The Conscience of The State

By Rev. Walter Hoye, President and Founder of the Issues4Life Foundation.

This article was written for a special Martin Luther King, Jr. edition of the Ruth Institute newsletter, January 17, 2011.

One day in Oakland, California, in the capacity of a sidewalk counselor, I met a Black man taking his girlfriend to get an abortion. When we talked, he said to me, he knew it was “his baby” and that his “CONSCIENCE” was bothering him.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in his book “Strength to Love,” published in 1963 wrote: (more…)

 

by Helen Alvaré, Greg Pfundstein, Matthew Schmitz and Ryan T. Anderson

January 17, 2011
Do pro-lifers care about life after birth?

One of the most frequently repeated canards of the abortion debate is that pro-lifers really don’t care about life. As much as they talk about protecting the unborn, we are told, pro-lifers do nothing to support mothers and infants who are already in the world. Liberal writers such as Matthew Yglesias are given to observing that pro-lifers believe that “life begins at conception and ends at birth.” At Commonweal, David Gibson, a journalist who frequently covers the abortion debate, asks how much pro-lifers do for mothers: “I just want to know what realistic steps they are proposing or backing. I’m not sure I’d expect to hear anything from pro-life groups now since there’s really been nothing for years.” (more…)

 

By Robert W. Patterson

This article was originally published in The Washington Examiner on January 11, 2011.

When thousands of pro-life activists gather on the Mall Monday to protest Roe v. Wade, few in Congress or the media will connect the dots linking the Supreme Court’s invention of a constitutional right to abortion 38 years ago to the economic crisis a generation later. (more…)
 

Abortion Law is Family Law

by Helen Alvaré, Ruth Institute Board Member

This article was originally published at PublicDiscourse.com on November 12, 2010.

Abortion law is usually seen as a matter of constitutional law. Is it time for that to change?

Questions about “abortion and the law” are usually seen as matters of constitutional law. Constitutional law, however, seems ill-suited. This is not only because the U.S. Supreme Court discovered a “constitutional right” for something that had been banned by most states for most of the nation’s history. It is also because the “privacy” right encompassing abortion frames the issue as a struggle between the state and the woman over her right to define her life, her future, or even her “concept …of the universe,” in the famous words of the Casey Court. But it is becoming increasingly apparent that abortion is about family relationships, not simply a contest between the state and a woman who happens to be pregnant. Scientific discoveries about human development and the testimonies of women who have had or have considered an abortion suggest that it is family law rather than constitutional law that provides the best means of understanding the issue of abortion. (more…)

 

by Jennifer Roback Morse, Ph.D

This article was first published July 23, 2006 at National Catholic Register.com.

The abortion lobby must be desperate. They evidently feel threatened by little old ladies who give away free baby clothes to women in crisis pregnancies.

The abortion lobby’s latest hyperventilation, a campaign calmly titled, “Crisis Pregnancy Centers: An Affront to Choice,” launches a very unsubtle, non-nuanced broadside against crisis pregnancy centers. (more…)