COMMENTARY | | Planned Parenthood's Long-Standing War on God History has shown that Planned Parenthood holds religion and a belief in God with much disdain. With the release of a recent study regarding the use of contraceptives, this organization attempts to make it seem like it is OK that people with strong religious beliefs have no problems using contraception-and do so regularly. Judie Brown will help us see the fallacy behind this and reiterates the reasons why taxpayer funding cannot continue for Planned Parenthood. [ Read today's commentary here. ]
If you know of someone who could benefit from receiving Pro-Life Today, we ask that you please forward this message and ask them to subscribe. American Life League works hard on a daily basis to provide relevant news, which is made possible by your donations. | HEADLINES | | Five Truths about Planned Parenthood National Review As the 2012 budget battles began, Clare Coleman, CEO of the National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association, took to the pages of the Washington Post. In a piece called "Five Myths about Planned Parenthood," she argued that defunding the organization was an ignoble goal for members of Congress looking to cut the bloated federal budget. In presenting Planned Parenthood as mainly focused on prevention, Ms. Coleman neglects to mention several statistics, gleaned from the organization's own annual reports and fact sheets, that illustrate its heavy (and increasing) involvement in abortion, as well as its practices that routinely place women's health and safety secondary to its own bottom line. | Vandals attack pro-life cemetery display Life Site News In the midst of Holy Week, a Cemetery of the Innocents Display at a Pennsylvania college was vandalized and desecrated by individuals identifying themselves in red paint as "pro-choice." | Obama wants more 'death panel' power World Net Daily Most of the legal challenges to Obamacare, the president's signature legislation that allows the federal government to take over health-care decision-making, focus on the "unconstitutional individual mandate" that defines sitting in one's living room as "interstate commerce" and demands the purchase of government-approved health insurance. However, there's a new round of alarms developing over what critics have described as the ultimate "death panel," concerns that have been raised because Barack Obama himself suggested giving an already-unaccountable board more authority. | |