Who Should Live? Who Should Die? Take a Poll!
One of the most remarkable aspects of the digital information age is the ongoing use of polls—designed, I suppose, to make people feel like their opinion really matters.
One of the most remarkable aspects of the digital information age is the ongoing use of polls—designed, I suppose, to make people feel like their opinion really matters.
Abortionist Martin Haskell, developer of the intact dilation and extraction method of killing (a type of partial birth abortion), recently moved his abortion facility from Cincinnati, Ohio to Sharonville, Ohio.
Early [October] President Barack Obama signed a law decreeing that federal statutes must no longer use the term “mental retardation.”
One of my Catholic media heroes, Phil Lawler, always writes with a certainty that forces one to think beyond what is claimed or what is reported elsewhere.
There was a time when it would never have occurred to simple folk that murder would become a recommended solution to budgetary woes—both at a national and a state level. In fact, years ago, the very idea would have sent shivers down the spines of most people.
This is the time of year when we reflect on the greatness of God, His love for each of us and His constancy in times of trial and tribulation. At American Life League, and for me personally, these realities evoke an immense sense of gratitude because the positive gifts He provides are too numerous to count.
Christmas is a very special time of year for all of us, but especially for pro-life families. We gather together to affirm all that we know is good, to celebrate the birth of our King and to renew our heartfelt emotions toward our beloved friends and relations, most especially our children and our grandchildren.
In March 2009, during a trip to Africa, Pope Benedict XVI gave an interview to certain members of the media. Among the questions posed to him was one dealing with AIDS sufferers and condom use.
One of the toughest challenges that pro-life stalwarts have to handle is our opposition to abortion in cases of rape and incest.
Proponents and practitioners of abortion are becoming more and more strident in their denials regarding not only the rights of mothers to know all the facts but the reality of who is killed during an abortion.
Have you noticed that people in this more nuanced wing of the euthanasia movement seem to be working from the same set of talking points?
The news out of Nebraska this week is both sobering and shocking. Pro-life Americans hear that the abortion industry is dwindling, but Dr. Leroy Carhart, infamous abortionist in the U.S. Supreme Court partial-birth abortion case Gonzales vs. Carhart, would take issue with that apparent false claim.