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Archives for June 2010

OK, now I’m depressed

June 13, 2010 by Brigitte Pellerin 1 Comment

So much for the “abortion isn’t used as birth control” rhetoric. In Britain:

Government data have disclosed that 89 girls aged 17 or under who terminated a pregnancy last year had had at least two abortions previously.

[…]

The Department of Health figures for 2009 show that, for the first time, more than a third (34 per cent) of abortions were performed on women who had already ended one or more pregnancies.

Across all ages, more than 1,000 women or girls were on at least their fifth termination, including 214 on their sixth, 70 on their seventh and 48 who underwent the procedure for at least the eighth time.

[…]

The total number of abortions in England and Wales last year, 189,100, fell slightly on the previous year. Of those, 63,390 involved women who had previously ended a pregnancy, compared with 51,987 a decade ago — a rise of 22 per cent.

Almost 18,000 abortions were carried out on girls aged under 18, including more than 1,000 on girls aged 14 or under.

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Can’t decide whether I like this idea or not

June 12, 2010 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

I dislike government handouts, but if you’re going to pay parents to have children maybe you ought to focus on the first few years?

New mothers should get a quarter of all their child’s benefits in just the first two years of a baby’s life to reduce the pressure on them to go back to work, it has been suggested.

The move for bringing forward the payments and letting mothers stay at home and let them bond more easily with their babies, according to the Government’s poverty adviser.

Currently, poorer parents are eligible to be paid as much as £100,000 in benefits and tax credits in equal instaments over the first 19 years of a child’s life, if he or she stays still in full time education.

However, Frank Field, the Labour MP for Birkenhead, suggested the Government should tailor the system of child benefits so that it better suited parents’ lives.

This could see a quarter of this total – £25,000 – paid out in just the first two years of a child’s life, to take the financial pressure off young mothers to go back to work and encourage them to spend more time with their babies.

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Memo to Keith Martin

June 11, 2010 by Jennifer Derwey 1 Comment

Memo to Keith Martin: your partisan politicking isn’t supported by many pro-choice groups. Truly, it’s an interesting state of affairs when pro-abortion supporters are standing in the way of women’s health.

“People here are perplexed and wondering why Canada is rolling back the clock and depriving women in developing countries from having the same rights to basic health care and access to abortion as women in Canada,” said Keith Martin, a Liberal MP who defected from the Tories in 2004.

“They’re mystified as to why the Canadian government has taken this position.”

As Keith Martin sits mystified, people like Melinda Gates, Bev Oda, and Ban Ki-moon remain committed to improving maternal health in the developing world, even without abortion in the agenda.

Teresa Chiesa, CARE Canada’s program manager for Africa, said the [maternal health] meeting was a success as stakeholders from all over the world committed to ensuring that the rate of maternal deaths — those occurring during pregnancy, childbirth or in the 42 days after delivery — continues its downward trend.

“It’s been a brilliant conference with the Gates commitment, and financial commitments from the U.S. government and Norway — there are going to be the resources we need to get behind the initiatives,” she said.

But Canada’s stance on abortion was indeed a topic of discussion among delegates in the crowded corridors of the Washington Convention Center this week, Chiesa said.

If Martin continues to be boggled by the lack of abortion funding, he may find himself on the sidelines while the committed make headway on the pressing issue of getting resources to the places they are most needed.

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Maternal health

June 11, 2010 by Jennifer Derwey 1 Comment

…means so much more than hospitals. From the BBC:

“…this year is the moment when the world will decide where to spend tens of billions of pounds over the next five years in the push towards the MDGs.”

[…]

But Dr Horton said it was “outrageous” that the latest investment announced by the Gates Foundation would not fund abortion services.

He added: “Unsafe abortion contributes to one in seven maternal deaths across the world. These women are already stigmatised, and they shouldn’t be ignored.”

My thoughts exactly! However, what Dr. Horton fails to see is that precisely by creating the space for abortion to become routine while not addressing the fundamental issues, we are ignoring these women. After all, it’s not the unborn child that enables the stigmatization.

Why, you might ask, would women go to such desperate lengths to have an abortion? For many young women, the cultural stigma of being an unwed mother is so strong that they will go to any length to avoid bringing shame and disgrace to their families.
A few years ago, a family friend committed suicide because her boyfriend had disowned the five-month-old foetus burgeoning within her womb. In her note to her parents she stated it would be better to die than bring humiliation to their Christian name.
Inherent in this cultural stigma is often the desertion of the partner or male responsible for the pregnancy, thus relegating the woman to position of a single mother.

Therefore the fear of single motherhood leads to unsafe abortions. A fear stronger than the desire to preserve life, even their own. Why? Because it’s not ideal, it’s not socially acceptable, and it’s not easy. It is essential, then, not only to provide these women with access to safe and hygienic medical care but to bring about a social change that will acknowledge these women as deserving of the dignity that can empower them with the strength and social support to become mothers, even in the least ideal of circumstances. Maternal health means so much more than hospitals, but they’re a good place to start.

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Good relationship advice

June 11, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

In the Globe and Mail! Yes, the Globe and Mail:

And meanwhile for you, refuse to play the part of the whining, insecure girlfriend who debases herself by waiting around for a guy who regularly makes her feel like the least important part of his life.

I have played this part. And I have friends who have played this part. It’s quite common. And really, there need be no drama. A guy is either into you, or he’s not. And if he’s not, his loss. If he is, you should not need to wait for him. (By the phone. On Christmas Day. Not that that’s ever happened to me.)

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So what?

June 11, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek 3 Comments

Maybe there is a hidden pro-life message in this ad. So what? Seems to me churches can and should call it like it is (and abortion is morally wrong, though you would hardly know it by attending church these days) whether or not there may be a political takeaway.

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CCBR in Alberta

June 11, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek 9 Comments

The Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform on the streets again, this time with some neutral, fair coverage.

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFiGPbHvPLA”>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFiGPbHvPLA]

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Winning women

June 10, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

Winning women in California, Meg Whitman and Carly Fiorina.

For our purposes here at PWPL, both are very successful and very wealthy, but Whitman is pro-abortion, Fiorina is pro-life. It’s a good start, anyway. (Whitman will come around.)

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Slippery slope? What slippery slope?

June 9, 2010 by Brigitte Pellerin 2 Comments

Scary numbers from Belgium:

Almost half of deaths by euthanasia in Belgium have involved patients who have not explicitly requested their lives to be ended by a doctor, a study has suggested.

A fifth of nurses interviewed by researchers admitted that they had been involved in the euthanasia of a patient based on the “assumption” they would want to die. Nearly half of the nurses – 120 of 248 – admitted they had taken part in “terminations without request or consent”.

Euthanasia has been legal in Belgium since 2002. It accounts for two per cent of all deaths annually. The law states that patient consent must be given and that doctors must carry out the procedure. But the study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal shows that the rules are routinely flouted and shows how doctors often delegate the administering of fatal drugs to nurses.


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Hitting bottom

June 9, 2010 by Brigitte Pellerin 7 Comments

Well, who knows? Maybe that’s not even close to as desperate as some people can get. Imagine that: Rumours suggest Sarah Palin might have had breast implants. As in, we don’t really know this. We just think she looks slightly bustier. So obviously that must mean…

BREAST IMPLANTS!!!!

The world may never recover.

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