Friday, February 1, 2013

ALL Pro-Life Today: How the USCCB Reacts to the Diabolical

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Friday, February 1, 2013
How the USCCB Reacts to the Diabolical
By Judie Brown
Once a child is created, he is a human being who should have all the rights of those who have lived to be born. But this is not the case. The taking of an innocent life has always been, and will always be, an evil act. Yet too many people either don't care or are too busy to worry about something that may or may not directly affect them. They fail to understand how abortion affects everyone. This lack of understanding can be traced back, in part, to lack of good leadership within the Church. Today's commentary addresses what is needed for these precious lives to be saved. 

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HEADLINES
So what if abortion ends a life? Rare candor from the 
culture of death
AlbertMohler.com
Is an unborn baby "a life worth sacrificing"? The question is horrifying, but the argument was all too real. In a recent article, Mary Elizabeth Williams of Salon.com conceded what the pro-life movement has contended all along----that from the moment of conception the unborn child is undeniably a human life. And yet, Williams argues that this unborn human life must be terminated if a woman desires an abortion. The child is a life, but, in her grotesque view, "a life worth sacrificing."

Meet abortion backer Ilyse Hogue, NARAL's incoming president
Live Action News
NARAL Pro-Choice America's outgoing president, Nancy Keenan, aptly summarized the abortion movement's greatest fear: millennials are much more passionate about life than they are about abortion. Recognizing the dire need for someone newer and fresher in its camp, NARAL has chosen the somewhat younger Ilyse Hogue to replace Nancy Keenan as president. Keenan's tenure is coming to a close after almost ten years, and a plethora of pro-aborts have been voicing their enthusiasm for NARAL's selection.

Court halts HHS mandate for Indiana auto lighting business
Citizen Link
A Catholic-owned company in Madison was granted temporary relief Wednesday from a government mandate requiring it to offer potential abortion-inducing drugs in its employee health plan. Grote Industries, a family-run business that manufactures vehicle lighting and safety system products, is the 10th to receive a preliminary injunction against the mandate. Founded in 1901, the company also operates in Mexico, Canada and Germany, and employs 464 people.