The Carnegie Stages Seeking clarity in all matters is an essential part of life, and this is certainly the case when it comes to terms to use when speaking of the stages of a preborn baby. Today's commentary will examine these stages and explain the formation of human life as a baby grows in the womb. [ Read the full article here. ]
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HEADLINES | | Dozens Protest Catholic Hospital's Relationship With Abortionist Life News A Catholic hospital in Durango, Colorado faced protests yesterday from dozens of pro-life advocates upset that Mercy Regional Medical Center associates with abortion practitioner Richard Grossman. Daniel Anguis, director of LifeGuard of Durango [an American Life League Associate group], a local pro-life group, told the Durango newspaper that Mercy shouldn't have an affiliation with Grossman. "For the hospital to claim that they're a Catholic hospital - they just can't do that by opening their doors to an abortionist," Anguis said. "They're definitely not acting Catholic by allowing an abortionist to be there. I don't think this would be a conversation or a debate at all if he was a child molester." | Educating NAACP on abortion One News Now The Life Education and Resource Network (LEARN), a pro-life African-American group, is trying to get the NAACP's attention concerning abortion. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) will not address the fact that 36 percent of abortions in the U.S. kill black babies. So, LEARN volunteers have been following the organization around the country and distributing copies of Life Dynamics' MAAFA 21, a documentary that demonstrates Planned Parenthood's connection with the eugenics movement to reduce or eliminate minority populations. | The U.N.'s Imaginary Babies The Wall Street Journal In 2004, the United Nations published demographic projections suggesting that the world in general, and the West in particular, was in real trouble: Persistently low fertility meant that the population of most industrialized nations would shrink in the coming decades. The U.N. report seemed to crystallize decades of increasingly gloomy predictions. In recent years, nearly every demographic study has painted a dire picture of the world's changing demographics. Yet when the U.N. issued its latest report this past May, it seemed almost sunny. The experts at the U.N.'s Population Division didn't just make these numbers up. They used a complicated computer model. The trick is their model is based on data from a small pool of countries which have "recovered" (sort of) from sub-replacement fertility. And most of these countries | |