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This is a scene from the movie Roe v. Wade. (Credit: CNS photo/courtesy Valerie Zucker.)
The independent drama Roe v. Wade had its red-carpet premiere, billed as the first large-scale movie opening since the pandemic began, on Feb. 26 at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando.
ORLANDO, Florida The independent drama
Roe v. Wade had its red-carpet premiere, billed as the first large-scale movie opening since the pandemic began, on Feb. 26 at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando.
The event at last allowed viewers to evaluate for themselves this decidedly pro-life production dramatizing the 1973 Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion across the United States. Like that landmark ruling, the film has predictably been the subject of much controversy.
Many in the media raced to report on CPAC over the weekend. But one panel went largely unnoticed: a pro-life panel challenging today’s “anti-woman” abortion culture.
On February 27, the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) hosted a panel exploring “Hard Questions for the Hard Cases: How to Defend Life.”
The New York Post’s Kelly Jane Torrance moderated the panel featuring pro-life leaders Emily Berning, co-founder of Let Them Live, Alison Centofante, director of external affairs at Live Action, and Republican Rep. Michelle Fischbach of Minnesota. Together, they debunked the lies of the abortion industry, including the myth that women “need” abortion to succeed.
Pro-life activist slams anti-woman culture encouraging abortion christianpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from christianpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.