Stan Posted February 21 Posted February 21 In May 1973, four months after the Supreme Court decided Roe v. Wade on January 22, 1973, civil rights leader Jesse Jackson spoke to JET magazine about abortion in the […] The post Jesse Jackson’s 1973 “Genocide” Statement and the Early Pro Life Movement Before Reagan appeared first on ReligiousLiberty.TV. View the full article phkrause 1 Quote If you receive benefit to being here please help out with expenses. https://www.paypal.me/clubadventist Administrator of a few websites like https://adventistdating.com
Joe Knapp Posted February 27 Posted February 27 Quote “Abortion is genocide. If people use preventive measures to stop the life process from originating, I can buy that. But if they get carried enough away to set the baby in process, they must get carried enough away to accept the responsibility of the baby. And I don’t want to hear this bit about babies not really living until the baby has a face and the doctor smacks it and it cries. Anything growing is living. If you got the thrill to set the baby in motion and you don’t have the will to protect it, you’re dishonest. But you don’t try to stop reproducing and procreating human life at its best. For who knows the cure for cancer won’t come out of some mind of some Black child?” Very interesting. He seemed to back away from that. He was right. The majority of babies killed are black. Quote Over the past two decades Black women have experienced substantially higher abortion rates than White women: recent CDC-based reporting shows Black women had an abortion rate of 24.4 per 1,000 in 2022 — about 4.3 times the White rate (5.7 per 1,000) — and accounted for 39.5% of reported abortions in 2022 while representing a much smaller share of the female population [1]. Long‑running scholarship and public‑health surveillance document persistent racial disparities in abortion rates stretching back decades, with national Black/White rate disparities averaging roughly 3–4 times in multiple studies Quote It was 100 years ago—on Oct. 16, 1916—that Margaret Sanger opened the first birth-control clinic in the United States. An advocate for women’s reproductive rights who was also a vocal eugenics enthusiast, Margaret Sanger leaves a complicated legacy — and one that conservatives have periodically leveraged into sweeping attacks on the organization she helped found: Planned Parenthood. Planned Parenthood was designed to kill the black babies. That's why they build them in black neighborhoods. Quote Last year, 25 House Republicans campaigned to have a bust of the pioneering family planner removed from the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery, where it has been included in an exhibit featuring American civil rights leaders, called “The Struggle for Justice,” with Ted Cruz’s office issuing a press release explaining that she didn’t belong there for a number of reasons, the most damning of which is that as part of her “inhumane life’s work” she “advocated for the extermination of African-Americans.” It’s not the first time Sanger has faced this accusation. During this past primary season, Ben Carson proclaimed that Sanger “believed that people like me should be eliminated” —later clarifying, per PolitiFact, that he was “talking about the black race”—and in 2011, Herman Cain alleged that Sanger’s original goal for Planned Parenthood was to “help kill black babies before they came into the world.” I am convinced she was working with demons. Quote
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