Thursday, February 9, 2012

ALL PRO-LIFE TODAY REPORT 2/9/2012

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Thursday, February 9, 2012
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Hell hath shown its fury when Planned Parenthood was scorned. Planned Parenthood head Cecile Richards showed just how deep fury can run as she unleashed a coup to destroy Komen for the Cure or force it into submission, following Komen's change in funding criteria that would exclude the abortion giant from future grants.

 

When Komen attempted late last year to quietly stop future Planned Parenthood grants, Richards apparently went to work right away behind the scenes, putting together a campaign that would force Komen to continue funding it or pay the ultimate price of being publicly destroyed, despite an ongoing investigation into its handling of government funds.

[ Read the full article here. ]

 

  

     
                               

  


 

HEADLINES
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Reuters

Reproductive rights advocates on Wednesday asked a federal judge in Brooklyn to make the "morning-after pill" immediately available to girls of all ages without a prescription. The move by a coalition headed by the Center for Reproductive Rights attempts to override a decision by U.S. Secretary for Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius that maintains the requirement of a prescription for girls age 16 and younger.


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Catholic News Agency

At Shippensburg University, female students who hook-up for drunken sex on Saturday will find it easy to dispose of just-conceived babies on Monday or Tuesday. A quick trip to the vending machine is all it takes. Easy. Kind of like buying a bag of Doritos.


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Life Site News

The conundrum faced by the organ transplant industry, that the removal of vital organs kills the "donor," can be "easily obviated by abandoning the norm against killing," two leading U.S. bioethicists have said. In an article titled, "What Makes Killing Wrong?" appearing in last month's Journal of Medical Ethics, the authors have moved the argument forward by admitting that the practice of vital organ donation ignores "traditional" medical ethics. "Traditional medical ethics embraces the norm that doctors ... must not kill their patients. This norm is often seen as absolute and universal. In contrast, we have argued that killing by itself is not morally wrong, although it is still morally wrong to cause total disability."