Sunday, September 5, 2021

Black Woman Slams Democrats: “The Only Thing They Care About Black Women is Whether They Can Kill Their Babies” National | Micaiah Bilger | Sep 3, 2021 | 4:24PM | Washington, DC

 

Black Woman Slams Democrats: “The Only Thing They Care About Black Women is Whether They Can Kill Their Babies”

National  |  Micaiah Bilger  |   Sep 3, 2021   |   4:24PM   |  Washington, DC

A poor black mother from Marietta, Georgia criticized abortion activists Friday for pretending to care about helping black mothers when they really just encourage them to “kill their babies” in abortions.

The woman called the Washington Journal program on C-SPAN during a discussion about the new Texas heartbeat law. She criticized guest commenter Nan Aron, president of the Alliance for Justice, and other abortion activists for claiming the pro-life law will especially hurt poor women and black women.

“I do not like the bate and switch that’s used by Miss Nan and others like her to talk about what’s best for poor black women as though the only thing they care about poor black women is whether they can kill their babies,” the woman responded.

Pro-abortion Democrats and abortion activists often bring up black women when they are advocating for abortion, claiming that they care about their access to “health care” and “right to choose.”

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But the truth is that abortion has devastated the black community. While abortions harm families of every race and culture, they disproportionately harm black families. Statistics show that while African Americans represent 13 percent of the U.S. population, they have 36 percent of all abortions. According to the Centers for Disease Control, the abortion rate among black women (21.2 abortions per 1,000 women) is almost four times higher than it is among white women (6.3 abortions per 1,000 women).

Research suggests the abortion industry specifically targets the black community. Life Issues Institute found that 86 percent of Planned Parenthood abortion facilities are located in or near African American and Latino neighborhoods.

On the call with C-SPAN, the Georgia mother said she is poor and she is raising two children; she said she knows when life begins. The woman urged activists like Nan Aron who truly want to help the black community to stop pushing abortion on women in need and start offering real help.

“I can tell you that as a poor black women myself that there is a lot of other things that we would like,” the Georgia mother said. “Like we would be able to afford for our children the best education, to live in some of the best places, to be able to take our children on some very good vacations that rich women get to do.

“So stop using us as a bate and switch … in order to put forth your ideas. And it’s a lot of us black women out here that struggle every day to take care of our children that are against abortion,” she said.

A descendant of slaves, the woman said the arguments for and against slavery are a lot like the arguments for and against abortion today. Many pro-life leaders also have pointed out this similarity, noting how blacks were treated as lesser human beings and how they were denied basic human rights in ways similar to how unborn babies are today.

Since 1973 when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Roe v. Wade, approximately 20 million unborn black babies have been aborted in America.


Joe Biden: “I Don’t Agree” With the Scientific Fact That Human Life Begins at Conception National | Steven Ertelt | Sep 3, 2021 | 11:54AM | Washington, DC

 

Joe Biden: “I Don’t Agree” With the Scientific Fact That Human Life Begins at Conception

National  |  Steven Ertelt  |   Sep 3, 2021   |   11:54AM   |  Washington, DC

Joe Biden finally put to rest any question about whether he’s a “faithful” Catholic.

During a brief question and answer period following a statement to the media today, Biden made it clear that he does “not agree” with the scientific fact that human life begins at conception. That puts him completely out of step with Biblical principles and the pro-life teachings of the Catholic Church that the lives of human beings begin at conception.

“I have been— continue to be a strong supporter of Roe V. Wade. I respect people who don’t support Roe v. Wade. I respect their views. I respect those who believe life begins at the moment of conception and all, I respect that, I don’t agree, but I respect that, not going to impose that on people,” Biden said.

Scientists agree that human life begins at conception and a recent study proved that to be true.

Biden’s comments are a marked contrast to what he said in 2015, when he stated: “I’m prepared to accept that the moment of conception is a human life and being.”

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The abortion activist also expanded on the campaign he launched to come up with a pro-abortion federal government solution to the Texas abortion ban, which could involve some sort of legal challenge to the pro-life law or a scheme to transport abortion customers to other states to kill their babies.

“I was told that there are possibilities within the existing law to have the justice department look and see whether there are things that can be done,” Biden said.

In response to the Supreme Court’s decision to not block a Texas law banning abortions, Joe Biden has launched a full federal government campaign to ensure that unborn babies in Texas will be killed in abortions.

As LifeNews.com reported, pro-lifers won another victory for life when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 against a request from pro-abortion groups to temporarily block enforcement of the pro-life law, meaning it will stay in effect for the time being.

Biden condemned the pro-life law on Wednesday with his own statement celebrating abortions. Today, Biden called the Supreme Court decision an “unprecedented assault” on abortion.

“By allowing a law to go into effect that empowers private citizens in Texas to sue health care providers, family members supporting a woman exercising her right to choose after six weeks, or even a friend who drives her to a hospital or clinic, it unleashes unconstitutional chaos and empowers self-anointed enforcers to have devastating impacts,” Biden said in a statement.

“For the majority to do this without a hearing, without the benefit of an opinion from a court below, and without due consideration of the issues, insults the rule of law and the rights of all Americans to seek redress from our courts,” Biden added. “Rather than use its supreme authority to ensure justice could be fairly sought, the highest Court of our land will allow millions of women in Texas in need of critical reproductive care to suffer while courts sift through procedural complexities.”

But the more worrisome portion of Biden’s comments is his pledge to mount a full federal government campaign to make sure babies are aborted.

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Biden said he was asking his Gender Policy Council and White House Counsel to “launch a whole-of-government effort to respond to this decision, looking specifically to the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Justice to see what steps the Federal Government can take to ensure that women in Texas have access to safe and legal abortions as protected by Roe, and what legal tools we have to insulate women and providers from the impact of Texas’ bizarre scheme of outsourced enforcement to private parties.”

The Texas law could save as many as 150 babies a day from abortion but if Biden issues a unilateral order to try to facilitate abortions elsewhere, that number could be adversely impacted. And it could have  the tax dollars of pro-life Americans at work shuttling abortion customers to abortion centers in other states — seemingly in violation of the Hyde Amendment.

Meanwhile, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said that Joe Biden wants Congress to pass a law making abortions legal up to birth.

In their ruling late Wednesday, the Supreme Court said the pro-abortion groups did not provide sufficient reasons to justify blocking the law.

“The applicants now before us have raised serious questions regarding the constitutionality of the Texas law at issue,” the majority wrote. “But their application also presents complex and novel antecedent procedural questions on which they have not carried their burden. … In light of such issues, we cannot say the applicants have met their burden to prevail in an injunction or stay application.”

Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett made up the majority in the decision. The justices who dissented were Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Elena Kagan, Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor. Kagan, Breyer and Sotomayor also wrote separate dissents slamming the court for allowing Texas to restrict abortions.

Kelsey Hazzard, a lawyer and leader with Secular Pro-Life, said the justices did not rule on the constitutionality of the law. They basically said “it’s too early for the Supreme Court to get involved” and the lower courts should handle it first, she explained.

The heartbeat law has the potential to save tens of thousands of babies’ lives every year, including 100 every day. Signed by Gov. Greg Abbott in May, it prohibits abortions once an unborn baby’s heartbeat is detectable, typically about six weeks of pregnancy. Exceptions are allowed if the mother’s life is at risk. Unique from other heartbeat laws, the Texas legislation includes a private enforcement mechanism that allows people to file lawsuits against abortionists who violate the law.

Texas Right to Life expressed hope that its life-saving legislation will spread to other states and save babies from abortion all across the country.

“Texas Right to Life celebrates this phenomenal victory for tens of thousands of preborn children who will be spared the evil of abortion,” the organization said in a statement. “We are optimistic that the Texas Heartbeat Act will continue to survive ongoing and future legal attacks against this historic policy.”

The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear another major abortion case out of Mississippi in October, bringing even more hope that the justices will allow states to protect unborn babies from abortion again.

Planned Parenthood has already stopped killing babies at its abortion centers while one abortion business killed as many babies as possible before the pro-life law went into effect.

Other pro-life leaders also celebrated the Supreme Court’s decision Wednesday, while urging people to support mothers and babies in need across Texas.

“We are celebrating this decision for what it is, baby steps in the right direction toward the obvious conclusion that Roe is fatally flawed and must go,” said Students for Life of America/Students for Life Action President Kristan Hawkins. “Students for Life of America was founded as a Post-Roe organization, working for the day after Roe with help and support for mothers and their children, born and pre-born. We are now one day closer to that reality.”

Pro-life advocates are reaching out to pregnant women across Texas with compassion and understanding, offering resources and emotional support to help them and their babies. Earlier this year, state lawmakers also increased support for pregnant and parenting mothers and babiesensuring that they have resources to choose life for their babies.

Texas Right to Life encouraged women seeking pregnancy help to visit its website for a list of resources. Find it here.

The American Civil Liberties Union, Planned Parenthood, Whole Woman’s Health and other abortion groups are suing to block the law. Their case now returns to the lower courts.

Whether the Texas law will remain in effect or ultimately be upheld as constitutional in court remains uncertain, but pro-life leaders are hopeful now that the Supreme Court has a conservative majority.

In 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court took away the states’ ability to protect unborn babies from abortion under Roe v. Wade, and instead forced states to legalize abortion on demand. Roe made the United States one of only seven countries in the world that allows elective abortions after 20 weeks. The court is scheduled to hear a Mississippi case in the fall that challenges this precedent.

Polls show Americans support heartbeat lawsAn April poll by the University of Texas-Austin found that 49 percent of Texans support making abortions illegal after six weeks of pregnancy, while 41 percent oppose it. In 2019, a national Hill-HarrisX survey also found that 55 percent of voters said they do not think laws banning abortions after six weeks – when an unborn baby’s heartbeat is detectable – are too restrictive.


Reese Witherspoon, Eva Longoria and Pink Slam Texas Abortion Ban, Celebrate Killing Babies in Abortions National | Micaiah Bilger | Sep 3, 2021 | 9:37AM | Washington, DC

 

Reese Witherspoon, Eva Longoria and Pink Slam Texas Abortion Ban, Celebrate Killing Babies in Abortions

National  |  Micaiah Bilger  |   Sep 3, 2021   |   9:37AM   |  Washington, DC

Celebrities including Reese Witherspoon, Pink, Eva Longoria and popular children’s author Judy Bloom voiced their outrage Thursday against a new Texas pro-life law that could save tens of thousands of unborn babies from abortion every year.

The Texas heartbeat law went into effect Wednesday, prohibiting abortions once an unborn baby’s heartbeat is detectable, about six weeks of pregnancy. Late in the day, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to temporarily block enforcement of the law – prompting outrage from abortion activists and their friends in politics and the entertainment industry.

Among them were Witherspoon, Pink, Bloom and Longoria, AFP reports.

Using the misleading hashtag #BansOffOurBodies, actress/producer Witherspoon wrote on Twitter, “I stand with the women of Texas who have the Constitutional right to make decisions about their health and their own bodies.”

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She also shared a tweet from Planned Parenthood that slammed the heartbeat law as “ridiculous” and urged people to “step up and fight for reproductive freedom.”

Longoria (“Desperate Housewives”) also criticized the pro-life law, writing: “It’s pretty simple. We should all be able to make decisions about our health & future.” She neglected the fact that babies in the womb deserve that same privilege.

“But between [Texas’s] extreme abortion ban & states passing a record number of abortion restrictions this year, we have to fight for everyone’s reproductive freedom,” Longoria continued.

Singer Pink also criticized the pro-life law as “extreme,” despite several polls showing support for heartbeat laws among Americans.

“This ban … will be the blueprint for bans across the US. Unless we do something about it,” she wrote on Twitter.

Echoing her almost word-for-word, Blume, known for her children’s books “Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing” and “Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret,” also described the life-saving law as an “extreme” abortion ban on Twitter.

The abortion industry in Texas received other comments of support from actresses Amy Schumer, Alyssa Milano, Aisha Tyler, Elizabeth Banks, singer Halsey and other celebrities.

Though about a dozen states have passed heartbeat laws, Texas is the first to be allowed to enforce its law. The others have been blocked by the courts.

The law has the potential to save tens of thousands of babies from abortion. In 2020, about 54,000 unborn babies were aborted in Texas, and about 85 percent happened after six weeks of pregnancy, according to state health statistics. That means more than 100 unborn babies with beating hearts may be spared from abortion every single day in Texas.

Whether the Texas law will remain in effect or ultimately be upheld as constitutional in court remains uncertain, but pro-life leaders are hopeful now that the Supreme Court has a conservative majority.

Meanwhile, pro-life advocates are reaching out to pregnant women across Texas with compassion and understanding, offering resources and emotional support to help them and their babies. Earlier this year, state lawmakers increased support for pregnant and parenting mothers and babiesensuring that they have resources to choose life for their babies.

Women may call or text 1-800-712-4357 or chat online with OptionLine, a 24-hour bilingual hotline run by Heartbeat International that has helped connect millions of women to pregnancy and parenting resources.


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