America's abortion extremism

Sheila Liaugmina
October 12, 2017
Reproduced with Permission
Sheila Reports

Somehow, Planned Parenthood has remained powerful, heavily funded and very influential among the power brokers of politics and culture: government, media, academia and Hollywood. Somehow, the abortion mentality has pervaded even believers in religion and absolute truth and moral order, convincing roughly half of them to accept the decades-long slick marketing slogans that it's about empowering women and respecting women's rights and protecting particularly their right to choose.

Choose what? Planned Parenthood gives women, particularly in minority neighborhoods, a lack of choice but easy access to abortion.

Having frequent conversations with expert guests on radio covering these issues - especially lately with congressional efforts to defund Planned Parenthood, the abortion giant's social media campaign in reaction and response to the possibility of losing federal funds, the recent vote in Congress to ban abortions of five month old babies in the womb, and the administration's move last week to roll back the HHS mandate requiring birth control pill coverage in health insurance plans for Christian and particularly Catholic groups like Little Sisters of the Poor - the point has come up more than once that the US is amongst the seven countries in the world with lax and extreme abortion laws.

The Washington Post editors must have found that hard to believe, and so submitted it to their well known ' fact checker '. This is how it opened:

"Seven out of 198 nations allow elective abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy." - statement of Trump administration policy, Oct. 2, 2017

The House approved a ban on 20-week abortions this week, and this dramatic statistic caught our attention…

It's about time. What brought it to WaPo's attention now? That House of Representatives ban on the 'Pain Capable Unborn Child Protection Act', which prompted this response from the White House, which included the attention grabbing statistic contained in this fuller snip than WaPo led with.

The United States is currently out of the mainstream in the family of nations, in which only 7 out of 198 nations allow elective abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

Worse still, the United States is in the top (or worst) four:

Here's a look at the seven countries. We sorted them from the most liberal on gestational limits to the least:

North Korea and Vietnam: No specified gestational limit, though regulatory mechanisms vary.

China: "Abortion is virtually freely available in China, and there are no defined time limits for access to the procedure," according to Pew Research Center. China now has a "two-child" policy, and human-rights advocates have criticized China's population and family planning laws.

United States: No federal ban on gestational limit, but 43 states have prohibitions on gestational limits, from 20 to 24 weeks, or the point of "viability," according to the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive rights research group. There are some exceptions made, usually for the life or health of the mother.

Then come Canada, Netherlands and Singapore.

Only North Korea, Vietnam and China are ahead of the United States in abortion extremism.

"Our nation does not belong in that disgraceful club", the Susan B. Anthony List declared in a statement after the House vote.

The 20 week abortion ban bill now goes to the Senate for a vote, and SBA List is running a grassroots campaign in states with vulnerable pro-abortion senators up for re-election in 2018 in states favorable to common sense restrictions to otherwise liberal abortion laws.

My home state of Illinois just got a major setback of unprecedented proportion when Governor Bruce Rauner broke his promise to pro-life leaders and voters, state clergy and even Chicago's Cardinal Archbishop Blase Cupich and signed into law the first binding legislation passed by an elected state official , ensuring that abortion will remain legal in the state of Illinois even if Roe v. Wade is overturned, and that state taxpayers' dollars will pay for abortion, violating consciences, and religious and other deeply held beliefs of citizens who have no say now.

At least, until the next election.

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