Being pro-death, I'm all for it.
I'm pro-death, too.
Actually, every single person on the planet is pro-death, whether they like it or not!
Being pro-death, I'm all for it.
But you're not murdering your child.
There is no scientific evidence whatsoever that such a thing as a soul exists.As soon as the egg becomes fertilized with sperm and implants itself onto the uterine wall, whatever you want to call it, has a soul...if a woman wants to murder that soul its up to her I just don't agree with it.
Rick Santorment SMH and I find it very interesting that the founder of Planned Parenthood Margaret Sanger was a racist who did state that "colored people are like human weeds and are to be exterminated", and that there have been over 50 million African American fetuses aborted since Roe vs Wade and that you can almost always find a Planned Parenthood in many of the inner city neighborhoods throughout the country
Sanger believed that lighter-skinned races were superior to darker-skinned races, but would not tolerate bigotry among her staff, nor any refusal to work within interracial projects.[83] Her contemporaries in the African-American community supported her efforts. In 1929, James H. Hubert, a black social worker and leader of New York's Urban League, asked Sanger to open a clinic in Harlem.[84] Sanger secured funding from the Julius Rosenwald Fund and opened the clinic, staffed with African-American doctors, in 1930. The clinic was directed by a 15-member advisory board consisting of African-American doctors, nurses, clergy, journalists, and social workers. The clinic was publicized in the African-American press and African-American churches, and received the approval of W. E. B. Du Bois, founder of the NAACP.[85] Sanger's work with minorities earned praise from Martin Luther King, Jr., in his 1966 acceptance speech for the Margaret Sanger award.[86]
From 1939 to 1942 Sanger was an honorary delegate of the Birth Control Federation of America, which included a supervisory role — alongside Mary Lasker and Clarence Gamble — in the Negro Project, an effort to deliver birth control to poor African Americans.[87] Sanger wanted the Negro Project to include black ministers in leadership roles, but other supervisors did not. To emphasize the benefits of involving black community leaders, she wrote to Gamble "we do not want word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members." This quote has been used by numerous Sanger detractors, including Angela Davis and the pro-life movement, to support their claims that Sanger was racist.[88] However, according to New York University's Margaret Sanger Papers Project, Sanger, in writing that letter, "recognized that elements within the black community might mistakenly associate the Negro Project with racist sterilization campaigns in the Jim Crow South, unless clergy and other community leaders spread the word that the Project had a humanitarian aim."[89]
http://womenshistory.about.com/od/quotes/a/margaret_sanger_2.htm (about half-way down the page)quote taken out of context: "We do not want word to get out that we want to exterminate the Negro population." (In the context, it's apparent that she didn't want such word to get out because such a characterization of her work was common -- and untrue. Then as now.)
Why is it that some people are DESPERATE for smaller/less government, but they desperately want the government to be given the right to make this decision? So, you want more government control when the control aligns with your moral code, but less when it doesn't? That's a mighty problematic way to determine laws.