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Abortion-Racism Link
http://med.studentsforlife.org/abortion-racism-link/
"The new PPAbortsAA mass media campaign [http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2010/sep/10092308.html] is the latest effort to target Planned Parenthood's racist agenda. When will Americans and others in the world finally realize how very racist this organization is?
"If you have not read it yet, our very popular Special Report of a number of years ago, The Inherent Racism of Population Control [http://www.lifesitenews.com/waronfamily/Population_Control/Inherentracism.pdf] is a must read.
"Forward it to others. Print it out and give it to students in classes and other groups to study and discuss." [23 Sept 10, LifeSiteNews.com]
www.PPAbortsAA.org
Fact Sheet -- http://www.ppabortsaa.org/media/Abortion_Facts.pdf
"I am a life" commercial -- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6KcQJAPeS8
37-second commercial Ultimatum to encourage pregnant women to give their babies life -- http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2010/sep/10092308.html
The Inherent Racism of Population Control -- http://www.lifesitenews.com/waronfamily/Population_Control/Inherentracism.pdf
Discrimination & Racism Coming Your Way from the Culture of Death
By Judie Brown
Discrimination and racism are very bad words in today’s politically correct parlance but, apparently, this is not so when the promoters of such attitudes are pursuing an agenda focused on more abortions for black mothers.
It came as no surprise to me when columnist Star Parker recently revealed to her readers the starkly anti-African American baby actions of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The group did an about-face quicker than you can spell bigot. Here’s the story.
Recently, the Georgia Senate passed the Prenatal Nondiscrimination Act, SB 529.
The bill, which is not by any means a perfect piece of legislation, nonetheless makes it a crime to abort a child because of the preborn baby’s race or gender in most cases.
When the bill was first introduced, the Georgia NAACP endorsed it and everyone was ecstatic, but the joy was short-lived. As soon as the bill moved over to the Georgia House, the Georgia NAACP withdrew its support.
As Parker writes,
In NAACP’s press statement, [Georgia NAACP President] DuBose said they came to the realization that the bill amounted to “nothing more than using women’s health as a political tool.”
It’s not news that an abortion holocaust is taking place in black America. Blacks, about 12% of our population, account for almost 40% of the abortions that are performed nationwide each year.
Apparently, Georgia Right to
Life, realizing that their state leads the nation in the number of
abortions committed on black babies, reached out to the NAACP and one
would have expected the effort to be met with open arms.
That was not to
be, for again, politics trumped truth.
Parker analyzed it accurately
when she opined:
Particularly troubling for a matter this grave, they [Georgia NAACP]
felt no compunction to provide any serious arguments regarding concerns
about the language or provisions of the bill that provoked the change of
support. They only served up the usual political buzzwords of the
pro-abortion community about women’s “health.”
It doesn’t take much imagination to conclude that the NAACP’s priority
became politics and not the welfare of the black community, its alleged
mission.
Taking a pro-life stand would have put the Georgia NAACP out of sync
with its national organization.
The most troubling aspect of this about-face by the Georgia NAACP is
that it runs consistent with a second news item.
Just a couple of days ago, the Alan
Guttmacher Institute (AGI), Planned Parenthood’s trusty statistic
factory, issued a statement regarding a new study addressing the
disparity in the number of abortions among the poor versus the not-so
poor.
AGI reports that “[t]he proportion of abortion patients who were poor
increased by almost 60%—from 27% in 2000 to 42% in 2008.” AGI provides
the explanation for this increase, stating,
[T]he deep economic recession may also have played a role, as financial
concerns led more women to want to delay childbearing or limit the
number of children they have.
Meanwhile, abortion service providers and nonprofit abortion
funds across the country have sought to meet the growing need among poor
and low-income women by providing services on sliding fee scales and by
subsidizing abortion services through charitable donations, which may
have allowed some poor women to access services they might not have
otherwise been able to afford.
“Gaps in unintended pregnancy and abortion between poor and more
affluent women have been increasing since the mid-1990s, so—sadly—none
of this comes as a surprise,” says Sharon L. Camp, president and CEO of
the Guttmacher Institute.
“Reproductive health disparities, and health disparities more
generally, are endemic in this country and stem from broader, persistent
economic and social inequities. We need to bridge these reproductive
health gaps by ensuring that all women, regardless of their economic
circumstances, have meaningful access to the full spectrum of
information and services—both contraceptive services to reduce levels of
unintended pregnancy and abortion services.”
Camp has always had a fetish for overstatement, but in this case she is
specifically equating the push toward social and economic equality with
the act of providing more child killings in abortion centers from coast
to coast.
Further, if any female truly wants to delay child bearing,
there is a solution that does not involve killing somebody, but that’s
another topic for another time.
More to the point regarding discrimination and racism: When one reads
the actual AGI study, we discover the fact that black and Hispanic women
were “overrepresented” in the study findings.
The report also
concludes, “One policy implication of this study is that increased
restrictions on abortion services would dis¬proportionately affect poor
and low-income women, black and Hispanic women, and young adults.”
It is patently obvious that this report lays the groundwork for
increasing federal health care dollars to be spent to ensure that
minority expectant mothers do not have to carry their children to term.
What else might one expect from AGI or, for that matter, from the NAACP?
As we have learned over the years, minorities are
ongoing targets of the proponents of abortion and the practitioners
themselves as they strive to solve the poverty problem by killing the
children of the poor.
These most recent news reports give further credence to the work of Dr.
Alveda King and her upcoming “Freedom Rides.” Something dramatic must be
done to shine a light on such disparities as those exposed by the
Georgia NAACP’s actions, and pro-life Freedom Rides are the antidote.
Public witness is always the best statement anyone can make.
And as King wrote in her blog, reflecting on the recent actions in
Georgia:
The Georgia bill to outlaw abortions that are coerced or based on the
race or sex or the child died Thursday night as the legislature
adjourned for the year without taking final action on the measure.
This story makes me sad to say that I was once a member of the Georgia
Legislature. Both parties, Democrats and Republicans, had a chance to
help women and strike a blow at racism and they killed it; along with
their actions are the subsequent killings of more babies. So sad!
Dr. King is not alone in her sadness, but we should take heart because
of her outspoken, fearless defense of the human person. As one article
about her relates,
Dr. Alveda King, niece of the late Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. … called
abortion “selfish,” “racist,” and among the worst inhumanities of our
times.
"Abortion and racism are both symptoms of a fundamental human error,"
King said, according to a released statement.
"The error is thinking that when someone stands in the way of our wants,
we can justify getting that person out of our lives. Abortion and
racism stem from the same poisonous root, selfishness,” she added.
King continued, "We create the deceptions that the other person is less
important, less worthy, less human."
“We are all fully human. When we face this truth, there is no
justification for treating those who look different than us as lesser
beings. If we simply treat other people the way we’d like to be treated,
racism, abortion, and other forms of inhumanity will be things of the
past,” she said.
King, who had two abortions, has spoken frequently at pro-life rallies
about the traumatic, lingering effects of abortion on women and its
connection to racism.
The challenge is to tell the truth; King is doing that...
[6May10, ALL Pro-Life Today, Judie Brown is president of American Life
League]
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