04-05-2021
Abortion remains one of America s most divisive issues almost five decades after it was declared legal nationwide. On one side, the belief abortion means killing a human being. The other, a wider explanation boiled down to choice. That s one in a number of words and ideas and positions used to soften the reality of a life and death decision.
One of the toughest battles for people against abortion is addressing assertions around the issue that makes taking a life seem more acceptable. Like the contention that life doesn t actually begin till a baby s outside the womb.
Myth: Not Really a Life Till Outside the Womb
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Those involved in the battle over abortion have seen America swing in January from the most pro-life president of the modern era to possibly the most pro-abortion commander-in-chief. So now those dedicated to the pro-life cause have to consider what kind of damage a Biden presidency can do to their efforts to end abortion.
Just after Joe Biden s inauguration, pro-life Americans gathered by the U.S. Supreme Court for a memorial to the nation s nearly 63 million aborted unborn and to pray that killing any more will become unthinkable.
Making Abortion More Acceptable
They also realize, however, they now face an administration likely to make abortion more acceptable to people than ever.
th anniversary of
Roe v. Wade Friday, vowing to end abortion with even greater resolve as the radical pro-abortion agenda of the Biden administration begins.
Since the Supreme Court’s decision in
Roe on January 22, 1973, more than 62 million American unborn babies have been victims of abortion.
Joe Biden’s choice of Kamala Harris as his VP makes his ticket the “most pro-abortion presidential ticket in history,” pro-life leaders say. https://t.co/PI30xkCmOT
Brandi Swindell, founder of the Stanton Public Policy Center, a women’s advocacy movement named after suffragist leader Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and affiliated with the life-affirming Stanton Healthcare clinics, will gather with the pro-life Purple Sash Revolution at the Supreme Court Friday.