Showing posts with label Abortion Rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abortion Rights. Show all posts

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Huckabee is horrible

Huckabee is a horrible man with a nasty conservative Christian vision for America. I’m happy knowing he has no chance at winning the race for the Whitehouse in 2016. His views on rape and abortion are extreme. Huckabee: 10-Year-Old Rape Victim Should Have Been Forced To Give Birth.

The former Arkansas governor who is seeking the Republican presidential nomination called the girl's rape a tragedy in an interview with CNN's Dana Bash on "State of the Union" Sunday.

But he said: "Let's not compound a tragedy by taking yet another life."

"A 10-year-old girl being raped is horrible. But does it solve a problem by taking the life of an innocent child? And that's really the issue," Huckabee said.

- via Crooks and Liars
His answer was essentially, fuck the little girl.

Monday, January 13, 2014

Please shut your business down James Dobson. Please.

James Dobson would rather shut down that give required coverage to his employees. I don’t think that’s a bad thing. In fact, I want to encourage him to shut his business down now matter what. Do it as a sign of protest. 

"The evangelist James Dobson still refuses to comply with the Obamacare legislation.   His staunch opposition to the plan, which requires employers to cover abortifacients – or substances that induce abortion, made headlines once again this week.  During an interview, Dobson made it clear that his organization refuses to abide by the abortifacients portion of the birth control mandate, even if it means shutting down his organization.  He went on to say,

‘We are suing (HHS Secretary) Kathleen Sebelius for forcing or trying to force all of us to give abortifacients medications to our employees,’ and I just absolutely refuse to do it.  We’ll close down before I’ll do it.’"

Source: James Dobson Says He Would Rather Shut Down Than Comply With Birth Control Mandate:

Of course, even if he loses his fight he will not shut down. We all know this already. Fanatics like Dobson won’t go that away. 

Monday, December 23, 2013

The Abortion War

This is a powerful documentary. It's called "The Abortion War": Fault lines by Al Jazeera Engilsh.

Friday, August 16, 2013

'I am special' says Missouri Rep. Paul Wieland

“I see abortion-inducing drugs as intrinsically evil, and I cannot in good conscience preach one thing to my kids and then just go with the flow on our insurance...”

Missouri Rep. Paul Wieland is Catholic and wants to make a point.

According to a report from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Wieland had been able to opt out of contraceptive coverage in previous years but was recently notified that it had become a requirement in the state plan, which he qualifies for as a member of the Legislature.

“In July I got a letter saying that opting out was no longer an option for me, and it really kind of upset me because I’m a devout Catholic,” Wieland told the Missouri Times.

While refusing to comment on the specifics of the case, Wieland’s attorney Timothy Belz acknowledged that the couple may be the only plaintiffs in the country currently seeking to be exempted as individuals. Belz told the Post-Dispatch that the legal precedent in cases filed by employers is mixed, but if Wieland prevails “it will be of great value to other families.”

Source: Republican lawmaker sues the federal government to keep his daughters from using birth control

Hey Paul! I'm pretty sure that it will only become an issue for you if you or your daughters choose to have an abortion. Otherwise, this is just a political stunt. And remember Paul, when your daughters seek an abortion (and the numbers tell us this is possible), they you get to pay for it yourself. 

Let me give you another out. Resign. Leave government in protest and go find a job in the private sector where you can practice your religion in private. 

Links to other posts on this issue:

Friday, August 09, 2013

Ken Cuccinelli must be stopped

Ken Cuccinelli is a strong supporter of these crazy religious clinics, and now he wants to be governor of Virginia. He must be stopped. This is superstitious madness. 

Read this: Undercover footage reveals more crazy "crisis pregnancy center" lies

Crisis pregnancy centers lie to women, and now there is more audio to prove it.

A counseling session covertly recorded by a reproductive rights advocate from NARAL Pro-Choice Virginia reveals, once again, the kind of dubious information (and baldfaced lies) staff members at these anti-choice centers are passing off as legitimate medical advice.

Excerpts from the exchange (which you can listen to in full here):

  • Condoms are “naturally porous” and do not protect against STDs 
  • Women who have taken the birth-control pill for four years prior to their first pregnancy have a 46% increased risk of breast cancer
One forgets that young people are impressionable and can be ignorant. Why, I remember buying a family bible back as a young parent because of the strong sales pitch from a religious organization about the time of my son's births. I was an atheist at the time, plus I paid for it in installments. I'm going with ignorant and gullible.

Thursday, March 08, 2012

Their facts were flatly wrong

Politicians who link abortion to mental heath problems beware (I’m talking about your Rick Santorum). Per an article in the New York Times called: A study linking abortion and mental health problems is called false, the only published paper that tries to establish the link has been discredited by a critique in the Journal of Psychiatric Research.

“This is not a scholarly difference of opinion,” Dr. Steinberg said. “Their facts were flatly wrong. This was an abuse of the scientific process to reach conclusions that are not supported by the data.”

I cannot put a finer point on it. It makes you wonder though. If the original study was flatly wrong, what motivated Dr. Priscilla Coleman? Could it be politics?

Dr. Coleman’s work has been used to support state laws in seven states (Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah and West Virginia) requiring that women seeking an abortion be counseled regarding its negative psychological effects. A similar analysis of data in Denmark (reported last year in the British Journal of Medicine) found no support for the hypothesis that abortion increased the risk of mental disorders.

Technorati Tags: ,

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Never threaten violence

My grandfather once told me that I should, “Never threaten violence as it serves your opponents cause.” I asked him what I should do instead because threatening to beat up a bully seemed like the right thing to do back when I was 12. He said, “Do violence if necessary, but only if your cause is just.” I did not understand his real message until I was much older. It was, “Never let your opponent know what you intend to do, and don’t let your opponent control how you act.” Through other lessons I understood that the use of violence was only justified if my life was in danger. I added one saying myself, “Never interrupt your adversary when they are making a mistake.”

Why is this important? Because when we lose control and say something that we don’t mean, the consequences can be bad and your loss of control can be used against you in the service of another’s cause. Like the anti-abortion movement’s desire to stop abortions. If you lose control while walking your daughter past anti-abortion protestors, you’ve allowed yourself to be manipulated. The results can be disastrous. Like in the case of a father named Hal Cox, who threatened to shoot an anti-abortion protester in the heart if she bothered his daughter again on the way out of a clinic. The protestors called the cops, the cops responded with SWAT, and you know the rest of the story.

As the family walked in, a woman protesting the clinic asked whether she could pray for them and the baby. The man responded that he did not believe in God. He told police he felt verbally assaulted because the protesters yelled at them and told his family they were going to hell if they got an abortion, according to the report.

The family then walked into the building.

A few minutes later, the man walked out to his car. The protester again approached him, telling him, "Jesus loves him," according to the complaint.

The man then allegedly told the protester if she said anything to his daughter, who was getting an abortion, he would "put a bullet" in her heart, according to the report. The man placed his hand on his right hip as if reaching for a gun but didn't actually have a weapon, witnesses said.

The clinic was shut down for two hours. Medical procedures where suspended. The anti-abortion crowd ran with the story. The spin started soon after.

Mr. Cox was not arrested. Charges will not be filed. Guns, confiscated from his vehicle, will be returned in a few days. Move along people, there is no story here. Except that there is. Mr. Cox chose to warn his adversaries, who promptly used the information to their advantage. Point awarded to the anti-abortion team.

Friday, August 27, 2010

How do you define the word approach?

Anti-Abortion activist pastor Walter Hoye had his conviction overturned on a technicality. The appeals court thought the judge’s instructions concerning the term “approach” were vague.

In a ruling Wednesday, a three-judge Superior Court panel said trial Judge Stuart Hing had failed to tell jurors what they had to conclude before convicting Hoye.

When jurors asked Hing during deliberations to define the "approach" that the ordinance prohibited, the judge told them to use the everyday meaning of the word.

But the panel said the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a similar case from Colorado in 2000 that an abortion protester who stands still, and speaks or hands leaflets to patients who walk by, cannot be convicted of knowingly approaching the patient.

Read more: Anti-Abortion pastor's convictions overturned

I can see where it might be a problem. It’s hard to understand a word with so many different uses. Common sense would be in short supply, no wait. It seems pretty clear to me. Approach, the act of drawing spatially closer to something. What were these judges thinking?

Previous posts on Walter Hoye

Monday, August 16, 2010

12th & Delaware on HBO

I watched the HBO abortion documentary 12th & Delaware on Sunday. I found it engrossing and emotionally charged. The premise is simple, an abortion provider on one corner, and pro-life counseling center on the other. The viewer gets to watch as patients struggle with hard choices and the people involved do everything they can to further their cause. I could not turn away. There was so much passion on display from both sides that I sympathized in some ways with all of them, yet I found the tactics of the pro-life camp troubling. They will do almost anything, or say almost anything, to get a girl to carry a baby to term.

from the website:

An official selection of the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. 12th & Delaware is the latest documentary from Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, who also directed 2006’s “Jesus Camp,” which was nominated for an Academy Award for best Documentary Feature. Their other credits include “Rehab for Terrorists,” “Freakonomics The Movie” and the award-winning “the Boys of Baraka.”

What they show struck a nerve. Christian pro-life counseling services protested.

"There is much in the film that is disturbing, as is the issue of abortion. It is difficult to know where the filmmakers used artistic license or key details were withheld. However, the overall perception that the filmmakers concoct of the pregnancy center and pro-lifers in general is in the style of many 1980's journalists, who ran sound bites of 'angry, white, male' pro-life protestors and lumped the entire pro-life movement in with them. That's inaccurate and it's propaganda.

Is the film propaganda? I don’t think so. I am aware of the obvious stereotypes, and they make their appearance. What the documentary left me with was a clear depiction of people who will do anything for their cause. Even if that anything is unethical. But then, I knew that already.

Thursday, August 06, 2009

Small victories

I’ve been following anti-abortion activist Pastor Walter Hoye since his arrest and conviction for violating an Oakland order prohibiting his antics within eight feet of a woman entering or leaving the clinic. He’s been on a crusade to have the ordinance overturned as unconstitutional. A federal judge did not agree.

U.S. District Judge Charles R. Breyer in San Francisco found the law both neutral in its content and appropriately applied by police who arrested Hoye last year in front of Family Planning Specialists Medical Group, an abortion clinic near Jack London Square.

I’ve walked by the clinic myself. I’ve seen Hoye’s minions in action. I am so pleased that the ordnance was upheld. At first blush I was horrified that his free speech could be so limited. Then I did the math. Eight feet is not very big. It’s just big enough to allow a person to walk on a sidewalk without being crowed by fanatical Christian protesters. The call it a protective bubble. That sounds about right.

Sunday, May 03, 2009

Catholic meddlers

Few thing rile me more than religious leaders attempting to push their moral agenda. Bishop Martino things his position on abortion is the only tenable position. At every opportunity he slams those who he feels are out of line, like Sen. Casey.

"I do not believe he has the moral stature to stand before the graduates of a Catholic college to address them about their futures and the challenges they will face when on the most important issue of the day -- the sanctity of human life -- he cannot muster the courage to oppose the pro-abortion agenda, which is currently being promoted in Washington," Martino said in a statement.

Is abortion rights the most important issue of the day? I can think of many other competing issues. Besides, the Catholic church lost its moral imperative a long time ago.

I read a book recently where the villain, a national leader who had lead his country astray, was punished by being ignored. Nobody, not a single person, would acknowledge his existence. It seems a fitting why to handle those who hate.

Technorati tags: ,

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Pastor jailed for Oakland anti-abortion acts

Walter Hoye, an Anti-abortion activist and Baptist pastor at a Berkeley area Church, will play the martyr and spend 30 days in Jail 

A pastor at a Berkeley church was jailed Friday for 30 days after unsuccessfully arguing that an order requiring him to stay 100 yards away from an Oakland abortion clinic violates his right to free speech…

…Hoye could have disposed of the jail time in a sheriff's work detail or by volunteering. But he balked at the judge's order to stay 100 yards from Family Planning Specialists Medical Group at Second and Webster streets. Hoye argued that the order was more severe than Oakland's ordinance and stifled his First Amendment rights.

Something tells me we will see Hoye back in front of the clinic just as soon as he’s a free man. Of course, it would be a violation of his probation. I wonder if he has the guts to do two years in State prison? speech

Saturday, February 21, 2009

I'm so conflicted

Baptist Pastor Walter Hoye will spend 30 days in jail for violating an Oakland law that creates a buffer zone between anti-abortion protesters and abortion clinics. Walter Hoye is a peaceful man who carries a sign that reads “Jesus Loves You and Your Baby. Can We Help You?” From a few unbiased accounts I've read, it appears that Hoye did not harass women entering the clinic, yet he is going to jail.

Everyone who reads my blog knows that I am no fan of religion, but a am also a huge fan of free speech. I am conflicted here because I don’t like religion imprinting it’s contrived moral agenda on secular society. I tend to rebel against the message because I don’t want the message to become law. People need options.

I also support the right of people like Hoye who peacefully protest what they find morally objectionable. From the accounts I’ve read, I do not see what Hoye did as wrong. Do you?

Technorati tags: , ,