Life

NATIONAL RIGHT TO LIFE TO HARRY REID: “Let the Senate vote on bill to protect unborn babies who feel pain”

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National Right to Life leaders with pro-life Senator Lindsey Graham 
(second from right) at a press conferencing where Sen. Graham (R-S.C.)
announced he would introduce the landmark legislation that would provide nationwide protection for unborn children who are capable of feeling pain,
beginning at 20 weeks fetal age (equivalent to "22 weeks of pregnancy," 
the beginning of the sixth month). Left to right: David N. O'Steen, Ph.D., 
NRLC Executive Director; Darla St. Martin, NRLC Co-Executive Director, 
Sen. Graham, and Carol Tobias, NRLC President.

The National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the federation of state right-to-life organizations, is calling on Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) to bring the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act to the Senate floor for a vote. At a press conference this morning, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) announced he would introduce the landmark legislation that would provide nationwide protection for unborn children who are capable of feeling pain, beginning at 20 weeks fetal age (equivalent to "22 weeks of pregnancy," the beginning of the sixth month).

"It is time for the Senate to take action on the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, and we urge Senator Reid to heed the will of the people and allow the bill to come before the Senate for a vote," said Carol Tobias, president of National Right to Life. "One-fifth of the states, nearly two-thirds of Americans, including two-thirds of American women, and the U.S. House of Representatives agree. Now it's time for the U.S. Senate to do its job and act to protect these most vulnerable members of our human family."

The Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act is based on a National Right to Life model bill that has already been enacted in ten states. The U.S. House of Representatives approved the federal bill June 18, 2013, 228-196.

In a nationwide poll of 1,003 registered voters in March, The Polling Company found that 64% would support a law such as the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act prohibiting abortion after 20 weeks – when an unborn baby can feel pain – unless the life of the mother is in danger. Only 30% opposed such legislation. Women voters split 63%-31% in support of such a law, and 63% of independent voters supported it.

The Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act would allow abortion after 20 weeks post-fertilization if the mother's life is endangered, or in cases of rape and incest reported prior to the abortion to appropriate authorities.

The bill contains congressional findings of fact regarding the medical evidence that unborn children experience pain at least by 20 weeks "post-fertilization age," or the start of the sixth month. Note: 20 weeks post-fertilization age ("fetal age") is equivalent to "22 weeks of pregnancy" in the widely employed "LMP" dating system.

Some of the extensive evidence that unborn children have the capacity to experience pain, at least by 20 weeks fetal age, is available on the National Right to Life website at www.nrlc.org/abortion/fetalpain and also here: www.doctorsonfetalpain.com/

Late abortions are not "rare." As National Right to Life observed in a letter to senators last week, "Because of coverage surrounding the trial of Kermit Gosnell and subsequent revelations about other abortionists, many Americans are becoming aware for the first time that abortions are frequently performed late in pregnancy, on babies who are capable of being born alive, and on babies who will experience great pain while being killed."

NRLC estimates that at least 140 abortion providers offer abortions past the point that this legislation would permit. These late abortions are performed using a variety of techniques, including a method in which the unborn child's arms and legs are twisted off by brute manual force, using a long stainless steel clamping tool. A medical illustration of this common method ("D&E") is posted here: www.nrlc.org/abortion/pba/DEabortiongraphic.

"Not since Congress voted to ban the brutal partial-birth abortion method has a more important piece of pro-life legislation come before Congress," added Susan T. Muskett, J.D., National Right to Life senior legislative counsel. "Lives hang in the balance. Congress cannot sit idly by to condone these violent acts; it's time to take a stand for the protection of these pain-capable unborn children."

Source: National Right to Life

National pain-capable abortion ban introduced in Senate

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Legislation that would prohibit abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy, at which point science indicates that unborn babies are able to feel pain, has been presented in the U.S. Senate.

"At twenty weeks, mothers are encouraged to speak and sing as the baby can recognize the voice of the mother," said Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who introduced the bill at a Nov. 7 press conference.

"The question for the American people is, 'Should we be silent when it comes to protecting these unborn children entering the sixth month of pregnancy? Or is it incumbent on us to speak up and act on their behalf?' I say we must speak up and act."

The House of Representatives passed a pain-capable abortion ban in June by a vote of 228-196. As of its introduction, the Senate legislation was co-sponsored by 33 members of the Senate, including Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), John McCain (R-Ariz.), and Marco Rubio (R-Fl.).

Similar fetal pain abortion bans have been enacted at the state level in Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, Oklahoma and most recently, Texas.

Graham explained that abortion practices should be reconsidered in light of advances in scientific technology since the Supreme Court decision of Roe v. Wade, which declared abortion to be protected by the constitution.

"Science and technology have advanced tremendously since 1973," he observed.

"We now know that an unborn child at the twentieth week of pregnancy can feel pain," Graham stated, pointing to the fact that anesthesia has been given to unborn patients during surgery.

"Given these facts and my continued strong support for life," he continued, "I believe there is a compelling interest in protecting these unborn children who are among the most vulnerable in our society. I'm confident that over time the American people and their elected representatives will say yes as well."

Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) joined Graham at the press conference, saying that while public opinion on the legality of abortion is divided, "on one point there is a growing consensus: we must all work together to reduce the number of abortions."

"With all of the innovative medical treatments now available, more Americans are realizing that we are talking about children that deserve protection and overwhelmingly believe that we need a law like this," he added.

"The unborn are the most vulnerable members of our society, and I am committed to ongoing efforts to protect innocent life."

Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the pro-life legislation group Susan B. Anthony List, also spoke at the Nov. 7 press conference, calling the bill the organization's "top priority."

"What we propose today is simple and foundational: the child in the womb is a member of the human family," she said. "At six months and even earlier that child suffers excruciating pain from the cruel dismemberment of its body or the piercing of its heart."

"Whether we as a nation should continue to authorize and practice the killing of these innocent members of our families is a great civilizational question," Dannenfelser continued.  "Anything less is unworthy of us as a free and generous people who wish that resounding phrase 'Equal Justice Under Law' to be something more than an echo of some lost dream."

Source: CNA/EWTN News

November 1, 2013

Webcam abortions nearing end in Iowa?

 
Planned Parenthood is challenging Iowa officials in court over webcam abortions.
 
The Iowa Board of Medicine ruled a couple of weeks ago to end webcam abortions – often referred to as "telemed" abortions – in which the abortion patient, in a remote location, converses via webcam with an abortionist elsewhere. Once the brief screening is done, the abortionist punches a button and a drawer opens in front of the woman, dispensing abortion chemicals she then takes at home.
 
Jenifer Bowen of Iowa Right to Life tells OneNewsNow the Iowa Board of Medicine made a sound decision.
 
"They felt that [because of] the lack of oversight, the lack of providing a doctor, the lack of follow-up care that Planned Parenthood of the Heartland provided, that women were and have been at grave risk here in the state," she states.
 
The RU-486 regimen has already proven to be dangerous on a national level. Thousands of complications are on record, according to Bowen.
 
"We know of at least 15 deaths from medication abortions throughout the United States," she explains, "as well as over 2,200 adverse effects of women who have nearly hemorrhaged to death or [suffered] ectopic pregnancies and those sorts of things."
 
Planned Parenthood is asking the judge to overturn the Board's decision and resume telemed abortions. Iowa was the first state to implement such abortions.
 
Contact: Charlie Butts, OneNewsNow.com

Federal Judge overturns one provision of Texas’s pro-life HB 2 but Pain-Capable Unborn Child provision not challenged and went into effect Tuesday

U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel
 
Austin-based U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel overturned a portion of Texas's pro-life HB 2 that required abortionists to have admitting privileges in a hospital within 30 miles. Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott is expected to file an emergency appeal of Yeakel's order to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.
 
However Judge Yeakel offered a mixed conclusion on that portion of HB 2 that addresses chemical abortifacients and how they are administered.
 
Although addressed in media accounts as little more than a side note (at best), the ACLU, the Center for Reproductive Rights, Planned Parenthood of Greater Texas, and several other Texas clinic owners did not challenge that part of HB2 which prohibits killing unborn children who have reached the developmental milestone of being able to feel pain which substantial medical evidence places at 20 weeks, if not earlier. Pro-abortionists are leery about taking on a law that clearly demonstrates that the pain-capable unborn child is a living member of the human family worthy of protection.
 
The Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act is now the law in ten states.
 
Judge Yeakel and the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals have disagreed about abortion-related laws previously. He issued a temporary injunction against a Texas law that disqualified abortion business affiliates from participating in the state's Women's Health Program which first a three-judge panel and then the full circuit overturned.
 
In his decision today Judge Yeakel declared that "the act's admitting-privileges provision is without a rational basis and places a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus." At last week's three-day trial, some abortion clinics argued that they had been unable to find hospitals willing to admit their abortionists and as a result a sizable proportion would be forced to close down.
 
Texas Solicitor General Jonathan F. Mitchell disputed those assertions, "saying the group had no evidence to support its claims and was wrongly trying to shift the burden of proof to the government." Mitchell maintained that the admitting-privilege rule would not pose an "undue burden" on women seeking abortions, which would remain available in Texas.
 
Moreover, "The Supreme Court has recognized that the state's interest in promoting fetal life is present throughout pregnancy," Mitchell said.
 
The measure requires that the abortionist be in the same room as the woman receiving the chemical abortifacients (which is not the case with so-called 'web-cam" abortions) and that abortionists follow the protocol approved by the FDA for the use of the two-drug "RU-486" abortion technique. The two drugs are the RU-486 itself which kills the baby and a prostaglandin which induces contractions to expel the now dead baby.
 
What Judge Yeakel appears to be saying is three-fold. First, that it is not an undue burden for Texas to require that abortionists use the FDA protocol that limits the technique to the first 49 days EXCEPT for those "women for whom surgical abortion is, in the sound medical opinion of their treating physician, a significant health risk during the period of pregnancy falling 50-63 days."
 
Second, abortionists cannot tinker with the FDA protocol with one exception: the respective dosages of RU-486 and the prostaglandin can be altered. Abortionists like to use more of the cheaper prostaglandin than the more expensive RU-486.
 
Third, it is acceptable to require the abortionist "must examine the pregnant woman," which is not done in web-cam abortions where the abortionist communicates via teleconferencing.
 
Contact: Dave Andrusko, National Right to Life

National abortion rallies ignore pain of women, critics say

 
A national campaign to depict abortion as a normal and positive experience has drawn criticism for overlooking the harm that abortion causes to women and their unborn children.
 
"This campaign reinforces the political beliefs about the goodness of abortion without giving women a chance to be honest about how they feel about their abortion or their lost child," said Tina Whittington, executive vice president for Students for Life of America.
 
The problem with "encouraging women to fit into this mold that says 'I am okay with my abortion and I feel no regrets,'" she told CNA on Oct. 30, is that "it takes away their rights to feel regret, loss or sadness."
 
"This is part of the reason why it takes women so long to seek help" for counseling after an abortion, Whittington continued. Rather than dealing with the pain they experience, women feel pressured to "stand behind a message point."
 
Ultimately, she said, the campaign tells women, "We don't care about your complicated emotional or psychological health, all we care about is getting this political agenda moved forward."
 
Whittington responded to a nationwide effort to re-energize the abortion movement in the U.S., led by Advocates for Youth and supported by other groups including NARAL Pro-Choice America, Planned Parenthood Federation of America and the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice.
 
The campaign has involved the coordination of more than 130 events in some 30 states and 100 college campus in order to promote abortion access and oppose regulations on abortion.
 
At the center of the campaign is an effort to "destigmatize abortion and promote access" by promoting stories showing abortion as a normal and positive experience for women. The initiative centers on the findings from a 2011 survey from the Guttmacher Institute stating that 1 in 3 women in the United States would have an abortion by the age of 45.
 
However, pro-life advocates noted that the campaign fails to take into account the stories of women who have had traumatic or negative experiences from their abortions, nor does it mention the children who were adopted after their mothers chose life in difficult and challenging situations.
 
"Many of these 1 in 3 are deeply wounded and struggle daily with the decision they made or were coerced into," said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of Susan B. Anthony List.
 
Overlooking these stories is overlooking the well-being of these women, she said.
 
"This is just another example of how pro-abortion forces put the institution of abortion above the wellbeing of individual women."
 
Dannenfelser told CNA that "post-abortive women who speak out about their experiences have been instrumental in encouraging other mothers to choose life and winning hearts and minds to the pro-life cause."
 
One of the rallies, held Oct. 28 in Washington, D.C., featured comments from Advocates for Youth president Deb Hauser, who explained that "every good story that mobilizes needs a villain."
 
According to rally organizers, one of the purposes of the event was to fight those who would "shame" women who have had abortions. A poem read at the rally criticized individuals who pray near abortion clinics, saying that they express "judgment" and oppose "freedom."
 
Dannenfelser explained that the campaign is pushing for abortion to "be normalized in our society."
 
But ultimately, she stressed, "the pro-life argument that there are two unique people – a mother and a child – at the center of every abortion decision will always win out."
 
Contact: Adelaide Mena, CNA/EWTN News

Dillard questioned about vote on pro-abortion Human Rights Commissioner

 
GOP gubernatorial candidate State Senator Kirk Dillard says there was confusion about the qualifications for Human Rights Commission appointees, and that while he voted in committee to approve an pro-abortion activist for the spot, he opposed the nomination on the Senate floor.
 
"Senator Dillard voted 'no' on the floor to Terry Cosgrove ... the actual or 'real' recorded vote," Dillard campaign spokesman Wes Bleed told Illinois Review. "There was some confusion over qualifications in committee. Sen. Dillard definitely opposes Mr. Cosgrove's appointment to the Human Rights Committee."
 
During the October 15th Executive Appointments hearing, Senator Dillard was the only Republican that joined the Democrats in approving abortion activist Terry Cosgrove for re-assignment to the Human Rights Commission. Cosgrove, who actively raises campaign funds for abortion supporters through Personal PAC, will be paid $46,960 annually for serving on the commission from March 2013 until November 2017.
 
Two other Republican senators - Tim Bivins and Matthew Murphy voted "no" in committee, and State Senator Sam McCann was not in the room during the vote. All eight Democrats voted "yes."
 
 
When AM157 came before the Senate floor last week, the vote was divided along party lines - 36 to 20:
 
 
Source: Illinois Review