Sunday, November 25, 2012

Planned Parenthood Has Closed 173 Clinics in Last 20 Years

Planned Parenthood has closed 173 clinics in cast 20 years.  Under the Clinton administration, a goal of 2000 was set.  They peaked at 938 in 1995 but have fallen back to 749.  Not all Planned Parenthood clinics do abortions, but they are the leading abortion provider in the United States and are the leading proponent of abortion all over the country.   
 
Jim Sedlack with American Life League says “Planned Parenthood was unable to meet its goal because of the collaborative work of three diverse groups of people—and a carefully worked-out plan of opposition.  Those groups are:

1. Pro-life activists who understand that Planned Parenthood runs the largest abortion chain in the country. That it kills, every week, twice the number of innocent human beings who died on September 11, 2001.

2. Parents who become aware of the threat that Planned Parenthood is to their children. The parents who fight Planned Parenthood come in all stripes—progressive, conservative, black, white, Hispanic, and Asian. Many actually consider themselves “pro-choice,” but do not want Planned Parenthood anywhere near their children.

3. Fiscal conservatives. They become very motivated when they realize the obscene amount of taxpayer money going to Planned Parenthood. The fact that PP received almost one-half billion dollars last year—and will probably be approaching the billion dollar mark in taxpayer money very quickly—gets them rightfully upset.

I don’t know if I agree that Americans are ready to heap Planned Parenthood onto the dust bin of history yet.  That's where they belong, but Planned Parenthood is well financed and abortion advocates, as witnessed by their willingness to say anything to get what they want, will be formidable for some time.  But they seem to suffer the more people find out about their corrosive impact, the abortion leadership and the amount of public money they receive.

That’s the good news.  Click here to read the rest of the story.


Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Judge Rules Against An Abortion For Mentally Disabled Woman.

Nevada District Court Judge Egan Walker has decided not to order an abortion for Rev. Bill and Amy Bauer’s pregnant 32-year-old mentally disabled daughter.  As we noted yesterday, Judge Walker was “presiding over hearings to determine if a 32-year-old mentally disabled woman should be permitted to carry her pregnancy to term or whether it is in her ‘best interests’ to be forced to have an abortion against the will of her parents who are her guardians.”

Their attorney, long time colleague and friend of Nevada LIFE, Jason Guinasso says, “I can confirm that this order was given by the court from the bench. Abortion is no longer an option! We have won!”  Rev. Bauer has told Nevada LIFE “A mediation session in the court room Nov 14 with the judge facilitating came to agreement that there will be no abortion. We continue to talk of other details.”

This is good news because if Judge Walker had ordered an abortion, it would have sent a clear and unmistakable message that courts can intervene in family matters and order an abortion against the family's wishes.  Letters and emails have come to the family and pro-life groups expressing outrage and concern regarding precisely these fears.

Though no abortion will be ordered, this case reveals a clear and present danger to families that something like this could happen.  Legislation is needed to send an equally clear message courts will not step in to family decisions and order abortions.

We should note that this is not just a pro-life concern.  That’s because many who are pro-choice on abortion do not want courts to order abortions against their family wishes no matter what their position is on abortion.

This case took a lot of persistence and prayer.  Guinasso himself notes tonight that “If you had been in the Court a few weeks ago and seen how determined the Court seemed to be to force Elisa to have an abortion, you would not have believed that today's ruling was possible...  It is truly a miracle how God was able to change” hearts and minds.

Thanks to everyone who offered their support and prayers.  We’ll have more to say about this case, especially in regards to the spurious proposition that abortion is safer than child birth. 

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

NV Judge May Decide For Abortion On Mentally Disabled Woman Against Family's Wishes.


In a bizarre case that can only be described as "can this possibly be happening in the United States of America," Nevada District Court Judge Egan Walker is presiding over hearings to determine if a 32-year-old mentally disabled woman should be permitted to carry her pregnancy to term or whether it is in her "best interests" to be forced to have an abortion against the will of her parents who are her guardians.
Bill and Amy Bauer of Fernley, Nevada, as judge Egan Walker eloquently notes, adopted and rescued six children from the streets of Costa Rica over 20 years ago, all of whom have fetal alcohol syndrome. 

One of their children is a 32 year old woman who is mentally handicapped and has the mental capacity and social skills of a 6 or 7year-old. Since she was 18 years old, her parents have served as her guardians, something typical in cases like this. Now she is pregnant with a healthy 14 week old baby boy or girl as a result of some sort of elopement from the group home she has been living in. The family wants her to have the baby and then place the child for adoption. The Bauers have said that their disabled daughter wants to have the baby. She does not want to kill it and several couples have expressed a desire to adopt the unborn child. We also know that Judge Walker could intervene to force an abortion.

How does this happen in America where a judge can intervene in a way that could force an abortion of a mentally disabled woman against the wishes of her family who are her guardians? Where are the allegations of abuse? What have the Bauers done wrong? How can a court interject itself into family decisions like this where there is no evidence or even charges of abuse or incompetence on the part of the guardians who are her parents, to overrule their decisions and possibly decide for an abortion of their grandchild? How can other guardians and families be safe from state intrusion and the prospect of forced abortion?

It is true that the young woman has epilepsy and that she is taking medications for it that could possibly harm the unborn child. But epileptic women have babies all the time and doctors know how to care for them. Letters from epileptic mothers have expressed outrage at the notion that their condition makes it too dangerous for them to bear children.

The mother is healthy and so is her unborn child but the court appointed attorney has acted like she is prosecuting the unborn. Her arguments demonstrate the corrupt and corrosive nature of the abortion mentality. That is, if any risk, no matter how minute, can be shown to make abortion a fraction safer than child birth (a spurious proposition), then in this mind set, abortion is warranted. This says that innocent human beings are expendable if they pose even the slightest risk to us. We even heard her ask what the psychological-emotional damage and impact could be to the mother if, with the interaction of her drugs for epilepsy, she bore a disfigured, deformed child?

This is the ugly face of abortion on display. Abortion sends the clear, unmistakable and absolutely unconscionable and intolerable message that certain classes of human beings are expendable for the benefit of other people and that some people are just not acceptable in our society. It sends the equally clear message that baby humans are means to our ends.

What's next? There are two more hearings before a decision is made on November 27. The Bauer's attorney, Jason Guinasso--we believe Jason is also the attorney for the Bauer's unborn baby grandchild-is calling expert witnesses to show that abortion is not safe and that it is not in the interest of the Bauer's mentally disabled daughter. And when women face an 81 percent added risk for mental health problems as a result of an abortion, and when 10 percent of all mental health problems are related to abortion, and when abortion poses so many physical risks, it's not beneficial for other women either. 

Judge Walker must rule out an abortion. To order an abortion would send a clear and unmistakable message that courts can intervene in family matters and order an abortion against the family's wishes. Bioethicist Wesley J. Smith warns, "If a court orders an abortion opposed by the parents/guardians of this woman, and the woman herself (who is not capable of informed consent)-absent clear and convincing evidence that the pregnancy poses a substantial risk to the woman's life... we will have entered territory once inhabited exclusively by China.