ProWomanProLife

  • The Story
  • The Women
  • Notable Columns
  • Contact Us
You are here: Home / Archives for Brigitte Pellerin

Nice turn of phrase

January 8, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

A friend draws my attention to a letter published in yesterday’s Guelph Mercury (can’t find a link, sorry). I especially like the last paragraph:

Dear Editor – Re: “Keeping personal views separate” (Guelph Mercury, Jan. 2).

A faithful Catholic is one who is shaped by the moral convictions of a
well-formed conscience and focused on the dignity of every human being, whether
it is the pursuit of the common good or the protection of the weak and
vulnerable.

Yet Guelph Liberal MP Frank Valeriote, a Catholic, admits to being
pro-choice. The optics suggest he is more guided by his political attachment to
the Liberal party than he is with the teachings of the Catholic Church.

As to a secular society such as contemporary Canada, the pro-life ideal has
not been tried and found wanting. Rather, it has been found difficult and
therefore, left untried.

— Ricardo Di Cecca, Burlington

Update: Ah, found a link.

UP-update: What do you know. That’s a line from G.K. Chesterton. Thanks to Dear Husband, resident Chesterton expert, for pointing it out.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Frank Valeriote, Liberal Party

A most remarkable man

January 8, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin 1 Comment

I’m sorry to hear Father Richard John Neuhaus passed away this morning. I have had the pleasure of meeting him and I’ll never forget his smile, his warmth, his generosity. R.I.P.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Richard John Neuhaus

Makes shovelling 17 metric tonnes of snow sound somewhat unglamorous

January 8, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

I’m not complaining. I like my life. Even when my driveway, which suddenly looks 5 times longer than usual, is covered with snow. (I have a new winter slogan: “Remember, snow IS a four-letter word.”)

But I can’t quite make it sound as glam as this, no matter how hard I try…

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Paris Hilton

Friends of Liberty

January 4, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin 2 Comments

Both Andrea (#88) and Rebecca (#80) made the Western Standard’s Liberty 100. Yay you!

___________________________

Tanya adds: Yay you, indeed! Now would you say you are “scrappy and unconventional” or just plain “controversial?”

___________________________

Andrea is just trying to understand how Rebecca beat her by eight spots. Seriously though–I always found Matthew Johnston (who put the whole thing together) had a good sense about him–he understands, I think, that strong families mean smaller government.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Liberty 100

Look who’s in the paper

January 3, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin 2 Comments

Andrea and I have an op-ed in this morning’s Ottawa Citizen about Rod Bruinooge. We’re in favour. Read it here.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Rod Bruinooge

Dear Colby: Huh?

January 2, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin 3 Comments

It could be me. Those vacation days have a way of softening the noodle (I blame Chimay; nobody ought to make beer this good). But I must say I have very little idea what Colby Cosh is saying in this piece.

I am amazed a hundred times a year that pro-life Christians get away with claiming that they stand on eternal principles when it comes to abortion, even though, if you prod them, they will start talking rot about DNA (whose existence and nature somehow went undisclosed through centuries of religious revelation) and will admit that it was the progress of scientific understanding which obligated them to suddenly promote abortion in the panoply of sins, circa 1968. They faced a choice concerning which principles they chose to modify under the pressure of technological change, and opted for the direction that allowed them to signal resistance to modernity. Their stance is about as deserving of deference as the Western Church’s 12th-century ban on crossbows, and no more tenable.

I guess it shows how much I don’t go out, but I have never been confronted with rot about DNA while discussing abortion-related issues (“a hundred times of year”? Gosh, Colby, where do you hang out?). Most of the pro-life folks I know are pretty keen on modernity – at least, the parts of it that gives us flush toilets, laptop computers under $1,000 and awfully cool gadgets like the “smarter smartphone” I just got. I’m also cool with crossbows.

I admit I don’t go to great lengths to justify how I became pro-life (or, as I prefer to call it, anti-casual-abortion). It’s quite simple, really: As a rule, it is wrong to end the life of innocent human beings. And I side with Rod Bruinooge whe he says it’s at best bizarre that a country would outlaw the sale of my own individual body parts but allow me to terminate the life of an unborn child at any point in a pregnancy for any reason whatever.

______________________________

Andrea adds: I wish I had written this before now, because now you won’t believe me, but I absolutely knew when Bruinooge said the bit about kidneys that some clever individual would come forward to say “Indeed! And this is why we must deregulate organ sales.” If I had thought about it harder, I might have guessed Colby Cosh—as I know his stuff and read it with interest, because he’s a good writer and I like him. Today’s offering isn’t really his best, in my opinion. It’s really… emotional. I recognize the visceral hostility to Christians–and by extension, Christian pro-lifers–because, er, I used to share it. So he’ll have to get over that, somehow, because being pro-life is not a religious stand, or rather, need not be. This column reads like a host of unresolved personal issues in national columnist clothing. 

____________________________

Tanya adds: Good, so I wasn’t the only one to pick up on the bitterness vibe in this editorial.
Mind you, he lost me way before that. He lost me at:

I don’t claim to know what most Canadians think about kidney donation; my guess is they don’t think about it at all.

Cosh followed that up with his own opinion of what he believes most Canadians would think of organ-selling on e-bay if they ever gave much thought to the issue at all, which they don’t.
(Not my fault. That sentence was only as confusing as his thought process.)

____________________

Andrea adds: And Tanya, we are not alone in picking up the bitter vibe. So did Charles Lewis in this quick rebuttal. (You’d have to be a rock not to notice. Compare and contrast God and Morgentaler? Really?)

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Colby Cosh, Rod Bruinooge

About 2008

December 31, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin 2 Comments

Well, here we are. The year is pretty much over. And while to many commentators it appears to have been a pretty darn wretched one, I’m quite pleased with it myself. Among many other good things that happened in 2008, I’m very grateful to Andrea for launching PWPL and delighted that she asked me to join. Thanks! And may 2009 bring even more good things to you and yours.

Happy New Year!!!

____________________

Andrea asks: What’s that saying again–it takes a village to raise a web site? (For me, in any event, it took Brigitte.) In any event, don’t thank me, no, no. A good team effort here with PWPL. And yes, I think 2008 was a good one too!

Filed Under: All Posts

This is what it looks like when people do research

December 30, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

Kady O’Malley has a lovely post this morning: Dear Liberal Party: That’s not actually an answer. Read and enjoy.

_______________________

Tanya loves:

To put it bluntly, Ms. Fairbrother may not be able to confirm the existence of this caucus, but if she’d bothered to ask around, anyone who has spent any time on the Hill  would have been able to fill her in.”

Oh SNAP! (I learned that expression from my 11 year old niece. It’s my pathetic attempt to recapture my youth.)

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Rod Bruinooge

Welcome to the world, Tripp

December 29, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

Congratulations!

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Bristol Palin

A new slogan

December 29, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin 1 Comment

I say! This Rod Bruinooge character is really starting to gain traction, isn’t he. Most excellent. I especially like this from him:

The bottom line is that people like myself are not going to stop until, at the very least, unborn children have more value than a Canadian kidney,” he said.

How about we make a t-shirt that says:

People are kidneys too
In Canada, body parts have more rights than entire fetuses.
Are we really that dumb?

Any other ideas?

________________________

Andrea: I’ll put forward “People for the Ethical Treatment of People” and keep thinking about it.
________________________
Brigitte passes along Dear Husband’s suggestion: He says “People for the Ethical Treatment of Humans” (or PETH) would be easier to pronounce than “PETP”. He’s obviously not French.

________________________

Andrea had already thought of the pronunciation difficulty: It’s PET-“P” –as in sounds like “pet peeve.” Come to think of it, that leads to all kinds of very witty advertising slogans. “Is killing people one of your pet peeves–in particular when they call it abortion? Join PETP today…”  (I’m still working on it, ironing out the details.)

________________________

Brigitte is working so hard she belongs in a Dickens novel:

Make custom t-shirts at CustomInk.com

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Rod Bruinooge

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 63
  • 64
  • 65
  • 66
  • 67
  • …
  • 86
  • Next Page »

Follow Us

Facebooktwitterrssby feather

Notable Columns

  • A pro-woman budget wouldn't tell me how to live my life
  • Bad medicine
  • Birth control pills have side effects
  • Canada Summer Jobs debacle–Can Trudeau call abortion a right?
  • Celebrate these Jubilee jailbirds
  • China has laws against sex selection. But not Canada. Why?
  • Family love is not a contract
  • Freedom to discuss the “choice”
  • Gender quotas don't help business or women
  • Ghomeshi case a wake-up call
  • Hidden cost of choice
  • Life at the heart of the matter
  • Life issues and the media
  • Need for rational abortion debate
  • New face of the abortion debate
  • People vs. kidneys
  • PET-P press release
  • Pro-life work is making me sick
  • Prolife doesn't mean anti-woman
  • Settle down or "lean in"
  • Sex education is all about values
  • Thank you, Camille Paglia
  • The new face of feminism
  • Today’s law worth discussing
  • When debate is shut down in Canada’s highest places
  • Whither feminism?

Categories

  • All Posts
  • Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia
  • Charitable
  • Ethics
  • Featured Media
  • Featured Posts
  • Feminism
  • Free Expression
  • International
  • Motherhood
  • Other
  • Political
  • Pregnancy Care Centres
  • Reproductive Technologies

All Posts

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Copyright © 2026 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in