"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour
Showing posts with label women’s rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women’s rights. Show all posts

Saturday, December 26, 2020

Mind-Bending Paradox - Russian Orthodox Church More Open to Abortion Than Russian Government - Correction

..
Correction: see comments below

Russian Orthodox Church has ‘soft & flexible’ stance on abortion & does not demand practice be made illegal, spokesman reveals
26 Dec 2020 12:33
By Jonny Tickle, RT

FILE PHOTO Vladimir Legoyda © Sputnik / Nina Zotina


The Russian Orthodox Church is not proposing a blanket ban on abortion and its official position is actually “more flexible” than a complete prohibition. That’s according to Vladimir Legoyda, the institution's main spokesperson.

Speaking on Saturday to RTVI, a New York-based Russian-language channel aimed at expats, Legoyda revealed that the Church is not entirely against the termination of pregnancy being legal.

“We are taking a softer and more flexible position in this case: we demand [abortion] be withdrawn from the compulsory health insurance fund,” he said. The Compulsory Medical Insurance Fund is a taxpayer-funded state program that guarantees the provision of free medical care for a wide range of illnesses.

Russia's religious debate around abortion hit the headlines in November, after Oleg Apolikhin, the chief fertility specialist at the Ministry of Health, suggested creating ‘abortion centers,’ that would be used exclusively for pregnancy terminations. Apolikhin expressed the opinion that terminating a pregnancy had become fashionable and instead wanted to change it into a “socially negative phenomenon.” The specialist also suggested removing abortion from the schedule of state-provided care.

His suggestion was knocked back by the ministry itself, which disagreed with both proposals. However, this idea has complete support from the Russian Orthodox Church, which also agrees with Apolikhin’s view that doctors should be able to refuse to perform an abortion.

“The Church has repeatedly said that doctors who, per their religious beliefs or internal convictions, do not want to perform abortion surgeries, should be able to not perform them,” Legoyda wrote on Telegram in November.

The leader of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, has previously called abortion a sinful practice, believing that terminating a pregnancy because of a discovered abnormality is “even criminal.”

In his opinion, abortion should not be an option just because an embryo “might not make a good football player, or a good lawyer, or a very strong and healthy person.”



Tuesday, March 3, 2020

'Cancel Culture' When it Comes to Inconvenient Truth in the Media

Fans rage at Hallmark after ‘Unplanned’ actress claims
film was cut from awards show

FILE PHOTO: Actress Ashley Bratcher and "Unplanned" co-stars accept a film award onstage during the 7th Annual K-LOVE Fan Awards at The Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, Tennessee. ©  AFP / Getty Images North America / Terry Wyatt

Fans of the Abby Johnson biopic ‘Unplanned’ were aggravated when star Ashley Bratcher, who plays the main character in the movie, alleged that the Hallmark Drama Channel cut all references to the film out of the broadcast.

‘Unplanned’ is a Pure Flix feature that tells the true story of former Planned Parenthood staffer Abby Johnson, who became a pro-life advocate after she witnessed an abortion via sonogram, where she says she witnessed the baby struggle against the procedure.

“Outraged,” Bratcher wrote on Twitter. “Movieguide awards recently aired on @hallmarkdrama & @UnplannedMovie & I were nominated. We were the ONLY nominees who were not recognized. Hallmark has ERASED us from the show and refused to acknowledge us as nominees. This is completely UNACCEPTABLE.”


Ashley Bratcher
@_AshleyBratcher
Outraged. Movieguide awards recently aired on @hallmarkdrama & @UnplannedMovie & I were nominated. We were the ONLY nominees who were not recognized. Hallmark has ERASED us from the show and refused to acknowledge us as nominees. This is completely UNACCEPTABLE. @hallmarkchannel

video 0:37


The film was nominated in three categories at the Movieguide Awards, an annual event that awards movies based on Christian and family-friendly entertainment.

One Twitter user asked the actress if she and the film were “nominated and a part of the awards, but when it was aired, you were cut.”

Bratcher replied, “Yes. That’s exactly what happened. If you watch the televised show it’s like we don’t exist despite our 3 nominations and time on stage.”

As her tweet went viral, fans expressed both their support for the movie and outrage over the alleged omission.

“Hallmark you are losing your viewers day by day,” one wrote. “Not to accept nominations that were done, it's a shame and an outrage to all of us who think that Unplanned is a movie on a very important issue of our time. And the main character deserves to be recognized as any other nominee.”

“It's almost like there's a political agenda involved…” one Twitter follower replied.


JSchmalstieg
@texrdnec
Replying to @_AshleyBratcher and 3 others
it's almost like there's a political agenda involved...


Another agreed, “Done with Hallmark!!! You are still winners to us!!!”


Laurie Hoffman
@LaurieJazzysam
Replying to @_AshleyBratcher and 4 others
Done with Hallmark!!! You are still winners to us!!!👍🏻


One fan posted a link to Hallmark Drama's tweet announcing the Movieguide Awards, encouraging fans to “ask why the blackout?”


Woke Bob Butterbur
@ersatzkulak
Replying to @_AshleyBratcher and 3 others
Everyone should ask why the blackout in the replies to this tweethttps://twitter.com/HallmarkDrama/status/1231987704872787968?s=19 …


Hallmark Drama
@HallmarkDrama
Watch the 28th Annual Movieguide Awards tonight at 11pm/10c with host @jen_lilley and for a night filled with Hollywood charm as we celebrate some of your favorite movies on @HallmarkDrama!


Neither Hallmark or Movieguide has issued a comment on Bratcher's accusations.

Hallmark has positioned itself as a channel that promotes films and television shows focused on family-friendly content, garnering a large conservative following. However, the network came under fire after they agreed to run a Zola bridal registry ad featuring a same-sex kiss. At first, Hallmark agreed to pull the ad, but reinstated it, prompting a boycott. They were criticized again for refusing to air ads regarding ‘Unplanned’ during its theatrical run.

It would appear that Hallmark has been infiltrated and taken over by LGBTQ proponents, so they no longer celebrate family-friendly content, nor do they serve their primary audience. They, like much of the media, are now only interested in furthering LGBTQ interests, abolishing Christianity, and indoctrinating people into their #PCMadness culture.

I think there is probable cause for a lawsuit.




Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Northern Ireland Morality Lurches Hard Left - Whether It Wants To Or Not

Same-sex marriage, abortion now legal in Northern Ireland
By Clyde Hughes

Pro-life demonstrators stand outside the Supreme Court in Central London in 2018. New laws legalizing abortion and same-sex marriage started in Northern Ireland Tuesday. Photo by Will Oliver/EPA-EFE

(UPI) -- A last-ditch effort by the Democratic Unionist Party to block British government reforms on same-sex marriage and abortion failed Monday, allowing both to become legal in Northern Ireland for the first time on Tuesday.

The new laws, which went into effect at midnight, ended the practice of women from Northern Ireland traveling to England to get abortions. Activists said they expect the first same-sex marriage to happen there around Valentine's Day 2020.

"This is a hugely significant moment and the beginning of a new era for Northern Ireland, one in which we're free from oppressive laws that have policed our bodies and healthcare," Grainne Teggart, Amnesty International's Northern Ireland campaign manager, said in a statement.

"No longer will those experiencing crisis pregnancy, who need to access abortion, feel they need to conceal what they're going through. Finally, our human rights are being brought into the 21st century. This will end the suffering of so many people," Teggart continued.

Not to mention the lives of thousands of babies!

DUP leadership, though, vowed to keep fighting the laws. Party leader Arlene Foster said she will examine "every possible legal option" to stop the measures.

"Until this moment, until this day in Northern Ireland, the safest place for an unborn child was in the sanctuary of its mother's womb," Jim Allister of the Traditional Unionist Voice, which also supported blocking the measures. "Sadly (now) the most dangerous place for some unborn will be in the mother's womb because the wanton decision can be taken to kill them."

Sinn Fein Party deputy leader Michelle O'Neill, though, called the last-second effort to block the new laws "pointless."

"Sinn Fein welcomes the end of the denial of the right of our LGBT brothers and sisters to marry the person they love," O'Neill said. "Sinn Fein also welcomes the end of the archaic law criminalizing women."

No wonder the secular violence has settled down in Northern Ireland, very few people believe in God anymore, nor do they fear Him. That might seem like a good thing at first glance, but in the final analysis, it will be disastrous. Turning your back on God is always disastrous eventually.



Tuesday, July 16, 2019

60 Hospitals in Romania Won’t Do Abortions as More Doctors Refuse to Kill Babies

 Abortion backlash in Romania

And they haven't even seen 'Unplanned' yet



INTERNATIONAL   MICAIAH BILGER  

BUCHAREST, ROMANIA

Romania has one of the highest abortion rates in all of Europe, but a growing number of doctors in the country are refusing to abort unborn babies.

EU Observer reports 60 of the 189 hospitals in the country (about 30 percent) will not abort unborn babies because of their doctors’ moral or religious objections.

“The law does not oblige us to do this, as it is a service on request, and we can accept or not,” said Robert Danca, manager of Cuza Voda hospital.

Abortions are legal in Romania for any reason up to 14 weeks, without even required counseling or waiting periods, according to the report. While public hospitals must provide abortions by law, doctors may refuse under Romanian conscience protection laws.

Reporters with The Black Sea publication recently contacted all the public hospitals in the country to ask if they do abortions. The investigation found that 60 would not.

One doctor, Daniela Chiriac, told the news outlet that she quit doing abortions seven years ago at the Municipal Clinical Emergency Hospital in Timisoara because she now believes they are a sin.

“I thought that if I could avoid a sin, then I should do it,” she said. “There are many patients who ask me to recommend someone else and I refuse, because it is also a sin.”

According to the report:

Individual doctors in Romania have the right to refuse to perform abortions.

The 2016 professional code for medics outlines that any doctor can decline to provide services if it affects their professional independence or moral values, or contravenes their professional principles.

These “conscience-based refusal” laws are common in most European countries – but when every doctor in a hospital invokes them, women find their access to healthcare faces restrictions.

Human rights lawyer Iustina Ionescu argues that any woman refused an abortion by her local hospital could sue, drawing a distinction between individual doctors and the healthcare provided.

“The doctor might not be held responsible,” she says, “but ‘the unit’ is a service provider covered by the healthcare law, and does not have such an explicit provision. I would say it is illegal for the healthcare unit to refuse, but we would need [to bring] a case.”

Abortion activists are pushing to overturn conscience protections for these reasons. Some now argue that doctors should be forced to abort unborn babies, even if it goes against their religious or moral beliefs. Earlier this week in America, Democrats in Congress voted against several measures to strengthen conscience protections for medical workers who oppose the killing of unborn babies.

In Romania, some politicians are working to combat the high abortion rate with pregnancy support programs. According to the report, MP Matei-Adrian Dobrovie proposed providing state funding to pregnancy resource centers that provide support to mothers and babies. He said Romania has the second highest rate of abortions per live birth in the European Union.

“These centers exist in other countries, such as the United States, and in Romanian legislation they are not regulated,” Dobrovie said. “I proposed to the ministry of labour that these centers should be included and the occupation of assistant and counselor in the pregnancy crisis to be included in the social services.”

Bless you MP Debrovie. May the hearts of other legislators be so inclined.




Saturday, May 26, 2018

Ireland Votes Down Abortion Law by Wide Margin

It will be interesting to see some post-referendum analysis as to whether or not there was outside interference in the process. Ireland took great pains to avoid that but I wonder how successful they were. 

Meanwhile, a new abortion law will be written this year which, hopefully, will be a little more sensible than the old. I don't like abortion; I see it often as a slap in the face of God, especially when women use it rather than contraceptives. Nevertheless, the old law was often inhuman in its application and probably deserved to go. Unfortunately, the pendulum will almost certainly swing back too far, and backlash against the Catholic Church may be to blame.

Members of a women's choir 'Voices for Choice' sing after a referndum on abortion, in Dublin, Ireland, 26 May 2018. Ireland has voted overwhelmingly to legalize abortion in a historic referendum on 25 May 2018. EPA-EFE/Aidan Crawley
By Sam Howard 

UPI -- An initiative to repeal Ireland's abortion law was overwhelmingly successful, results released Saturday indicate.

Once votes from all 40 constituencies were counted, the final total indicated 66.4 percent of voters cast ballots to repeal the country's eighth amendment to its constitution in Friday's referendum, Irish broadcaster RTE reported.

The final results confirmed what many suspected the result would be. The Irish Times newspaper predicted 68 percent of voters cast ballots to change the law in an exit poll published earlier.

The country has had one of Europe's most restrictive abortion laws, which is enshrined in its constitution. Under the law, fetuses in early pregnancy are guaranteed citizenship status and women who have an illegal abortion could face up to 14 years in prison.

The United Nations Human Rights Committee has criticized the law.

The referendum could pave the law for legislation to allow for abortions as late as 12 weeks into pregnancy, or later in cases threatening a woman's health or in the event of fatal fetal abnormality.

"Remarkable day," Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar wrote Saturday on Twitter. "A quiet revolution has taken place, a great act of democracy."

Varadkar said he'd like to pass legislation for a new abortion law by the end of the year, according to The Guardian.



Friday, December 8, 2017

Amnesty Intl Risks Criminal Probe after Taking Soros' Funds for Pro-Abortion Campaign in Ireland

Soros and left-wing organizations don't seem to have any respect whatsoever for a country's laws. It is one thing to oppose a law, and something else altogether to break another law in order to oppose the first. Yet they claim the high moral ground.

© Amnesty International Ireland / Facebook

Amnesty International Ireland could face criminal charges after an Irish regulatory body found that it broke the law by accepting a donation from George Soros’ Open Society Foundation for an abortion rights campaign.

Ireland’s Standards in Public Office Commission informed the human rights organisation that it had breached Irish law by accepting funds from a foreign donor and may face criminal investigation, Amnesty International Ireland said in a statement.

The organisation says the €137,000 grant received from the Open Society Foundation (OSF) last year was used to support a campaign to ensure abortion laws in Ireland comply with human rights.

Abortion is a 'human right'???? "Life' is a human right; the most basic and fundamental of all human rights! Abortion is the death of a human - the opposite of a human right! What lunacy!

Amnesty has blasted the law as draconian and defiantly stated it would not comply with the order to return the funds.

“Amnesty International will not be complying with the instruction from the SIPOC and will deploy every means at its disposal to challenge this unfair law,” Executive Director of Amnesty International Ireland, Colm O’Gorman said.

O’Gorman claimed on Twitter that Irish law was “being weaponized by those opposed to our work.”


The Electoral Act 1997, as amended in 2001, forbids overseas donations of more than €100 to “third party” organisations for “political purposes”. Violation of this law can carry a penalty of up to three years imprisonment.

Earlier this year, it emerged that three organisations including the Abortion Rights Campaign and Amnesty International had received funds from the Open Society Foundation.

The Abortion Rights Campaign were ordered by SIPO to return the funds or face criminal investigation – an order they duly complied with, however, no such order was made against Amnesty International.

The organization said it was using the grant to carry out opinion polling and “research into models of abortion law reform that might bring Ireland into compliance with its international human rights obligations” – an explanation apparently accepted at the time, reported The Irish Times.

O’Gorman says it is unclear why the body reversed its decision, but noted that some groups and media have been framing their campaign to reform Ireland’s abortion law as ‘controversial’ or ‘too political.’ “They have also portrayed foreign funding as somehow sinister,” he said.

If it comes from Soros, it probably is sinister!

Amnesty International is now calling on the Irish government to urgently amend the Electoral Act so that civil society groups are not so “punitively” restricted in their access to funding.

'Punitively'??? Aren't both sides restricted by the same law? How then can it be punitive to one side?

Soros’ Open Society Foundation is the second largest charity in the US and said to be the most influential around the globe. It has been accused of undermining democracy in several countries – a charge denied by the NGO.

And if it is true, it's justified. Many a liberal believes that the end justifies the means, regardless of how illegal or onerous those means.


Wednesday, July 12, 2017

El Salvador Teen Rape Victim to Appeal 30-year Sentence for Stillbirth

I dislike abortion intensely, but when people of power and responsibility act in such a cruel and vindictive manner, it only feeds the impetus of those seeking liberal abortion rights. The judge didn't believe she was raped - seriously! We're talking El Salvador here, aren't we? Meanwhile, the gang-banger who impregnated her is walking free without a care in the world. Does that sound fair in any way?

It's like the judge is stuck in a pretense that El Salvador is a righteous country. He must be aware that - Criminal youth gangs dominate life in El Salvador; an estimation of at least 60,000 young people belong to gangs. El Salvador experiences some of the highest murder rates in Latin America; it is also considered an epicenter of the gang crisis, along with Guatemala and Honduras. - Wikipedia.


Evelyn Beatriz Hernandez Cruz was sentenced on Friday to 30 years for aggravated homicide after she says was raped, became pregnant and miscarried. 

A network of activists in El Salvador say they won't stop fighting for Evelyn Beatriz Hernandez Cruz, a young woman who was handed a 30-year prison sentence last week for aggravated homicide after she gave birth to a stillborn baby.

"That is an injustice and we're going to fight. We're going to appeal the case and also we are going to fight until the end," Sara Garcia told As It Happens guest host Laura Lynch.

Garcia — a member of the Colectiva Feminista and Citizens Association for the Decriminalization of Abortion in El Salvador — was in the courtroom with Hernandez's mother when the 19-year-old was sentenced.

San Salvador, El Salvador

"She was really sad and she broke into sobs in that moment.… She had a hope that that day she was going to be released and that didn't happen," Garcia said. "Her mother was really, really sad, upset. She was saying, 'They are lying. My daughter is innocent.'"

Hernandez was convicted of aggravated homicide under El Salvador's hardline anti-abortion laws after she suffered a third-trimester stillbirth in a bathroom in April 2016. 

The judge accepted the prosecution's argument that her failure to seek medical attention before or during childbirth was tantamount to murder. 

But Hernandez maintains she didn't know she was pregnant at the time.

In the months before, she said, she'd been repeatedly raped by a gang member in the small community where she lived. She said she did not report the attacks out of fear — of both gang violence and the criminal justice system.

"The judge did not believe what Evelyn said — did not believe that she did not know she was pregnant," Garcia said.

An activist holds a sign reading 'Legal Abortion' on International Women's Day in San Salvador, El Salvador, March 8, 2017. (Jose Cabezas/Reuters)

Hernandez is one of dozens of women who have been jailed in El Salvador after suffering from complications during childbirth. Garcia said she knows of at least 20 such cases.

Miscarriages and stillbirths in El Salvador are often treated as suspected abortions, which have been considered murder under Salvadoran law since 1997.

Even if a baby survives childbirth complications, the mother can be charged with attempted murder.

Garcia said Hernandez's supporters will keep fighting for her and for all women in her situation.

"We really want to change this reality of injustice in El Salvador," she said.



Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Abortions Banned in Russian City for 1 Day in Memory of Biblical ‘Massacre of Innocents’

© Lesya Polyakova / Sputnik

Abortions have been banned for one day at all public medical institutions in a central Russian city, in symbolic memory of the biblical ‘Massacre of the Innocents’ in Bethlehem by King Herod.

The step was taken at the initiative of the local diocese and regional health authorities.

“On this day all public health institutions of the Yaroslavl Region are prohibited to perform abortions; certain events have been scheduled aimed at combating the murder of babies in the womb and protecting the priceless value of motherhood,” the press service of the Archdiocese of Yaroslavl said on Wednesday. 

The organizers behind the initiative have also urged private clinics to join the abortion ban.

I don't think that's going to happen! It's about money and religion. Abortion clinics are all about money and reject anything to do with religion.

The campaign was launched in symbolic memory of the “Bethlehem babies murdered by King Herod, who wanted to kill the infant Jesus when he was born.” 

Although there is no information about the massacre of the infants on the orders of Roman King Herod in ancient historical sources, it is mentioned in the Gospel of Matthew and later Christian texts. The Bethlehem innocents are revered by Christians as saints, as they were the first to suffer for Christ. 

The Yaroslavl diocese also plans to carry out a ‘Candle of Memory’ campaign both for the infants killed by Herod and those who die as a result of abortion.

37% or 70% - It's Russia; official numbers are always wrong

According to Deputy Prime Minister for Social Affairs Olga Golodets, for every 1.9 million newborn babies in Russia, there are 700,000 abortions.

The head of the Women for Life movement, Natalya Moskvitina, has other figures, however – she claims some 70 percent of pregnancies in Russia are consciously aborted.

"Seventy percent of pregnancies end in abortion. Three-quarters of marriages end in divorce during the first four years of life together. Every three seconds a baby is killed in abortion clinics," Moskvitina said, referring to figures obtained in the fall of 2016, as cited by Interfax news agency. 

Rostov Kremlin, Yaroslavl Region, Russia

According to Moskvitina, “abortions are business" in the first place, and those who are involved in it tell people that it is a "principle of freedom."

"It is legalized, and every woman faces this terrible choice. No one tells her […] the norm is to fight for your child," she said.

The Interreligious Council of Russia has expressed concern over mass abortion. Last summer, the council - consisting of leaders and representatives of Orthodox Christianity, Islam, Judaism and Buddhism - pointed out in a statement that Russia has one of the highest abortion rates in the world, stating that "the number of the violently aborted lives in mothers' womb on various estimations totals to a million or even exceeds a million." 

In September last year, Patriarch Kirill signed a petition calling for a ban on abortions covered by Russian medical insurance. It had been launched by the public movement For Life and was backed by over 300,000 people, including Russia’s Chief Rabbi Berl Lazar, Supreme Mufti of Russia Talgat Tadjuddin, and Russian Ombudsman for Children Rights Anna Kuznetsova. 

Kuznetsova, who is herself a mother of six, noted Russia already has an anti-abortion program in the form of special consultation rooms at medical centers, yet in 2015, only some 266 women consulted specialists in this program, a mere 25 percent of them deciding against having an abortion. 

Although the petition only called for abortions to be excluded from the list of medical services covered by universal healthcare, Christian pro-life activists behind it said it was only the first step towards a full ban on abortion, which they will be pushing for in future. 

However, a nationwide public opinion poll conducted soon after the petition was launched showed that an overwhelming majority of Russians are against the initiative. According to the results of the research conducted by state-owned VTSIOM, 72 percent of Russians are currently against a legislative ban on abortions, while 21 percent said that they would support such move. Only 4 percent of respondents said they considered the procedure unacceptable under any circumstances.

Yaroslavl Region, Russia

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Ohio ‘Heartbeat’ Abortion Law Moves to Kasich for Approval

    © Sebastian Kahnert / DPA / Global Look Press

Ohio Governor John Kasich may sign into law a bill that bans abortion once a heartbeat can be detected in a fetus, making the state one of the most restrictive in the US on the issue. Sponsors hope that under the Trump administration the bill will avoid being overturned.

The bill was passed on Tuesday night by the state House hours after the legislation was approved by the Senate. Kasich, an abortion opponent, earlier voiced concerns over the constitutionality of the law, but did not comment on whether he would sign it.

The bill was defeated twice in the past in the state Senate, but was revived and passed the legislature after Donald Trump’s presidential victory, Senate President Keith Faber said.

With a vacant seat in the US Supreme Court to be filled by Trump, proponents of the bill hope the justices may uphold the ban once an ensuing challenge against it reaches the top judiciary body.

"I think it has a better chance than it did before," Faber said.

Abortion was legalized in the US by the Supreme Court over four decades ago, but individual states are allowed to restrict the right to end pregnancy to certain cases. The Ohio bill gives a short window of about six weeks before a fetus heartbeat can be detected. It also makes exceptions for women whose life is under threat due to their pregnancy, but not to victims of rape or incest.

Similarly restrictive abortion laws were earlier defeated by lower courts in North Dakota and Arkansas, with the Supreme Court refusing to hear appeals on those rulings in January, Reuters reported.

The current abortion law in Ohio requires a mandatory waiting period and counseling before the procedure can be performed. Clinics performing it are only available in one out of 10 counties of the state, according to NARAL Pro-Choice America, an organization fighting for the repeal of laws restricting the right of women to terminate pregnancy.

"Banning women from getting a medical procedure is out of touch with Ohio values and is completely unacceptable," the advocacy group’s Ohio branch said in comments on the bill.

"A medical procedure"! That's a new name for it. Stopping a beating heart has many names, but 'a medical procedure' isn't one of them.

Monday, November 7, 2016

High Court in Ireland Rules an Unborn Baby Has a Right to Life

 INTERNATIONAL   LIFE INSTITUTE     DUBLIN, IRELAND


A High Court judge has ruled that the word ‘unborn’ in the Irish Constitution means an “unborn child” with rights beyond the right to life which “must be taken seriously” by the State.

The Irish Times reports that  Mr Justice Richard Humphreys said that the unborn child, including the unborn child of a parent facing deportation, enjoys “significant” rights and legal position at common law, by statute, and under the Constitution, “going well beyond the right to life alone”.

The judgement was made in a judicial review of a deportation order.

Mr Justice Humphreys said many of those rights were “actually effective” rather than merely prospective.

He also said that Article 42a of the Constitution, inserted by a 2012 referendum, obliges the State to protect “all” children and that because an “unborn” is “clearly a child”, Article 42a applied to all children “both before and after birth”.

Niamh Uí Bhriain of the Life Institute said that this was a significant ruling which confirmed that the unborn baby was deserving of all the rights and protections to which every other person was entitled. She added that the ruling was a blow to those who were seeking to discriminate against children before birth and who argued that the preborn child was not fully human or entitled to human rights.

“This is an important ruling which provides useful clarity at a time when the media and abortion campaigners are arguing that preborn children should be denied even the most fundamental right – the right to life,” she said. “Mr Justice Humphreys has ruled that preborn children not only have a right to life, but that the State is obliged to ensure that all the rights accruing to every child are upheld for children before birth.”

“It is interesting that in his decision Mr Justice Humphreys dismissed as ‘entirely without merit’ the argument made by the State that the only relevant right of an unborn child was a right to life,” she said.

“This ruling reminds us that we are a human being from conception and that our human rights must be protected and upheld from that point,” said the Life Institute spokeswoman.

Thursday, September 8, 2016

‘Abortion is Murder’ Initiative Could be Headed to Ohio Voters

FILE PHOTO © Rick Wilking
FILE PHOTO © Rick Wilking / Reuters

Three Christians in Ohio are defiantly trying to overrule the landmark Supreme Court decision Roe v Wade by proposing a voter referendum that would classify abortion as “aggravated murder.”

Those who procure or carry out an abortion could be facing 15 years to life in prison, if the initiative makes it on the ballot and passes.

This will, of course, start a bunch of people running around in circles with their hair on fire screaming that women have a right to their bodies. They do! They have the right to not be pregnant if they want and there are many ways to ensure that. But once a woman is pregnant, that right ends. A woman's right to her body is superseded by a child's right to live. That is the only thing that makes any sense whatsoever. 

The proposal, which was submitted to Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine’s office this month, details how it wants to "criminalize the killing, known as ‘abortion,’ of all pre-born human beings in the Ohio Constitution.”

Its aim is to “prohibit abortion of all unborn human beings, without exception, and classifying it as aggravated murder in the state of Ohio."

The proposal describes an "unborn human" as "an individual organism... from fertilization, whether fertilization occurs inside or outside of a human, until live birth."

There were an uncounted number of signatures attached to the proposal, with 1,000 valid signatures of registered voters needed for approval, according to the Cleveland Dispatch.

The proposed law would not affect “genuine contraception,” human eggs or in-vitro fertilization (IVF).

Anthony Dipane, one of the three who proposed the bill, explained to the newspaper that they are "just three Christians in Ohio” who are not connected to any anti-abortion rights groups.

“We don't take donations. We don't pay people. We're financing this out of our pockets at this point,” he said.

DeWine, a Republican known for his opposition to abortion, has until September 12 to determine if the wording of the proposal is accurate, fair and truthful, as well as to verify the signatures.

If all is in order, it’s then passed onto the Ballot Board. The amendment's proponents would have to secure just under 306,000 signatures to secure its place on the ballot, which would most likely be in November 2017.

From this stage, pro-choice advocates could then challenge the amendment, with the Ohio Supreme Court having exclusive jurisdiction over its constitutionality.

The proposal is only the second of its kind across the US, with Oklahoma’s Supreme Court rejecting a similar measure in March 2016, ruling that would be in contravention of Roe v Wade.

Monday, May 9, 2016

Queensland Bill Would Legalize Abortion Up To 9 Months



Queensland abortion bill: MP says procedure
'should not be a crime'

By Josh Bavas and Louisa Rebgetz

A private member's bill to legalise abortion for women up to nine months' pregnant in Queensland will be tabled in State Parliament today by independent MP Rob Pyne.

This story is particularly close to my heart as one of my granddaughters just gave birth to two babies at only 32 weeks - that's 7 months. They are both health and happy and growing. How can killing a viable baby after 6 or 7 months be anything but first degree murder?

Opposition Leader Tim Nicholls said the LNP partyroom would consider the bill, while Labor MPs would be allowed a conscience vote.

Rob Pyne
Rob Pyne said he was committed to progressive change.
(Supplied: Queensland Labor)
The bill does not contain provisions to prevent late-term abortions but Mr Pyne said he would be open to amendments.

The Member for Cairns, who resigned from the ALP in March, said he was drawn into politics to make progressive changes in the state.

"It's not 1899, abortion should not be a crime," Mr Pyne said.

"The world is changing very quickly and unfortunately our politicians aren't."

Deputy Premier Jackie Trad has not confirmed whether she would support Mr Pyne's bill was for a conscience vote.

"Every single member of the Australian Labor Party has a conscience vote on this matter," she said.

Opposition Leader Tim Nicholls said the LNP was yet to formulate its position.

"We'll be looking at it and we'll be considering it in the partyroom as we always do with these important issues to Queenslanders," he said.

Mr Pyne said he had the support of fellow crossbench MP Billy Gordon, while Shane Knuth and Rob Katter were yet to make their views clear.

Deputy Premier Jackie Trad, Minister for Women, Shannon Fentiman, and Leader of the House, Stirling Hinchliffe, this morning attended a rally outside Parliament House in support of change.

Open to amendments to prevent late-term abortion

The Queensland Criminal Code has prohibited abortion since 1899, but case law based on a 1986 ruling means abortions are permissible if there is serious danger to the mother's life or her physical or mental health.

Amendments introduced in 2009 also allowed for surgical and medical (or chemical) abortions in Queensland.

In New South Wales, an abortion is only lawful if a woman's doctor believes on reasonable grounds it is necessary to avoid a serious danger to her life or her physical or mental health, taking into account economic, social and medical factors.

The ACT, Victoria and Tasmania have all decriminalised abortion, making it legal up to nine months' gestation.

However, late-term abortions in Tasmania, defined as past four months, and Victoria, where late-term is classed beyond six months, require approval from two medical practitioners.

Mr Pyne said his bill did not include any such provisions.

"It may be that, as part of the committee process and as part of this bill going through, that either of the major parties or anyone may move amendments and I'd be happy to look at those," he said.

The bill will go to a parliamentary committee for consideration before being presented to Parliament for debate.

Pre-teens seek abortions in private hospitals

Emily's List supports progressive female Labor candidates trying to reach Parliament, Ms Trad is a member.

"We certainly have a few members of the State Government and they will be supporting the woman's right to choose," Lisa Carey from the group said.

Queensland counselling service Children by Choice said about two children under 14 were seeking advice about an abortion every month.

Last month a 12-year-old Rockhampton girl was forced to go to the Supreme Court to get permission to have one done.

Counsellor Liz Price said most of the abortions are happening in private hospitals as current laws make it too difficult to use the public system.

"We see access significantly compounded for under 14-year-olds," she said.

"There are only two private clinics in all of Queensland that have a licence that allows them to perform procedures of that nature on an under 14-year-old one in the far north of Queensland and one down here in south east Queensland."

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Biggest Abortion Case in Decades Leaves Supreme Court Divided

Police keep watch as protesters demonstrate in front of the U.S. Supreme Court on the morning that the court took up a major abortion case in Washington March 2, 2016 © Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

The US Supreme Court heard arguments Wednesday over a Texas law placing tough new restrictions on abortion providers that would potentially shut down all but nine or 10 clinics across the entire state.

The justices appeared to be closely divided on the merits of the case, and with the recent death of Justice Antonin Scalia, the possibility is there that the court will not be able to reach a majority decision. If it remains deadlocked in a 4-4 vote, the Texas law would remain on the books, thanks to a lower court ruling in favor of the legislation. However, the case would not establish a national precedent.

Essentially, the law mandates that any doctor performing abortions also have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles of the clinic they work in, so that they could deliver patients there in the event of an emergency. The law also requires clinics to upgrade their standards to meet those of an ambulatory surgical center.

The number of abortion clinics in Texas has already shrunk from 40 to 18 as a result of the law. If the restrictions are upheld by the high court, it is expected that another eight or nine will shutter their doors, and that other states would try to implement similar legislation.

Outside the Supreme Court, hundreds of pro-life and pro-choice activists gathered to support abortion rights. Pro-choice advocates held up signs and pushed the justices to strike down the regulations.

One speaker argued that anti-choice supporters were using "under handed schemes to take women's rights away."

Elsewhere, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan made a brief appearance to meet with pro-life protesters. Some women who participated held signs reading, "I am a prolife feminist."

During Wednesday’s hearing, the four liberal justices expressed opposition to the law, Reuters reported. Opponents have argued that the regulations impose an “undue burden” on women, making it more difficult for them to seek out an abortion while doing little to make the procedure safer.

The conservative bloc of the court, meanwhile, questioned whether the rules have actually forced as many clinics to close as pro-choice activists claim. Supporters of the law have argued that the regulations are intended to improve safety standards for women and protect their health.

As is often the case, the fate of the law rests largely in the hands of Justice Anthony Kennedy. Although he is a conservative, he has frequently voted with liberals in the past. On Wednesday, he said Texas would experience a “capacity problem” if more clinics close, USA Today reported. Additionally, he cited the fact that more women have been receiving surgical abortions rather than medication-induced ones as a result of the law.

"This may not be medically wise," he said, as trends around the US are leaning increasingly towards medication.

If Kennedy rules with the liberals to strike down the law, then other abortion restrictions across the US may also come into the crosshairs. Various states have tried to impose mandates such as 24-hour waiting periods.


However, Kennedy also expressed interest in the idea of sending the case back down to the lower courts so that they could study the law’s effects more closely. More research would determine whether abortion clinics are actually closing because of the new regulations, as well as whether the clinics that would remain could realistically attend to the needs of the state’s women.

Close to 2 million women would live more than 50 miles away from the nearest abortion clinic should the law take effect, according to the Guardian. Some 750,000 would be more than 200 miles away.

Since the landmark Roe v. Wade case protected the right to abortion in 1973, the Supreme Court has ruled that any regulations on the procedure cannot create an “undue burden” on women. As pro-life supporters have failed to block abortion in general, they have recently begun placing more limits on clinics and doctors, leaving the courts to decide whether they qualify as burdensome.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

OMG - Illinois GOP Bill Proposes Cutting Aid to Single Mothers, Including Rape Victims

Illinois House committee studying heartless, evil bill
© Siu Chiu / Reuters

A new bill proposed by Illinois Republicans would strip single mothers and their children of financial aid. The draft law makes no excuse for rape victims who decide not to abort, but excludes in vitro mothers.

Currently in committee, the bill proposed by two GOP members, John Cavaletto and Keith Wheeler, would deny newborns birth certificates if their mothers will not or cannot provide the name of a biological father. 

“Absent DNA evidence or a family member’s name, a birth certificate will not be issued and the mother will be ineligible for financial aid from the State for support of the child,” the bill reads.

The bill would also take away the state’s financial support for a child born to a single mother if she fails to provide the name of the biological father or bring DNA test results identifying him within 30 days.

The draft law says that “a family that does not comply with the Vital Records Act provision concerning birth certificates of unmarried mothers shall be ineligible for aid for support of the child.

If passed into law, amendments would have to be attached to the current law that does not require paternity records.

The Vital Act stipulates that if “the mother was not married to the father of the child at either the time of conception or the time of birth, the name of the father shall be entered on the child’s birth certificate only if the mother and the person to be named as the father have signed an acknowledgment of parentage in accordance with subsection.”

Despite the anti-abortion stance generally taken by Republicans, the bill reportedly makes no exception for victims of rape or incest. Yet, at the same time, the new requirements would not apply to “artificially inseminated mothers.”

This is insanely unfair and qualifies for outright evil in my books. If you are a Republican, please do not let this act pass. 

What kind of evil would drive 2 state representatives to do something like this? I hope to God that those two jerks don't go around calling themselves Christians; it's bad enough being an embarrassment to the Republican Party, but to God as well!!!??

Friday, February 19, 2016

Murderous Insanity in NY State Assembly

New York Assembly Passes Bill Allowing Shooting Babies Through the Heart With Poison to Kill Them

STEVEN ERTELT      ALBANY, NY

New York state Assembly

The New York state Assembly proved that promoting the best interest of women apparently includes pushing late-term abortions.

For years, the state legislature has been embroiled in a battle over a package of bills designed to push the interests of women. The bills have been held up in part because it includes a measure that would promote late-term abortions in the Empire State. Despite strenuous support from pro-abortion Gov. Andrew Cuomo, the legislature has refused to pass the package of bills because of the abortion measure.

The abortion bill would allow an abortion procedure that has abortionists shooting poison through the hearts of unborn children to kill them.

Now, the state Assembly has approved part of the package of bills — specifically the abortion promotion measure Governor Cuomo strenuously supports.

Today in a vote of 94-49 the New York State Assembly approved passage of AB 6221, the extreme stand-alone 10th point from the previously packaged 10-point Women’s Equality Act, which would expand third-trimester abortions and allow non-doctors to perform abortions. Since 2013, abortion advocates have been holding the Women’s Equality Act hostage to this single dangerous bill, refusing to break the 10-point bill up. This session, however, the will of the voters was finally heard, and the stand-alone bills have been considered.

I think we need a Baby's Equality Act!

“Expanding cruel and brutal third-trimester abortions has long been a goal of the anti-life lobby who never met an abortion they didn’t like,” said Lori Kehoe, New York State Right to Life executive director. “With no regard for the fully developed unborn baby who is violently dismembered, or otherwise killed, the New York State Assembly once again put the abortion lobby above New York State women and their children.”

New York state Assembly

AB 6221, sponsored by Assemblywoman Glick, would change existing New York State law, which currently allows for abortion in the third trimester when the mother’s life is in danger, to allow abortion on-demand throughout all nine months. The law would be changed to allow abortion for any reason deemed “relevant to the well-being of the patient” including physical, emotional, psychological, and familial factors, and the mother’s age.

With no consideration for the well-being of the baby, even if it's viable.

AB 6221 has no interest in the life of the living, developed, unborn human child, stripping away any protections the smallest members of our human family have.

“We now look once again to the Senate to hold the line in defense of the children which happens to also be in accordance with the will of the rest of the people,” added Kehoe. “It is ridiculous that in 2015, with all the technology at our disposal, we are still arguing whether or not an eight month old baby in the womb deserves protection.

It is doubtful that our descendants will look kindly upon this period in our history, when we fought for the right to dismember babies weeks, days and even minutes before birth.”

New York State Right to Life will be discussing this and other attacks on members of the human family at their free-to-the-public Lobby for Life Day on April 29 at the Legislative Office Building in Albany.

I could be wrong but it seems to me that when you stop a heart from beating, you're ending a life. How else could you possibly interpret that?

Thursday, February 11, 2016

Northern Irish Assembly Rejects Abortion Law Change

Betrayal of women or faithful to sanctity of life?

© Regis Duvignau / Reuters
My subtitle above is a most unfortunate reality - we should never have come to a place where we have to choose a child's right to live over its mother's right to not be pregnant. It's an absurd argument since women have any number of ways to not get pregnant and that's really it, isn't it? If you don't want to have a baby, don't get pregnant! I know there are many situations where that is not a choice for a girl, but most abortions are not performed on women who had no choice in whether or not they get pregnant. That is a disgrace and is morally repugnant at best.

Members of the Northern Irish Assembly have voted against proposals to relax strict abortion laws. Human rights groups said the decision has “betrayed women and girls.”

The Stormont assembly voted 59 to 40 against the legislation, which proposed to allow abortions in the case of fatal fetal abnormality and sexual crime. 

Not sure I agree with preventing abortions of fatally abnormal fetuses, however, I suspect that could be misused. I don't know if that was their reasoning for rejecting it or not.

Amnesty International said the decision will allow Northern Ireland to maintain its “Victorian” and “restrictive” laws, and called on the devolved authority to bring its legislation in line with the rest of the UK.

Despite a debate which lasted until nearly midnight, the outcome of the vote was predictable, after the Democratic Unionists and the SDLP announced they would not support amendments to the law.

Abortion is permitted in the rest of the UK under the 1967 Abortion Act, but in Northern Ireland terminations are only allowed if the mental health or life of the mother is in danger.

The rejection of abortions for reason of sexual crimes, ie rape, is not a real issue since that can be covered under the 'mental health' exception. If a girl is able to carry the child while receiving counselling for the rape, she should do that. She can then give the child up for adoption if she doesn't want to keep it. 

She should also have the option of keeping the child and continuing counselling for a period afterward.

The change to legislation was proposed by Alliance Party members Trevor Lunn and Stewart Dickson. Lunn told the assembly his decision was sparked by the “painful” decision to access an abortion many years ago due to a fatal fetal condition.

In December last year, Belfast’s High Court ruled that abortion law in Northern Ireland breaches the European Convention on Human Rights.

Patrick Corrigan, Amnesty International’s Northern Ireland program director, said the laws are draconian and in need of urgent change.

“Northern Ireland’s abortion law dates from Victorian times, is among the most restrictive in the world and is in urgent need of reform. A vote to stymie change today is a further betrayal of women and girls who will continue to be forced to travel outside Northern Ireland to seek the healthcare they are denied at home.”

He said between 1,000 and 2,000 women are forced to travel abroad each year to find abortions, and “are made to feel like criminals for having done so.”

They would have felt that way even if they received their abortions in Belfast. Guilt is inevitable when you take the life of a child that God has blessed you with, as it should be.

“An extensive consultation on this issue was already conducted by the Department of Justice in 2014/2015 – it recommended a change to the law with regard to access to abortion on fatal fetal abnormality. The DUP and other Executive Ministers have had eight months to get behind the proposal from the Justice Minister and have failed to do so. More talk will tell us nothing we do not already know – that the law on abortion in Northern Ireland is unfit for purpose.”

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Northern Ireland Joins the Insanity of Abortion Rights

High Court abortion judgment in North is reflection of changing attitudes
Judge’s ruling adds momentum to recognition of women’s reproductive autonomy
Siobhán Mullally, Irish Times

David Ford: to appeal judgment. Photograph: Arthur Allison.
The Belfast High Court judgment on access to abortion in the North has rightly been described as historic. The outcome of the case taken by the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission is to be welcomed, particularly given the neglect of women’s rights and gender equality in the North over several decades.

Both the Minister for Justice, David Ford, and the Attorney General, John Larkin, have indicated that they are appealing the High Court’s judgment.

The judgment is a striking one, not only in the challenge it poses for the European Court of Human Rights but, more widely, in the attention it gives to the specific issue of women’s reproductive autonomy in seeking to balance contested rights claims on abortion.

Specifically, on the right to travel to England to secure access to an abortion, Mr Justice Mark Horner noted that it does not protect morals to export a problem to another jurisdiction and then turn a blind eye.

It was precisely this possibility to travel to another jurisdiction that contributed in no small part to the European Court of Human Rights concluding, in A, B and C v Ireland, that the interference with the rights of two of the applicants, A and B, did not ultimately lead to a violation of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, protecting the right to private life.

This finding of the court has attracted widespread criticism. It is difficult to imagine that a court would, in other circumstances, find that the freedom to travel to a neighbouring country was relevant to determining the proportionality of a state’s interference with a protected human right (in this case a woman’s right to private life).

The discriminatory impact of Ireland’s abortion laws on women who are unable to travel has been repeatedly criticised by UN bodies, marking a sharp contrast with the position taken by the European Court of Human Rights to date.

One law for the rich

As Mr Justice Horner said, the restriction on access to abortion “bites on the impoverished but not the wealthy”, meaning there is one law for the rich and another for the poor. As he also noted, the European consensus points to the need to extend the right to abortion on both sides of the Border.
Northern Ireland’s abortion regime is more restrictive than Poland’s but less restrictive than in the Republic. The only other European states with comparably restrictive regimes are Andorra, San Marino and Malta.

What impact the Northern Ireland High Court’s judgment will have on this jurisdiction has been the subject of much debate. Whether it will prompt legal or political change is uncertain, but there can be no doubt that it adds momentum to the recognition of women’s reproductive autonomy as central to the lexicon of human rights – women’s rights as human rights, to repeat the mantra of the Beijing World Conference on Women 21 years on.

The judgment of a court in the North is, of course, not binding in this jurisdiction. Equally, the European Court of Human Rights is not bound to follow its findings on the scope of Article 8 of the convention’s protection of private life. But it cannot be denied that the reasoning of the High Court, particularly on a woman’s right to autonomy and the repeated denial of that right, is significant.
Mr Justice Horner noted Northern Irish law places a disproportionate burden on victims of sexual crimes. A woman who is pregnant following rape, the judge said, is “merely a receptacle to carry the child of a rapist”, her personal autonomy “vilely and heinously invaded”. The blanket ban on abortion in such circumstances, even when the victim of rape is a child herself, can, he said, “never be said to be proportionate”. Such clarity in a court judgment on this island, on the contested subject of women’s reproductive autonomy, is rare.

Central to the conclusions of the European Court of Human Rights in the A, B and C case was the finding the current abortion regime reflected the profound moral views of the Irish people. The court found insufficient evidence the views of the majority had changed significantly since the 1983 referendum supporting the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution. Recent opinion polls, however, challenge that conclusion.

Changing views

The Horner judgment, and the willingness of the Northern Irish Human Rights Commission to take this case, point also to significantly changing views in the North. In 2008, the commission reported the issue of terminations was one of the most contested in its consultations on a bill of rights. It went on to note that there was “no clear widely accepted international standard in respect of the underlying issues”. The commission’s practice, and indeed international human rights law, have evolved significantly since 2008.

The commission has indicated it will challenge the appeals brought by both the Department of Justice and the Attorney General and will re-introduce all of the original grounds brought before the High Court, namely, access to a termination of pregnancy in circumstances of serious malformation of foetus (including fatal foetal abnormality), rape or incest. Commenting on the appeals, Chief Commissioner Les Allamby, noted that the commission was seeking to secure legal reform, “so that the human rights of women and girls are protected when facing these difficult decisions.”

Other developments on both sides of the Border have received less attention in this debate. The slow pace of reform and wavering political commitment have prompted a number of brave women and organisations to seek the support of UN human rights bodies in the struggle for change. A request to the UN Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women to conduct an inquiry into NI abortion law was submitted by the Family Planning Association, the Northern Ireland Women’s European Platform, and Alliance for Choice. This request is still pending.

In this jurisdiction, two complaints are pending before the UN Human Rights Committee against Ireland, specifically on the prohibition of abortion in cases of fatal foetal abnormality.

Given the committee’s repeated criticisms of abortion law in Ireland, there is a strong possibility that Ireland will be found to be in violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. If this happens, as a matter of international law, the State has an obligation to bring its law into conformity with the covenant.

But the government of the day may decide not to, and international law depends very much on the political will of states to comply with their legal obligations, such is the continuing force of state sovereignty. However, in the face of repeated international condemnation, the State cannot continue to deny the inhumanity of our laws and the degradation of women’s bodies that underpins such laws.

 "The degradation of women’s bodies", are you serious. That is the 'insanity' that my title refers to; the idea that abortion is about women's bodies. Abortion is about babies. The degradation of their bodies is unspeakably horrible. 

Practicing birth control by killing the baby is as evil before the birth as it is after. Those who harbour the lie that it's about women's bodies or women's rights, have a lot to answer for.

Siobhán Mullally is professor of law at University College Cork and director of the Centre for Criminal Justice and Human Rights. She is joint editor of The Irish Yearbook of International Law (Hart Publishing, Oxford)