Pro-Life
The case against human abortion
RU-486 is poison
I’d like to contrast the use of two medical poisons for a moment. Chemotherapy is used to kill tumors that are growing uncontrollably in a body. Without the use of the poison, cancer, the “bad cells” will overtake the good cells and kill the person.
RU-486, on the other hand, kills “good cells.” Did you know that after just four weeks of conception, a human person is creating a million new cells a second? These cells aren’t destroying, they are creating.
Read MoreSay yes to life like Mary did
In praise of gender equality
How to understand liberal advocacy for human abortion
Iowa Democrats pray for more human abortion
We give thanks, oh Lord, for the doctors, both current and future, who provide quality abortion care.”
Read MoreA cynical prayer
Planned Parenthood must really be desperate.
They are actually turning to prayer in a sort of “Hail Mary” attempt to help them hold on to their crumbling human abortion empire. No, let’s be honest. It’s a cynical ploy to stem the tide against them by people of faith who believe God is on the side of the pre born…
Read MoreHypocrisy defined
How Democrats defend bigotry
I am rerunning another piece about the Jack Hatch saga from two years ago. Mr. Hatch, the Democratic candidate for Governor this year, led the charge to smear a good, Catholic woman and keep her off the Iowa Board of Medicine, to which she had been nominated by Republican Governor, Terry Branstad. This all happened two years ago.
This piece provides another glimpse into the political character of Jack Hatch, and why he isn’t fit to be governor of the great state of Iowa.
Read MoreRevisiting Jack Hatch’s deceit
Jack Hatch is the candidate for Governor for the Democratic Party. He has staked out ultra pro-human abortion positions, just as his opponent, Terry Branstad, has been a consistent defender of Life.
In light of Mr. Hatch’s prominence, it is worth revisiting my post from two years ago (April 23, 2012) which gave us a glimpse into Mr. Hatch’s political character. This piece also ran in the Des Moines Register.
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