May 11, 2010

NEWS SHORTS FOR TUESDAY

NEWS SHORTS FOR TUESDAY

Watch: The 'Stop Planned Parenthood Project'; 'The Pill' Kills

Birth control pill turns 50

This year, as the birth control pill turns 50, debate still abounds as to whether or not the drug is beneficial. While there's little doubt the pill has changed American culture, some have suggested that change may not be for the better. "I wonder whether birth control is just one step in a staircase of choices that leaves us with the illusion that humans are products to be consumed or discarded rather than gifts given, created, by God," Amy Julia Becker wrote in a recent Christianity Today blog.

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Anti-Abstinence Groups Launch Website
 
Advocates for Youth and the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States

Advocates for Youth and the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS) have launched a website in an effort to promote open, casual sex in public schools.

The site boasts plans to "institutionalize" comprehensive sex education in public schools and even gives visitors a tool kit to get the dangerous anything-goes message into their own schools.

On a list of current "barriers" to sex-ed implementation, abstinence-only education is listed in many of the bullet points.
Click here for the entire article.


Hillside Covered in Crosses for Abortion Awareness
 
White crosses on a hillside

Right to Life volunteers put up a display in Raleigh County to raise awareness about abortion.

A sobering display was presented in Raleigh County on Monday, May 10. Three thousand, seven hundred white crosses went up on a hill near Crossroads Mall. Each cross represents a pregnancy that was aborted in the United States. Volunteers from the Raleigh County Right to Life organization spent the day hammering them into the ground. Leaders with the group said that while it may be easy to ignore numbers on a paper, this kind of display is harder to brush aside. 
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El Salvador bishops warn: CEDAW threatens the unborn

Archbishop José Luis Escobar Alas

The bishops of El Salvador are urging the nation's president and legislators not to ratify the pro-abortion Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW). The treaty "not only threaten[s] the newly conceived fetus, but it could also bring serious consequences to the dignity of women," said Archbishop José Luis Escobar Alas of San Salvador at a May 9 press conference.
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C-section Rates Tick Upward As Doctors Fear Being Sued

C-section Rates Tick Upward As Doctors Fear Being Sued

In the bucolic town of Patterson, just south of the Dutchess County line, lives a little boy of 6 who has trouble speaking and swallowing, and who will need years of instruction in the basic chores of living. This little boy, loved by his parents, was healthy and whole until the moment of his birth, when he spent several devastating minutes lodged in a frantic and asphyxiating tug between the womb and the world. In those few minutes, his brain and his life were forever changed. And so, five months ago, in a courtroom in Westchester County, a jury put a price-tag on that damage.
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Kagan nomination worries life and family advocates

President Obama meets with Solicitor General Elena Kagan. Credit: White House, Pete Souza.

The Family Research Council (FRC) reacted to Elena Kagan's nomination to the Supreme Court Monday, stating that although President Obama praised her "superb" qualifications, her "known record speaks otherwise." Other pro-life and pro-family organizations worried that she an activist approach to constitutional law.

Tony Perkins, president of FRC, said in a statement Monday that Kagan "has the least amount of experience of any nominee in the last three decades."

"Her judicial experience is zero," he added, "as is her real-world experience, having spent most of her career in academia or working as a Democratic Party insider.

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May 10, 2010

Supreme Court nominee: Solicitor General, Elena Kagan

Supreme Court nominee: Solicitor General, Elena Kagan

Supreme Court nominee: Solicitor General, Elena Kagan

President Barack Obama has nominated Solicitor General Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court, saying she will demonstrate independence, integrity, and passion for the law. If confirmed by the Senate, Kagan will become the third woman on the high court. Obama introduced her Monday in the White House's East Room. He called her "my friend" and one of the nation's foremost legal minds.

But lets get some information on the Solicitor General, Elena Kagan...

POSITION: Supreme Court nominee

NOMINEE: Elena Kagan

Born: April 28, 1960

Occupation: Dean of Harvard Law School and Charles Hamilton Houston Professor of Law at Harvard University.

Education: BA summa cum laude, Princeton University, 1981; MPhil, Worchester College, Oxford, 1983; JD magna cum laude, Harvard Law School, 1986

Clinton White House: 1995-1996 associate counsel to the President; 1997-1999 deputy assistant to the President for Domestic Policy; 1997-1999 deputy director Domestic Policy Council.

From 1986 to 1987 Ms. Dean Kagan served as a judicial clerk for Judge Abner Mikva on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.  From 1987-1988 she also served as a judicial clerk for Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.  Dean Kagan briefly served as a staff member for Michael Dukakis's presidential campaign.  During the summer of 1993 she served as Special Counsel to the Senate Judiciary Committee to work on the confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Hate Crimes

Believes courts should support hate crime laws and that when reviewing regulations of speech, courts could "evaluate motive directly, they could remove the lion's share of the First Amendment's doctrinal clutter." Elena Kagan, Private Speech, Public Purpose: The Role of Government Motive in First Amendment Doctrine, 63 U. Chi. L. Rev. 413, 516 (1996).

"In her 1993 University of Chicago Law Review piece, she wrote that proposed regulations on hate speech and pornography failed to adhere to the fundamental First Amendment principle of viewpoint neutrality — that the government cannot favor certain private speakers or viewpoints over others. Her 1996 article on government motive in First Amendment cases has been cited more than 115 times — an enviably high number for a secondary source. In that article she declares that "the application of First Amendment law is best understood and most readily explained as a kind of motive-hunting." David Hudson, Jr., "Solicitor-general nominee: impressive First Amendment resume," FirstAmendmentcenter.org.

On Opposing Religious Institutions Involving Themselves In Pregnancy

"As a young law clerk, Kagan, 49, once penned a memo saying it would be difficult for a religious organization to take government funding to counsel teenagers about pregnancy 'without injecting some kind of religious teaching.' When a Senator asked her about the memo, Kagan did not hesitate to distance herself from its views, saying she had fresh eyes two decades later. 'I looked at it, and I thought, That is the dumbest thing I've ever heard,' she said." Michael Sherer, "Solicitor General Elena Kagan," Time, April 13, 2010.

On Questioning of Presidential Nominees

"Kagan herself has called for the Senate to use confirmation hearings "to engage nominees in meaningful discussion of legal issues."  In her 1995 review (62 U. Chi. L. Rev. 919) of Stephen L. Carter's The Confirmation Mess,  Kagan argues that the "critical inquiry" that the Senate should conduct on a Supreme Court nominee "concerns the votes she would cast, the perspective she would add (or augment), and the direction in which she would move the institution." Kagan draws as "the fundamental lesson of the Bork hearings … the essential rightness—the legitimacy and the desirability—of exploring a Supreme Court nominee's set of constitutional views and commitments."

Although Carter's book and Kagan's review focus heavily on Supreme Court nominees, they also address DOJ nominations (especially Clinton's 1993 nomination, subsequently withdrawn, of Lani Guinier to be AAG for Civil Rights), and Kagan's view of the Senate's role applies fully to those (and other executive-branch) nominations. That, of course, is hardly surprising, as the case for careful scrutiny of the legal views of DOJ nominees, even if combined with greater deference to the president, seems widely accepted." Ed Whelan, "Obama's SG Pick Elena Kagan," NRO's The Corner, January 7, 2009.

On Lack of Experience

"Kagan may well have less experience relevant to the work of being a justice than any justice in the last five decades or more.  In addition to zero judicial experience, she has only a few years of real-world legal experience.  Further, notwithstanding all her years in academia, she has only a scant record of legal scholarship.  Kagan flunks her own 'threshold' test of the minimal qualifications needed for a Supreme Court nominee." Ed Whelan, "Supreme Court Nominee Elena Kagan," NRO's Bench Memos, May 10, 2010.

On Being a Washington and Obama Administration Insider

"There is a striking mismatch between the White House's populist rhetoric about seeking a justice with a "keen understanding of how the law affects the daily lives of the American people" and the reality of the Kagan pick.  Kagan is the consummate Obama insider, and her meteoric rise over the last 15 years—from obscure academic and Clinton White House staffer to Harvard law school dean to Supreme Court nominee—would seem to reflect what writer Christopher Caldwell describes as the "intermarriage of financial and executive branch elites [that] could only have happened in the Clinton years" and that has fostered the dominant financial-political oligarchy in America.  In this regard, Kagan's paid role as a Goldman Sachs adviser is the perfect marker of her status in the oligarchy—and of her unfathomable remoteness from ordinary Americans." Ed Whelan, "Supreme Court Nominee Elena Kagan," NRO's Bench Memos, May 10, 2010.

Opposition by Liberals

"Liberal legal scholars and experts stepped up their attacks Friday on Elena Kagan as a potential Supreme Court nominee, hoping to dissuade President Obama from selecting her in the last few days before an expected announcement early next week.  A group of four law professors Friday morning published a piece at Salon.com criticizing Kagan, Obama's solicitor general, for hiring too few women and minorities when she was dean of Harvard law school. Liberal attorney and blogger Glenn Greenwald — who has taken Kagan to task for her views on executive power and been the chief organizing force behind criticism of Kagan — promoted the column on his Twitter account and kept up a drumbeat against Kagan. . . .'I've devoted everything I can to making the case against Kagan before Obama chooses, precisely because I know that once he makes his selection, the overwhelming majority of progressives and Democrats will cheer for her even if they have no idea what she thinks or believes,' Greenwald said. . . .Prominent liberal legal scholar Erwin Chemerinsky made that very point this week in an interview.  'The reality is that Democrats, including liberals, will accept and push whomever Obama picks,' said Chemerinsky, founding dean of the University of California-Irvine law school. 'Obviously, liberals hope that Obama will pick someone more from the left than the center. It can't be that Republicans pick conservatives and Democrats pick only moderates.'" John Ward, "Liberal activists intensify attacks on Kagan as court pick nears," The Daily Caller, May 7, 2010.

Roe V. Wade and Ties to Abortion

"Elena Kagan has no judicial record from which to determine her position on Roe v. Wade, but she has publicly criticized the 1991 Supreme Court ruling to allow the Department of Health and Human Services to restrict funding from groups that performed or promoted abortion, and has also criticized crisis pregnancy centers," said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of pro-life political action group Susan B. Anthony List.

"Additionally, President Obama has said he prefers a Supreme Court nominee who would take a special interest in 'women's rights'—a barely masked euphemism for abortion rights," Dannenfelser noted. "Through the judicial confirmation process the American people must know where Elena Kagan stands on the abortion issue, and it is the responsibility of the U.S. Senate to find out."

Dr. Charmaine Yoest, president of Americans United for Life similarly criticized the move, saying on Monday that "Elena Kagan has strong ties to abortion-advocacy organizations and expressed admiration for activist judges who have worked to advance social policy rather than to impartially interpret the law."

Title X Funding

Previously, Elena Kagan publicly criticized a 1991 Supreme Court ruling in Rust v. Sullivan that upheld the right of the Department of Health and Human Services that restricted Title X funding from groups that performed or promoted abortion. Additionally, she has expressed her belief that pregnancy centers should be barred from guiding teens in decisions about their pregnancy.

Petition

Students for Life of America and LifeNews.com are cosponsoring a petition opposing the nomination of Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court. I just signed it and encourage other pro-lifers to as well.

Click here for more information.

Compiled from: OneNewsNow, FRCBlog and the
Susan B. Anthony List
Publish Date: May 10,2010
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Free iPad Pregnancy App Reveals Development of Unborn Baby

Free iPad Pregnancy App Reveals Development of Unborn Baby

Free iPad Pregnancy App Reveals Development of Unborn Baby
Pro-lifers have often struggled to counter the assertion that unborn babies are "just a clump of cells" that look nothing like human beings.  Now, they have one more method to help show the truth: an application for the iPad that displays images of unborn babies from week four to week forty.


Click here for the video.

The app allows the baby's gender, size, due date, and weight to be entered to customize the information it displays.   It can display life-size images of the baby as the baby changes throughout pregnancy, with close-ups, information to read, and even audio clips.

The program was developed by the baby products company Pampers, and directs users to the Pampers pregnancy calendar for further information.  It also allows users to post their baby's progress on Facebook.

The app may be downloaded for free here.

Contact:
James Tillman
Source:
LifeSiteNews.com
Publish Date:
May 10, 2009
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Adult Stem Cells Deep in the Heart of Texas

Adult Stem Cells Deep in the Heart of Texas

Adult Stem Cells Deep in the Heart of Texas

The Texas Heart Institute has received a grant of $1.5 million from NIH for studies on using adult stem cells in combination with heart-assist devices in cases of heart failure. The idea is to use assist devices to rest the heart, while using adult stem cells to stimulate repair of damaged tissue.

The group has been one of the leaders in the U.S. in the field of treating heart damage with adult stem cells, including participating in a recently-published trial by ten institutions. Adult stem cells are both successful and ethical in patient treatments, and cells from the patient's own body avoid the risk of transplant rejection.

The Texas group had already found that adult stem cells derived from a patient's own bone marrow can be transplanted into a damaged heart, where they stimulate the development of new heart muscle and blood vessels, repairing heart damage. A new publication by the team has helped illuminate how the adult stem cells work in the heart. In a study published in Circulation Research, they show that a specific type of human adult stem cells, known as CD34+, when injected into the damaged hearts of mice, improves heart functions by stimulating formation of new blood vessels and/or by providing beneficial chemical signals within the heart. They also found that the adult stem cells can survive in the hearts of the mice for up to a year. The study is an important step in understanding how adult stem cells repair damaged hearts, as well as other tissues.

Contact: David Prentice
Source: FRCBlog
Publish Date: May 7, 2010
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New Study "Follows the Money" of Abortion

New Study "Follows the Money" of Abortion

New Study

Legal abortion in the United States is a billion-dollar industry, and one new study says that the tentacles of legal abortion have already reached deep into the commerce and culture of American life, and that motives for profit may be keeping it alive.

Vicki Evans, Respect Life coordinator for the Archdiocese of San Francisco's Office of Public Policy and Social Concerns, is the author of the study, "Commercial Markets Created by Abortion: Profiting From the Fetal Distribution Chain." The study doubled as her thesis for the licentiate in bio-ethics she received from the Regina Apostolorum Pontifical University in Rome, where she graduated Summa Cum Laude.

Evans told Catholic San Francisco, the newspaper for the Archdiocese of San Francisco that she wanted to use her training as a certified public accountant to "follow the money" between the abortion industry and commercial enterprise.

"I wanted to come up with a body of knowledge that nobody else had thought of before," she told Catholic San Francisco. "In following the money and seeing who gets paid for what and how much they get paid, and how unregulated these areas are, I found a lot of facts that a lot of people wouldn't have noticed or wouldn't have thought to look for."

In her 72-page study, Evans wanted to find out how "special interests" or "commercial cause" was now driving the abortion industry and keeping it free from transparency or regulation.

"Putting aside the ideological question for the moment, it appears that abortion-related businesses, silently springing up and maturing over the past forty years, could now be influencing the abortion debate," she wrote.

Evans' findings note that between the fiscal years 2003 and 2008, the abortion industry – 1,787 abortion providers in the United States in 2005 – grew from an 810 million dollar business to 1.038 billion dollar industry.

Over this time period, Planned Parenthood Federation of America's abortion market share dramatically increased from 245,092 abortions ($88.2 million in 2003) to 305,310 abortions ($122.1 million in 2007). By 2008, PPFA had taken 25 percent of the abortion market, more than doubling its market share since 1997 (then 12 percent).

Evans also noted how PPFA is involved with many clinical trials conducted by pharmaceutical companies, and said "thirty percent of its clinical trials included teens, age thirteen to eighteen."

"Attracting teenagers to contraceptive use is a component of the abortion industry's business plan, as is offering abortion as a remedy for failed birth control."

Evans also noted in her thesis that, "When abortion became legal in the United States, no one anticipated that it would give rise to a tremendous market in fetal parts, tissues and cells."

Evans' study revealed that the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and biologics sectors are the main industries engaged in fetal tissue research. The commercial use of fetal tissue is evolving from the mere production of childhood vaccines into the productions of vaccines that treat influenza, HIV, and others.
 
The cosmetics industry also has an "enormous and increasing demand" for "fetal cell technologies." This began first with treating burn victims, said Evans, and has now made its way into the anti-aging market, a $30 billion industry: this includes miracle creams developed using fetal-cell technologies, to face lifts and cosmetic procedures derived from injecting aborted fetal tissue. The only limit to the demand for the "fetal anti-aging market" is "the amount of money available to be spent for products and procedures promising youth, beauty and vitality."

But ultimately the demand for fetal parts and organs for scientific and commercial purposes could not have happened without the legal and cultural protections that surround abortion. Despite the fact that the aborted bodies of "millions of fetuses" cannot technically be bought or sold, a clandestine market for them exists, she said.

"It is important to shine a light on these practices that take place behind closed doors," wrote Evans. "There are powerful forces conspiring to keep this information from the public and the media with the ostensible conviction that they are protecting a woman's right to choose. However, it is becoming obvious that many ideological groups are being used as pawns by powerful financial interests."

Society has to address the problem of the commercialization of abortion, Evans warned, because it had perilous implications for human identity and relations.

"Habitual participation in immoral acts inevitably leads to personal desensitization, self-deception and rationalization about what it means to be human," Evans stated.

"When morality is excluded from a civil society, the weak and vulnerable are easily exploited for the benefit of the strong and powerful. This is the worst brand of injustice. It deserves to be brought to light."

Click here for the complete study.

Contact: Peter J. Smith
Source:
LifeSiteNews.com
Publish Date:
May 7, 2010
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Euthanizing Patients for Organs Advocated in Bioethics

Euthanizing Patients for Organs Advocated in Bioethics

Euthanizing Patients for Organs Advocated in Bioethics

This isn't the first time that coupling assisted suicide/euthanasia has been suggested as a potential concept, but it may be the first time it has been actively advocated.  Oxford bioethicists Julian Savulescu–for whom virtually anything goes–writing with Dominic Wilkinson argue that euthanasia coupled with organ harvesting would be a splendid way to obtain more kidneys, livers, and hearts. From "Should We Allow Organ Donation Euthanasia?" published in Bioethics (citations omitted):

It is permissible to withdraw life support from a patient with extremely poor prognosis, in the knowledge that this will certainly lead to their death, even if it would be possible to keep them alive for some time. It is permissible to remove their organs after they have died. But why should surgeons have to wait until the patient has died as a result of withdrawal of advanced life support or even simple life prolonging medical treatment? An alternative would be to anaesthetize the patient and remove organs, including the heart and lungs. Brain death would follow removal of the heart (call this Organ Donation Euthanasia (ODE)). The process of death would be less likely to be associated with suffering for the patient than death following withdrawal of LST (which is not usually accompanied by full anaesthetic doses of drugs). If there were a careful and appropriate process for selection, no patient would die who would not otherwise have died.  Organs would be more likely to be viable, since they would not have sustained a period of reduced circulation prior to retrieval. More organs would be available (for example the heart and lungs, which are currently rarely available in the setting of DCD). Patients and families could be reassured that their organs would be able to help other individuals as long as there were recipients available, and there were no contraindications to transplantation. This is not the case at present with DCD, since many patients do not die sufficiently quickly following withdrawal of LST for organ retrieval.

That has been argued before, as we have discussed here often. But the bioethicists take it even a step farther, coupling it with assisted suicide, as apparently has been done in Belgium:

If we believe that we should not remove organs from patients who are still alive, even where they have consented to this and would otherwise die anyway, then one alternative would be to euthanize the donor and retrieve organs after cardiac death had been declared. This would already be a theoretical option in countries where euthanasia is permitted. Organ donation after cardiac euthanasia has been described in a patient in Belgium. Organ donors could be given large doses of sedative, and cardioplegic agents (to stop the heart). Again, this would reduce the risk of patients suffering after withdrawal of LST and make organ donation possible for some patients who would otherwise not be able to donate. In an extreme case, they might choose to undergo euthanasia at least partly to ensure that their organs could be donated.

As you may recall from my first piece against assisted suicide, published in my innocent days before immersing myself in these issues, I suggested that eventually assisted suicide and organ donation would be tied together "as a plum to society." I just didn't know it had actually happened–as opposed to having been "merely" advocated.  We now learn it was done in Belgium.  I will get that article and report about it here at SHS (and perhaps elsewhere).

I have a theory: If you are a bioethicist–the more brutal your ideas, the more denigrating of human exceptionalism you become, the more crassly utilitarian direction in which your advocacy flows–the more prestigious the university that will give you a tenured chair and a big salary, and the more likely you are to get the big grants.  Think, Peter Singer and personhood theory/infanticide/Great Ape Project and Princeton and, as here, Jullian Savulescu and Oxford.  Interestingly, both are Australian, so perhaps a pleasing accent is part of the mix. In any event, this article not only supports my theory, but proves another point I often make–if you want to see what is going to go wrong in society tomorrow, just read the professional journal articles published today.

Contact: Wesley J. Smith
Source: Secondhand Smoke
Publish Date: May 8, 2010
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Pennsylvania Seeks to Shut Down 'House of Horrors' Phila. Abortuary

Pennsylvania Seeks to Shut Down 'House of Horrors' Phila. Abortuary

Kermit B. Gosnell's abortion facility
The Pennsylvania Department of Health is seeking to shut down the abortuary run by Philadelphia abortionist Kermit Gosnell, whose practice was abruptly halted in February after investigators stumbled upon the detestable conditions inside the clinic, including blood-stained floors and dozens of fetuses preserved in jars. A local grand jury is also currently investigating the abortionist.

Gosnell's medical license was suspended immediately after the raid, which was sparked by the death of a woman in a botched abortion at his facility in November. The suspension order confirmed that Gosnell's assistant, who had no medical license or training, regularly administered prescription painkillers and performed medical examinations in the abortionist's absence. This assistant, according to the order, administered painkillers to 41-year-old Karnamaya Mongar before she died of fatal arrhythmia last fall.

The state Board of Medicine described Gosnell's clinic, where investigators found "parts of aborted fetuses" that "were displayed in jars," as "deplorable and unsanitary" and "a clear danger to the public." In March, the Pennsylvania Department of Health detailed more than a dozen state laws regarding patient safety and documentation that it found Gosnell's practice to have violated.

Gosnell was required to respond to the Health Department's citation within 30 days, but did not do so, Health Department spokeswoman Stacy Kriedeman told the Philadelphia Inquirer. Gosnell was also silent regarding to the department's motion April 20 to pull the clinic's abortion license, said Kriedeman. She said health officials then asked the administrative judge in charge of the case to find Gosnell guilty by default; again, Gosnell failed to respond.

In addition, Tasha Jamerson, a spokeswoman for District Attorney Seth Williams, confirmed to the Inquirer on Thursday that a local grand jury had begun an investigation into Gosnell's practice.

The 69-year-old abortionist has been named as defendant in 46 civil suits since 1981, according to the Inquirer - ten of which were medical-malpractice cases, and one involving a patient's death. The latter case was settled out of court.

The horrific conditions of Gosnell's clinic had evidently been kept under wraps for years, thanks to his patients' unwillingness to speak out in public about their experience. A Philadelphia abortion referral service known as CHOICE told the Inquirer that the state medical board had declined the group's attempt over a decade ago to file a complaint against Gosnell, because the testimony had to come from the patients themselves.

"We couldn't get women to do it," said Susan Schewel, executive director of the Women's Medical Fund, referring to the need for women to provide medical records and attend a Harrisburg hearing. Many of Gosnell's patients were reportedly poor, uneducated, and lacking in English language fluency, further adding to the difficultly of bringing his practices to light. Schewel said the Women's Medical Fund would discourage women from going to Gosnell.

But when women do speak out, the stories that they tell about what happens inside the clinic are gruesome: Malina Williams, who was only 13 years old at the time of her abortion, described to the Inquirer how she could see the preserved fetuses through a door left ajar moments after her abortion.

"He left the door open," said Williams, now 32. "I could see all the little babies in bottles filled with liquid, and I started crying.

"He said he did research on them. He said, 'Don't cry, don't feel bad. Everybody does this.'" Williams' abortion, notes the Inquirer, was illegal, having been obtained without parental consent. Williams confirmed that Gosnell's clinic "was the spot where you went if you got pregnant and didn't want your mom and dad to know. They didn't even ask for ID."

The girl says she only began to learn more about Gosnell's clinic after she had to return due to an infection. "It was only after that I started hearing rumors about people getting sick in there, that he didn't even clean the instruments he used," she said.

Contact: Kathleen Gilbert
Source: LifeSiteNews.com
Publish Date:
May 7, 2010
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NEWS SHORTS FOR MONDAY

NEWS SHORTS FOR MONDAY
 
Experts Rebuke Pro-Abort Prof. Claim that "a Fetus is Not a Person"

Dr. Mark Mercer

A philosophy professor at Saint Mary's University (SMU) in Halifax is drawing rebuke from experts in bioethics, medicine, and philosophy for a Monday column in which he advocates abortion based on the notion that "a fetus is not a person."

If pro-abortion advocates can show that the unborn child is not a person, argues Dr. Mark Mercer in an op-ed for the Ottawa Citizen, then a woman's reason for aborting him or her "cannot be outweighed by the fetus's right to life, for, not being a person, the fetus has no such right."
Click here for the entire article.


Belgian Doctors Euthanized Disabled Patient and Harvested Her Organs

Belgian Doctors Euthanized Disabled Patient and Harvested Her Organs

I found the article about the Belgian euthanasia coupled with organ harvesting referenced in my critique yesterday of a bioethics journal article  urging that very approach.  The woman in question was not terminally ill, but in a "locked-in" state, that is, fully conscious and completely paralyzed.  She wanted to die–a desire accommodated by her doctors.  Just prior to being killed, she decided to donate her organs. From, "Organ donation after physician-assisted death," (Letter to the Editor) published in the journal Transplantation...
Click here for the entire article.


Romanian Police Investigate Teen Death Following Late-Term Abortion

Romanian Police Investigate Teen Death Following Late-Term Abortion

Police in Romania southeastern Constanta county are investigating the death of a 15-year-old who died at the local county hospital hours after she had had a late-term abortion. Preliminary autopsy results showed the girl, who died of cardio-respiratory arrest, had gone into hemorrhagic shock and had also suffered a uterine rupture. Hospital spokesman Florian Stoian said the girl's medical chart states she came to the hospital Monday around noon with massive blood loss following an incomplete abortion procedure. She underwent surgery that evening, where the doctor found her fetus was dead, and she was placed under intensive care. The teenager died four hours later.
Click here for the entire article.


A TAX On Abortion?

Taxes

Editor's note: Since the State regulates abortion (e.g. ultrasounds, 24-hour waiting period, informed concent, parental notification, etc.) the State can tax the murder of children by abortion. The Abortion Regulators can call it "Herod's Tax" (Matthew 2:16). Thanks to all the baby killing regulations they've supported, the State (Herod) IS in the baby killing business.

Lawmakers anxious to avoid a general tax increase have offered several creative alternatives for raising revenue. Some say the state could sell some of its buildings and land. Others suggest going after tax cheats and Medicaid fraudsters, privatizing services, or raising the court fees for criminals. But Sen. Mary Pilcher Cook may have just offered the most unique idea so far: impose a sales tax on abortion. Pilcher Cook, a Shawnee Republican, offered the idea as an amendment today as the Senate debates a 1-cent sales tax increase. Her amendment would also decrease the proposed sales tax hike to .9 cents.
Click here for the entire article.


Miscarriage of Justice in Italy - The Prenatal Disability Death Sentence


Miscarriage of Justice in Italy - The Prenatal Disability Death Sentence 

The news story was surreal "A baby boy abandoned by doctors to die after a botched abortion was found alive nearly a day later.  The mother, pregnant for the first time, had opted for an abortion after prenatal scans suggested that her baby was disabled."  

The baby's death sentence began the moment he was diagnosed prenatally with a disability and deemed not worth welcoming into this world.  He fought his initial death sentence valiantly and was able to enter this world still breathing and his heart still beating.  This was not enough to overcome his predetermined "death sentence" and when a compassionate soul realized the "miscarriage of justice", it was too late to reverse the torturous harm and neglect that had been exacted upon this "innocent" human being.
Click here for the entire article.


Kagan is 'Stealth Candidate' with a 'Fill-in-the-Blank' Approach to Law


Solicitor General Elena Kagan

Americans United for Life (AUL) President and CEO, Dr. Charmaine Yoest, called for U.S. Senators to reject Solicitor General Elena Kagan's appointment to the high court, because "Americans do not support a radical abortion- rights activist taking a fill-in-the-blank approach to the U.S. Constitution."

Yoest made the following comments: "Today's AUL analysis shows that Kagan has contributed money to the National Partnership for Women and Families, a pro-choice organization with strong ties to Emily's List and NARAL. She is an ardent abortion supporter, even arguing the federal government is subsidizing 'anti-abortion speech' when, in Title X, the federal government is prohibited from referring women for abortion. Ironically, her free speech sentiments do not extend to critics of aggressive activism. She has referred to those who call for respect and adherence to the Constitution 'irresponsible' and asserted that their criticism was 'harmful to our constitutional system and to the value of a judiciary.
Click here for the entire article.
 

May 7, 2010

Obama to Pick Pro-Abort Elena Kagan for Supreme Court: Report

Obama to Pick Pro-Abort Elena Kagan for Supreme Court: Report

Solicitor General Elena Kagan

Top White House aides expect President Obama to select Solicitor General Elena Kagan on Monday as the Supreme Court justice to replace retiring Justice John Paul Stevens, reports Mike Allen of Politico Friday.

"Kagan's relative youth (50) is a huge asset for the lifetime post. And President Obama considers her to be a persuasive, fearless advocate who would serve as an intellectual counterweight to Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Scalia, and could lure swing Justice Kennedy into some coalitions," reports Allen.

Both former U.S. President Bill Clinton and Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) urged Obama last month to select someone who has not served as a judge. Kagan, who was appointed to her current position in March 2009 after nearly six years as the Dean of Harvard Law school, is the only member of the relatively short list of names considered for the position to have no judicial experience.

Kagan is known for strongly favoring taxpayer funded abortion, and is a critic of the 1991 Supreme Court decision Rust v. Sullivan, which upheld federal regulations prohibiting Title X family planning fund recipients from counseling on or referring for abortion.

Americans United for Life also reports that Kagan once suggested that faith-based groups operating pregnancy care centers should not counsel pregnant youths, for fear that they would include their religious beliefs in the counseling process.

In April, the White House reacted with fury when Ben Domenech, writing in a blog post for CBS News, declared that Kagan would be the "first openly gay justice" on the U.S. Supreme Court. Under increasing pressure from the Obama administration, CBS eventually pulled the post and Domenech apologized for "a Harvard rumor" - but not before posting an addendum stating: "I have to correct my text here to say that Kagan is apparently still closeted - odd, because her female partner is rather well known in Harvard circles."

Contact: Kathleen Gilbert

Source: LifeSiteNews.com
Publish Date: May 7, 2010
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The Pill and 50 Years OF Misery

The Pill and 50 Years OF Misery

May 9th, 2010 is the 50th anniversary of this nation’s most popular recreational drug, the birth control pill

Isn’t it interesting that as the United States of America approaches the 50th anniversary of this nation’s most popular recreational drug, the birth control pill, special interest media is ginning up the presses—or in this case, the web sites—with all sorts of ideas for the next 50 years. A sampling of what America’s birth control worshippers are saying may give one pause to rethink.

For example, on May 3, the Los Angeles Biomedical Research institute (LA BioMed) announced “that it has received $1.5 million in grant funding to study a contraceptive for men that uses a combination of two hormonal gels applied to the skin of the arm and abdomen.”

The report explains:

The Food and Drug Administration approved the birth control pill on May 9, 1960, giving women greater control over their reproductive choices and their lives.

Drs. Christina Wang and Ronald Swerdloff are LA BioMed principal investigators and directors of one of only two of the National Institutes of Health centers dedicated to clinical research on male contraceptives. They have conducted several studies of male contraceptives, including the current one.

Dr. Swerdloff, the director of the LA BioMed at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center's Male Contraceptive Clinical Trials Center, says the development of a male contraceptive will change men's view of their health and their role in reproductive decisions.

"Just as women gained greater control over their reproductive choices and their health with the advent of the birth control pill, a male contraceptive would get men more involved in their personal health care and would give them greater reproductive choices," said Dr. Swerdloff.

If one is to believe these comments, then the pill is celebrated today as a drug that gives women “control” over their ability to conceive or not to conceive a child, depending on their whims and fancies.

Or to put it another way, in blunt but honest terms, the unveiling of the birth control pill in 1960 invited females and their male counterparts to consider, for the first time in our brief history, the idea that fornication and adultery could be a group sport because this little chemical concoction was going to do away with the possibility of conceiving a child.

At the same time, the pill created the idea, perhaps subconsciously, that all those who used it would no longer be put in the unpleasant position of having to accept responsibility for their actions. This life-changing prescription meant not having to live with the consequence of—God forbid—being with child (i.e. pregnant).

In other words, the pill changed everything, turning the truth about human sexuality—waiting until marriage to engage in relations and welcoming a child as a gift—on its head and then denying those truths because they were merely old-fashioned, outdated ideas.

Now clinical research is investigating the possibility that men should perhaps no longer carry little packages containing latex in their hip pocket or army boot, but rather a prescription gel, so that they are always prepared and can take charge of the situation with less delay. Sounds almost like the scientists are arming men for war games with females. 

In my humble opinion, any man worth his salt would never consider using a chemical that could, as has been the proven case with the birth control pill, result in a heart attack, a stroke, cancer or even death.

On the other hand, proponents of these various chemicals do not admit to the fact that not only does the birth control pill abort on occasion; it is also not what one would describe as a health benefit.

If those concerned with the health and well-being of humans were truly consistent, they would point out that no recreational drug is actually healthy, whether one is discussing cocaine, marijuana, alcohol, cigarettes or birth control chemicals.

In addition to the research devoted to men, there are other voices with different bones to pick about the pill’s 50th anniversary.

Susan Reimer’s opinion piece in the Baltimore Sun laments that the pill “didn't stabilize marriages that might be stressed by too many children or sexual tension. Divorce has only increased since 1960, impacting almost half of all marriages. The pill didn't stabilize populations in developing countries or control disease, famine and political unrest. The women in those countries couldn't get the pill.”

“And it didn't prevent unwed pregnancies, either. Those numbers have nearly tripled.” 

But what she says the pill did create was more women in the workforce. Huh?

Reimer suggests that the enormous number of women in the workforce was a byproduct never projected by the lofty promise makers of the 1960s.

But she doesn’t seem to get the point that, while the pill made it easier, perhaps, for women to enter the job market, it also, almost simultaneously, created a breakdown in the family.

As more and more women entered the workforce, leaving their children in day care and their husbands to fend for themselves, the family unit started to decay to a point where today the television or the Internet is the babysitter that nobody could have imagined. The pill has been among the most sociologically damaging instruments in history. 

But these are the sort of things to which Reimer cannot admit.

Oh yes, and then there’s Geraldine Sealey, who hasn’t got a good word to say about the pill, about her life, about her sexual libido or frankly about anything at all. She is an angry woman, whose article carries the very appropriate title, “Why I hate the pill.”

I thought I might be about to read an exposé on what the pharmaceutical companies have done to deceive women, using them as human guinea pigs and lying to them. 

But no, that is not where Sealey went in her diatribe.

She just wants women to have more choices. And she wants the industry to do something about it because she is positive that all those “unwanted pregnancies” are happening because there still are not enough choices for females who want desperately to have sex but certainly don’t want to be troubled with a child.

She tells readers:

The birth control pill didn't just magically appear in women's medicine chests one day. Its creation was a hard-won victory for women, by women, specifically, Margaret Sanger and Katharine McCormick, the activist duo most responsible for its development. As Elaine Tyler May describes in her new book, America and the Pill, these heroines began their fight in the early 20th century against the same sexist forces that once prevented women from voting, as well as conventional wisdom that equated birth control with vice and immorality, but ultimately managed to get the pill introduced here decades later.

Oh, come on, lady! Let’s face facts and tell it straight for a change. Why do women want the pill along with as many other selections on the sex-at-any-price menu as they can get?

Because, quite simply, they have become infatuated with the idea of never having to be accountable for anything they do in order to satisfy their sexual urges. It is as if sex alone was worth denying everything that is moral and good about being faithful, pure and chaste before marriage as well as after it. Those values have become near-artifacts in the history of the human race.

Chastity and fidelity are the focus of sneers, derision and mockery. And yet, after nearly 50 years and only God knows how many damaged women, men, families and dead babies, many in our midst are still racing ahead, demanding more … more misery, more heartbreak, more death, more perversion.

Pope John Paul II in his remarkable Gospel of Life, explained this societal negativity (Chapter 1: 13):

It is frequently asserted that contraception, if made safe and available to all, is the most effective remedy against abortion. The Catholic Church is then accused of actually promoting abortion, because she obstinately continues to teach the moral unlawfulness of contraception. When looked at carefully, this objection is clearly unfounded. It may be that many people use contraception with a view to excluding the subsequent temptation of abortion. But the negative values inherent in the "contraceptive mentality"—which is very different from responsible parenthood, lived in respect for the full truth of the conjugal act—are such that they in fact strengthen this temptation when an unwanted life is conceived. Indeed, the pro-abortion culture is especially strong precisely where the Church's teaching on contraception is rejected. Certainly, from the moral point of view contraception and abortion are specifically different evils: the former contradicts the full truth of the sexual act as the proper expression of conjugal love, while the latter destroys the life of a human being; the former is opposed to the virtue of chastity in marriage, the latter is opposed to the virtue of justice and directly violates the divine commandment "You shall not kill".

But despite their differences of nature and moral gravity, contraception and abortion are often closely connected, as fruits of the same tree.

Until that tree is uprooted, tossed aside and killed, the problems that confront mankind will not soon disappear. The honest response to the pill-loving in our midst and their hackneyed celebratory yammering should be that 50 years of deceit, misery and death is enough.

Contact: Judie Brown

Source: CNSNews.com
Publish Date: May 7, 2010
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Why do so many great writers have epilepsy?

Why do so many great writers have epilepsy?

An epilepsy gene was discovered in 1996, so it is only a matter of time before genetic counselors offer the option of abortion or embryo destruction to parents of preborn offspring - if they're not already.

Yesterday Holy Kaw drew attention to a fascinating article on How Stuff Works. I had no idea so many of our great writers had epilepsy... and that there's an explanation.

This is just another example of that which we consider abnormal, or a defect, not necessarily being so, or at least having a sunny side that contributes to the advancement of humanity....

Alfred Lord Tennyson

Alfred Lord Tennyson described the experience as "the clearest of the clearest, the surest of the surest, the weirdest of the weirdest, utterly beyond words."...

Before they happened to Gustave Flaubert, the Frenchman became terrified, writing that he felt "a whirlpool of ideas and images in my poor brain, during which it seemed that my consciousness, that my me sank like a vessel in a storm."

Lewis Carroll also shared this sense of growing unreality, writing that his made him feel strange, like another person. These descriptions aren't nightmares or passages from science-fiction novels. They're attempts to describe what it feels like to a have an epileptic seizure....

Flaubert, Charles Dickens, Edgar Allan Poe, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Lord Byron, Dante Alighieri, Sir Walter Scott, Edward Lear, Jonathan Swift - all legendary writers and all epileptics.

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

The hallucinations, seizures and flood of memories associated with temporal lobe epilepsy influenced some of these writers profoundly. Dickens, Dostoevsky and Flaubert cast characters in their works as epileptics. Carroll's bizarre, dreamlike fictions, such as Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, seem to share some characteristics with the above descriptions of seizures. Some critics have argued that the entirety of Alice's Adventures is a symbolic representation of epileptic seizures.

Besides its tendency to induce hallucinations and other disturbing stimuli, epilepsy has been linked to a condition called hypergraphia, an all-consuming desire to write.

The overwhelming urge to write - and to write constantly - and a form of epilepsy appear to come from the same part of the brain: the temporal lobe. A troubled temporal lobe may then both spur someone to write obsessively and also cause temporal lobe epilepsy....

Picture painted by Vincent van Gogh

It's worth noting that many of these writers, and epileptic artists like Vincent van Gogh, were quite prolific, in some cases over rather short life spans. (Van Gogh, who may have had both epilepsy and bipolar disorder, painted constantly and wrote his brother multiple letters a day.)

Epilepsy and hypergraphia can be accompanied by depression, which for some artists is a bane and for others a challenging source of inspiration. But depression, with its many possible causes, isn't likely a source of artistic talent. Instead, it often provides a reason for people to sort out their problems through art....

Contact: Jill Stanek
Source: jillstanek.com
Publish Date: May 7, 2010
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UNFPA, Amnesty and CRR to Push "Reproductive Rights" on UN Treaty Bodies

UNFPA, Amnesty and CRR to Push "Reproductive Rights" on UN Treaty Bodies
Convention Against Torture (CAT) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR)
This week, abortion advocates, the Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR) and Amnesty International (AI), are teaming up with the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) to host the "first-ever" briefings on "reproductive rights" for the committees responsible for monitoring compliance with the Convention Against Torture (CAT) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).

According to the CRR website, the briefing with the UN Committee against Torture (CAT) will focus on "reproductive rights violations" such  "denial of reproductive healthcare services, including abortion and post-abortion care."

Critics point out that not only has the term "reproductive rights" never before been included in any binding UN treaty, but also that delegations have made explicit statements to define abortion out of the term whenever it has been included in lower level, non-binding conference outcome documents and resolutions.

UN observers have watched compliance committees, especially the body that monitors the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), overstep their mandates in over 100 different instances over the years to misinterpret treaty provisions and pressure countries to decriminalize or liberalize access to abortion.

The CRR briefing with the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), co-sponsored by UNFPA, will address maternal mortality "as a human right issue." CRR bills this meeting as part of its "ongoing advocacy" with this UN committee "as it develops its new general comment on sexual and reproductive health rights."

In the C-FAM paper "Rights By Stealth," authors Susan Yoshihara and Douglas Sylva explain that general comments "are the treaty body members' own interpretations of the articles of the conventions" and that "once created, they serve as the committees' official interpretations." Even though states never agreed to any abortion provisions, a new general recommendation on "reproductive rights" and "sexual and reproductive health" signals that the committee will seek to expand the treaty beyond the boundaries set by those who carefully negotiated its language.

Recently, UNFPA has been holding meetings to work on an ICESCR General Comment.  Aminata Toure of UNFPA stated, "we have to define the meaning for this right [to sexual and reproductive health] and the necessary actions to be taken by the states in order to realize it." Luz Angela Melo, also with UNFPA, added that, “A General Comment on the right to sexual and reproductive health can be very useful for UNFPA’s advocacy work."

States have started to push back on the misinterpretations of the treaty monitoring bodies. Just last year during the General Assembly, states registered objections to a reference on a new ICESCR general comment on "sexual orientation." Iraq, on behalf of the Arab group, led the successful opposition to General Comment 20, and noted at the time that it was "of paramount importance to make it clear that international agreements should not be strangely interpreted." The CRR briefings are scheduled for May 7 and May 10 in Geneva.

Contact: Samantha Singson

Source: LifeSiteNews.com
Publish Date: May 6, 2010
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New Planned Parenthood mega-mill in St. Paul will be eco-friendly!

New Planned Parenthood mega-mill in St. Paul will be eco-friendly!

New Planned Parenthood mega-mill in St. Paul

I've reported previously on the massive pro-life protests and prayer vigils at a St. Paul, MN, Planned Parenthood abortion mill as well as PP's annual "Good Friday solidarity event."

Well, PP of MN, ND, and SD is closing that mill and building a 46,000 sq. ft., 3-story mega-mill in an industrial park....

Why now? According to StarTribune.com:

[Sarah] Stoesz [president and CEO of PP in MN], said PP is preparing for a possible increase in demand because of the new federal health care bill, which will add millions of people to insurance rolls starting in 2014. Many will be the lower-income and young adults that PP serves, she said. "We don't know exactly what health care reform will mean for our patients," she said. "But I anticipate that more people will access health care."

The new location was chosen "after a zip code analysis of where PP's patients come from," according to TwinCities.com, i.e., a "low-income minority community," writes our MN pro-life friend Sandy.

PP also chose the new spot to "provide more privacy for patients who now routinely have to walk past abortion foes who try to persuade them not to go into the clinic," according to StarTribune.com, i.e., ditch pro-life protesters.

PP's new mega-mill falls mid-range in size compared to other mega-mills built by PP in recent years:

Aurora, IL (2007): 22,000 sq ft
Sarasota, FL (2009): 23,000 sq ft
Portland, OR (February 2010): 40,000 sq ft
St. Paul, MN (to open December 2011): 46,000 sq ft
Denver, CO (2008): 50,000 sq ft
Houston, TX (to open fall 2010): 78,000 sq ft

[Have read about but can't confirm mega-mills in Worcester, PA (33,000 sq ft) and Seattle, WA (31,500 sq ft). If you have links to corroborate these or any others I haven't listed, please alert me in comments section and I'll add to the list.]

Environmentalists will be happy to learn PP is going green! Buildings used to kill babies to save the planet will be eco-friendly! PP of MN's new chop shop will be LEED-certified, as was the Sarasota PP, eco-friendly video below...


Click here for the video.

Contact: Jill Stanek
Source: jillstanek.com
Publish Date: May 7, 2010
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U.S., U.K. Criticize Canada for Refusing to Bring Abortion Funding Debate Into G8

U.S., U.K. Criticize Canada for Refusing to Bring Abortion Funding Debate Into G8

G8 Summit

The campaign to insert abortion funding into maternal health initiatives has dominated the media coverage leading up to the 36th annual G8 Summit, which will be held in Huntsville, Canada in late June.  The host government, Canada, has come under considerable criticism from the United States (US), the United Kingdom (UK), pro-abortion NGOs and the Canadian media for refusing to bring abortion into the debate.

The G8 Summit brings together the leaders of eight of the largest economies of the world.  Traditionally, the host country has wide latitude to set the agenda.  In January, the Canadian government, under Prime Minister Stephen Harper, announced its intention to make maternal and child health a development priority for this year’s summit.

Almost immediately, pro-abortion groups attacked the plan for not specifically including family planning and abortion. The opposition has been led by Maureen McTeer, the wife of former Prime Minister Joe Clark and the Canadian representative for the White Ribbon Alliance for Safe Motherhood, who has been actively lobbying Canadian government officials using a briefing paper published by Action Canada for Population Development.

The Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) stopped funding abortion services overseas last year by not renewing funding contracts with two of the largest international abortion providers, International Planned Parenthood Federation and Marie Stopes International. It is this non-renewal of funding for these abortion providers that some believe is at the heart of the protests over the Canadian policy for the G8 health initiative.

In February and again in March, Canadian administration officials confirmed that family planning and abortion would not be included in the G8 maternal and child health initiative, because as one official explained, “the purpose of this is to be able to save lives.”

On March 30, at the G8 Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Quebec, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton stoked the fires of the debate by declaring, “You cannot have maternal health without reproductive health, and reproductive health includes contraception and family planning and access to legal, safe abortion.”  The UK Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, expressed his nation’s agreement with the US: “Our position is very much as stated by Secretary Clinton.”

Although the Canadian government has softened its stance on family planning, they have held firm on the abortion issue.  Last week, Prime Minister Harper definitively ruled out abortion as part of the G8 initiative, stating “"We want to make sure our funds are used to save the lives of women and children and are used on the many, many things that are available to us that frankly do not divide the Canadian population.”
 
Despite Secretary Clinton’s statement in March, neither the US nor Canada currently directly fund abortion services in developing countries. While  the US Agency for International Development (USAID) does give money to independent agencies that provide access to abortion, it is also restricted by the Helms Amendment, which states that “No foreign assistance funds may be used to pay for the performance of abortion as a method of family planning or to motivate or coerce any person to practice abortions.”

Contact: Terrence McKeegan, J.D.

Source: C-FAM
Publish Date: May 6, 2010
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Even Pro-Abort UNICEF Says Stop Pushing Abortion in Canada's G8 Plan

Even Pro-Abort UNICEF Says Stop Pushing Abortion in Canada's G8 Plan

Liberal MP Bob Rae Usurps Maternal Aid Event With Abortion Push

UNICEF logo

At the same time as a pro-abortion Conservative senator’s advice to women’s groups to “shut the f--- up” about abortion in the Canadian government’s G8 maternal health plan is making headlines in Canada, a coalition of international aid groups, including the pro-abortion UNICEF, have also called for an end to debate over the issue. The groups are pleading for all parties to cease the politicization of the plan over abortion so it can move forward and save the lives of mothers and children in the developing world.

Only one week after they issued this plea however, Liberal Foreign Affairs Critic Bob Rae usurped a mother's day event the aid groups hosted on Parliament Hill by calling for abortion in the plan, reports journalist Deborah Gyapong on her blog.

The coalition of six foreign aid groups, including CARE Canada, Plan Canada, RESULTS Canada, Save the Children Canada, UNICEF Canada, and World Vision Canada issued a statement April 27th, following the government's announcement that abortion would not be included in the health initiative.

“Every year nine million women around the world watch as their children die from painful, preventable illnesses that often cost dimes, not dollars, to treat,” they wrote. “Hundreds of thousands more women die in childbirth because they lack access to dependable health care close to home.”

The upcoming G8 summit in June, they continue, “provides an historic opportunity to chart a course out of this desperate terrain.”  Yet, they bemoan that the initiative, which “could benefit millions,” is being “swallowed up by a political debate about abortion that is stifling the potential for progress.”

“We don’t want disagreement about whether or not the Canadian government funds abortion to put at jeopardy the entire initiative,” says UNICEF Canada’s director of international programs, Meg French, according to Tandem.

The call to cease the wrangling over abortion in the plan is significant coming from UNICEF, who, though they maintain otherwise, have clearly shown a determined support for abortion.

For example, in 2007, they took part in a global initiative that called for legalized abortion as part of an effort to promote maternal and child health in the developing world.  In 2004, they opposed a proposal in New Zealand that sought to require parental consent for underage girls seeking abortion.  In 2009, they lobbied in the Dominican Republic against a new constitution seeking to protect life "from conception until death," asking legislators to liberalize abortion laws so women would not be subjected to "unsafe procedures."

The aid groups' statement continued: “We know from recent polls that abortion is a sensitive issue for Canadians and debating abortion in the context of this initiative will not resolve the domestic debate. … It's time to measure success in lives saved, not political points scored.”

The groups’ concerns were echoed in an unusally emphatic fashion this week by Conservative Senator Nancy Ruth. “We’ve got five weeks or whatever left until G-8 starts. Shut the f--- up on this issue (abortion),” she reportedly told a number of pro-abortion groups gathered on Parliament Hill on Monday, saying that she feared further backlash from the Harper government if they continued to push the issue. “This is now a political football. This is not about women’s health in this country.”

The Conservatives have insisted repeatedly that they do not want to open a debate on abortion, but the opposition parties, particularly the Liberals, have sought to use the maternal and child health initiative as an opportunity to divide the Conservative caucus over abortion.

Within days of the initiative's January announcement, Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff stated, “We want to make sure that women have access to all the contraceptive methods available to control their fertility because we don’t want to have women dying because of botched procedures, we don’t want to have women dying in misery.”

Then in March the Liberals pushed a motion, proposed by Rae, calling for abortion in the plan.  Though they had the support of the opposition parties, it was defeated in a vote of 144-138, because 13 Liberals were absent or abstained and three – Dan McTeague, John McKay, and Paul Szabo – opposed it on principle.

On Tuesday, one week after issuing their statement, the foreign aid groups and some others held an event on Parliament Hill to kick off what they call 'A Week to Save Moms and Their Kids', in order to support the G8 initiative.

A press release states that they gathered “to call for all-party support” on the initiative.  MPs from all parties were present, including Minister of International Cooperation Bev Oda, Bob Rae, Johanne Deschamps of the Bloc Quebecois, and John Rafferty of the NDP.  Each of the MPs was presented with a Mother's Day basket that included chocolates and flowers, as well as home birthing kits and nutritional supplements.

But according to journalist Deborah Gyapong, who was present at the event, Bob Rae used it as a further opportunity to promote abortion in the initiative, despite the stated wish of his hosts the week before.

Rae spent the first three quarters of his address praising the initiative for offering such things as improved health care, nutrition, and inoculations, Gyapong explains.  “But then, he cut loose,” she writes. “Though he avoided the 'A' word, he didn't just talk about reproductive rights but a woman's right to choose.”

She then relates how all of the journalists flocked to Rae.  “Talk about upstaging! Talk about stepping on someone else's event,” she writes.  “When the NGO reps opened up their event for questions and answers, all the journalists were over by Rae.”

Detailed coverage of UNICEF's anti-life history is available here.
http://www.lifesitenews.com/waronfamily/unicef/

Contact: Patrick B. Craine

Source: LifeSiteNews.com
Publish Date: May 6, 2010
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