ProWomanProLife

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

If you believe in prayer…

December 18, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen 1 Comment

sun burst..now’s the time to put your belief into action. Peter Ryan, the executive director of New Brunswick Right to Life is asking for prayer today, as the NB Legislature debates abortion.

The new Liberal premier, Brian Gallant, has promised to strip New Brunswick of every last shred of protection for women seeking abortion in the province by January 1st, but the Conservatives have decided to not allow any changes until the Legislature has had a chance to debate the issue.

The notice of motion was introduced by two women PC MLAs, Dorothy Shephard, and seconded by  Jody Carr.  It reads:

Be it resolved that the Legislative Assembly urge the government to cause any changes to abortion services that it has adopted or intends to adopt to be the subject of a debate in the House, and to delay implementation of those changes until that debate has occurred.

Thank you to these women for at least recognizing the democratic process.

The January 1st change would mean tax-funded abortion on demand in NB hospitals, a historic policy change, with a likely gradual but steep increase in the abortion rate.

According to Ryan, today’s debate could go to an unlikely vote – it would certainly take a miracle, hence the request for prayers.

He writes:

Today an all-important debate on abortion policy will take place in the NB Legislature, initiated by the Tory opposition. They could push for a vote on the issue (the government is not obliged to vote on this, as the policy change in Regulations (not legislation) is due to take place through an Order-in-Council under the cabinet’s direction). If a vote does take place, that likely has to happen by this Friday, when the Legislature is likely to recess for Christmas.

If a vote were to take place, the results could be interesting. About 10 of the government’s MLAs (out of 26 total) have pro-life leanings, and if 5 of them were to jump ship the outcome of the vote could be favorable!

I therefore turn to you and the national pro-life community for spiritual help at this time. Perhaps you could remember us in prayer over the coming hours and couple days. Thank you so much.

For more information on this issue, see the LifeSite breaking news article here.

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts, Political

Senate debate reveals truth about assisted suicide

December 11, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen 3 Comments

Physician-Assisted-Suicide-Kill1
The recent debate in the Senate (at 1620) outlines perfectly what Andrew Coyne meant when he said (my emphasis):

So it is that a cause advanced in the name of a limitless individual freedom (self-annihilation, it is said, being the ultimate assertion of personal autonomy) defends itself with reference to how acutely limited that freedom would actually be.

Senator Nancy Ruth has introduced a bill to legalize assisted suicide, and listen to what she says in terms of how that assisted suicide must be carried out:

Let me be clear: This bill does not allow for non-voluntary ending of life. It does not allow for uninformed ending of life. And it incorporates safeguards for physicians, too. What it does is restrict requests for physician-assisted death to those who are 18 years or older, who are citizens or permanent residents of Canada at the time of the request and who have been diagnosed by a physician with an illness, disease or disability including from a traumatic injury. Their condition must cause intolerable physical or psychological suffering that cannot be alleviated by any medical treatment acceptable to that person.

It also allows requests from those in a state of weakening capacities with no chance of improvement, as long as they’re of sound mind, capable of full understanding, acting voluntarily, free from coercion and undue influence. …

Let me tell you how a request for physician-assisted death must be made. The request must be in writing and signed in the presence of the assisting physician and two witnesses. Not everyone can be a witness. Those excluded from being a witness include the partner of the person making the request or other relatives or adopted children, beneficiaries of the patient’s estate, and health care workers in the health institution where the person is or has been.

Once a request has been made, two physicians, including a qualified consulting doctor independent of the assisting physician, must examine the person making the request to determine if he or she meets the conditions prescribed by the law. The assisting physician must then provide specific information to the person making the request about his or her medical prognosis, the consequences of the request and all the feasible alternatives. These should include but not be limited to comfort, palliative or hospice care and pain control.

The bill also imposes a waiting period of at least 14 days before the request can be carried out. Moreover, a request for access to physician-assisted death may be revoked at any time orally, in writing or by other means. At the time of the act, the assisting physician must record the details and explicitly ask the patient if he or she still wishes to proceed. The bill stipulates that related documents must be placed in the person’s medical record, and within 30 days the assisting physician must file a report to the provincial Minister of Health.

Coyne is spot on. So much for freedom.

But the really scary part is that in the end, no one will pay attention to Senator Ruth’s long list of “safeguards”.  Legalized PAS will all too soon be seen as a human right, not to be curtailed by such limitations as age, mental ability and terminal condition.  Why should such a “right” be available to only those of a certain age, certain mental capability, certain physical or psychological condition?

Here is how the debate in the Senate ended, with the Honorable Senator Anne C. Cools asking this very significant question:

I thank Senator Nancy Ruth for her work on this bill and for the deep commitment that she has made to this cause. I will ask Senator Nancy Ruth just where, in law and in the Constitution, does she or any person derive a power to take a human life? I would like to know the constitutional basis of such power. That is the first question.

Interestingly, many years ago, this country, Canada, moved, like most Western countries — let us leave the United States of America out of the scenario — in acknowledging that no human being has the power to take another human being’s life. This was demonstrated in many communities by their abolition of capital punishment, on the grounds that no human decision and no human decision-making apparatus is so perfect as to be accurate in every circumstance. The legal condition reached a point in most countries where governments, judges and juries avoided findings of guilt so as to avoid death sentences because of the lack of certainty in process.

It is very interesting that the law of our land set aside capital punishment. Now we want to create a form of capital killing.

Senator Campbell: Question!

Senator Cools: Honourable senators, I am asking Senator Nancy Ruth’s opinion on what I am saying. I would invite you to give it careful consideration as well.

I put my question to you, senator, because you have done a lot of research on this. From whence is a legal power derived to ask one man or one woman to take the life of another human being? This is very unsettled, it is an unanswered question in the history of humanity for millennia. It is the essential question that will have to be answered in this debate, the source of the power to take another human life.

Senator Nancy Ruth: Honourable senator, I’m not aware of any constitutional power to end life, nor am I aware of any constitutional power to begin life.

Senator Cools: There is a constitutional power to begin life.

The Hon. the Speaker: All the questions have been asked.

(On motion of Senator Campbell, debate adjourned.)

Filed Under: All Posts, Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia, Featured Posts

From the macabre to the just plain horrifying

December 5, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen Leave a Comment

medium_10104162366

Two “great” articles on euthanasia. First, a bioethicist from the University of Tübingen in Germany, Ronald Kipke, has pointed out that “commercial assisted suicide” (CAS) – paying a non-doctor to kill patients – is a logical development of physician-assisted suicide, and a much better deal over-all.  It means that we don’t have to involve doctors in killing people.

Commercially available assisted suicide means that you get what you pay for without having to convince panels of doctors who might be having qualms with their consciences.  There would be no refusals and referrals, no annoying counseling sessions and having to spend time finding a doctor sympathetic to your cause.  It is simply a service that is paid for and performed by people trained just for that one purpose.

The point that he is making, in actual fact, is that commercially available suicide horrifies all of us – even those who approve of doctor assisted suicide and euthanasia. The same reasons that one would use to argue against commercial suicide apply just as well to doctor assisted suicide, and even more so.

… there is not a single ethical reason that speaks persuasively only against CAS. Either the arguments do not apply to CAS, or they do apply but equally or even more so to PAS … To reject CAS while endorsing PAS is, therefore, not ethically justifiable: it is not a coherent ethical position. Therefore, the position of the liberal advocates of PAS has to be revised. Either they have to expand their advocacy to include CAS and therefore radicalize their position considerably or they have to revise their rejection of some arguments that are generally raised against assisted suicide.

And while we contemplate the virtues of commercial suicide, doctors in the Netherlands are working on a scheme to increase the number of organs available for organ-donor transplant – by… you guessed it, harvesting them from people who want to be euthanized. It actually has a name and an acronym; Organ Donation Euthanasia or ODE.  According to the Mercator.net article,

Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam and the University Hospital of Maastricht have already written national guidelines which are being studied by the Dutch Transplant Foundation.

If the procedures are approved, they would be binding on hospitals and doctors throughout the country.

Now this could prove to be really profitable. Not only could we have for-profit clinics available for killing people, we can harvest their organs and sell them to hospitals doing wonderful life-saving work. Except for the bit about selling them, Oxford bioethicists Julian Savulescu and a colleague, Dominic Wilkinson concur:

Many lives could be saved even if only a small percentage of people opted for ODE… We should encourage and support such altruistic desires.

Herein lies the reason why former pro-euthanasia advocate, Dr. Theo De Boer, has become an internationally known opponent of the practice. He realized that once you legalize killing, the instances of it just get worse and worse. In his words, “once the genie is out of the bottle, it is not likely to ever go back in again.”

photo credit: <a href=”https://www.flickr.com/photos/_flood_/10104162366/”>Flооd</a> via <a href=”http://photopin.com”>photopin</a> <a
“… there is not a single ethical reason that speaks persuasively only against CAS. Either the arguments do not apply to CAS, or they do apply but equally or even more so to PAS … To reject CAS while endorsing PAS is, therefore, not ethically justifiable: it is not a coherent ethical position. Therefore, the position of the liberal advocates of PAS has to be revised. Either they have to expand their advocacy to include CAS and therefore radicalize their position considerably or they have to revise their rejection of some arguments that are generally raised against assisted suicide. – See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/careful/view/15269#sthash.BKs7XmWx.dpuf
a bioethicist from the University of Tübingen in Germany has pointed out that “commercially assisted suicide” (CAS) – paying a non-doctor to kill patients – is a logical development of physician-assisted suicide. – See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/careful/view/15269#sthash.BKs7XmWx.dpuf
a bioethicist from the University of Tübingen in Germany has pointed out that “commercially assisted suicide” (CAS) – paying a non-doctor to kill patients – is a logical development of physician-assisted suicide. – See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/careful/view/15269#sthash.BKs7XmWx.dpuf
a bioethicist from the University of Tübingen in Germany has pointed out that “commercially assisted suicide” (CAS) – paying a non-doctor to kill patients – is a logical development of physician-assisted suicide. – See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/careful/view/15269#sthash.BKs7XmWx.dpuf

Filed Under: All Posts, Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia, Featured Posts

Senators propose euthanasia bill

December 3, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen Leave a Comment

DoctorWe live in interesting times.  Yesterday, Senator Nancy Ruth and Senator Larry Campbell introduced Senate Private Bill S 225, a bill that legalizes euthanasia  and assisted suicide by lethal prescription. This bill is based on the private members bills that were introduced in the House of Commons by Stephen Fletcher MP, earlier this year.

According to the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, the bill is deliberately permissive.

The bill is designed to protect physicians who act by lethally injecting or assisting the suicide of their patients. It is not designed to protect the patients.

The bill specifically allows euthanasia and assisted suicide for people with disabilities.

The bill allows euthanasia or assisted suicide for “psychological suffering.” Psychological suffering is not defined.

The bill is not limited to terminal illness.

The bill requires the physician to self report the death after it has already occurred. This assumes that physicians will self-report abuse of the law. Since the patient is dead, when the act is reported, therefore no actual protection exists for the patient.

The EPC also quotes Dr. Theo de Boer, who sat on the Regional Euthanasia Review Committee in the Netherlands for nine years. After seeing the progression of the practice of euthanasia, Dr. de Boer went from being an ardent supporter to opposing it internationally. In a recent article, that exposes the incredible increase in euthanasia in the Netherlands, de Boer stated:

I used to be a supporter of legislation. But now, with twelve years of experience, I take a different view.

At the very least, wait for an honest and intellectually satisfying analysis of the reasons behind the explosive increase in the numbers. Is it because the law should have had better safeguards? Or is it because the mere existence of such a law is an invitation to see assisted suicide and euthanasia as a normality instead of a last resort? Before those questions are answered, don’t go there. Once the genie is out of the bottle, it is not likely to ever go back in again.

Filed Under: All Posts, Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia, Featured Posts

On the unconsidered realities of future children and abortion

December 2, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen 2 Comments

009c72fc571390faa0aadd9fabde6683Any woman considering an abortion should read the quotes of these women who have been there and done it.  They are heart-rending, tragic testimonies to the unexpected and often unconsidered long-term consequences of abortion.  My heart goes out to these women and their families – so many of them were just never told the truth.

Abby Johnson, Founder of And Then There Were None:

One day in the car, my daughter (out of nowhere) asked if some day she would be able to see her siblings in Heaven. I asked her what she meant…honestly, hoping that she was not talking about my own two abortions. She said that she knew I had two abortions and she wanted to know if she would ever get to meet those babies because she said, “in my heart, I miss them.” I never knew I would pass that sort of heartbreak on to my children.

When I had my abortions, I never thought about how it would affect others. I didn’t think about my future children. I never thought about how I would have to explain my selfishness to them.

My abortions live in me, and unfortunately, they live in them. ”


Ashley Granger, Wife, mother, sonography student:

Now that my son is 4 years old, I sometimes look at his sweet face and wonder what features my other child would have had. I still have dreams about holding him or her and it makes me so deeply sad to think that I have robbed my son of a sibling. Why not just try and conceive a sibling for him today you may ask? Well, I would love to but my husband and I have been struggling with infertility for two and half years. I never once dreamed that I wouldn’t be able to conceive when I wanted to! Every night my sweet boy prays to God for a sibling and every time I hear those precious prayers my heart aches over what I did. Because in retrospect an abortion isn’t an easy fix or a solution to a problem….it is the problem, and it leaves a lasting effect on generations to come.

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts, Motherhood

CMAJ pushing RU-486 in Canada

November 24, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen 5 Comments

Screenshot 2014-11-24 12.32.41

The Canadian Medical Association Journal has published an article that shows how access to abortion in English speaking Canada falls behind that of Quebec.  The article covers researchers, funded by the Society of Family Planning, who presented their preliminary findings of a study on access to abortion at the Family Medicine Forum in Quebec City on Nov. 12.  What they found was that of the 94 abortion facilities across Canada, 46 of them are in the Province of Quebec.  They claim that Quebec is a leader in “equitable access” with half of its abortion facilities in rural areas and at least one facility in every health region.

What the CMAJ article and the study are really aiming at, however, is raising the issue of “medical abortion”.

Researches claim that the poor access to surgical abortion in other provinces “puts [women] at higher risk of having a second trimester abortion and its associated complications. And for those without the resources or time to navigate the system, it may mean carrying an unwanted pregnancy to term.”

Co-investigator Dr. Edith Guilbert, a senior medical advisor at the National Institute of Public Health of Quebec had this to say:

Increasing access to medical abortion — that is, abortion induced by oral medication — could close some of the gaps in rural access because a local family doctor could administer the drug. “It saves women having to travel. It saves them having to undergo a surgical procedure.”

The article goes on to say that Health Canada has been considering approval of mifepristone (known as RU-486) since December 2012.

According to a recent CMAJ commentary (2013;186:13-14), the drug is considered the gold standard for inducing safe and early non-surgical abortion.

What they don’t, of course, mention are the deaths, complications and horrendous health hazards that have befallen women and their unborn children in BC, the US and around the world.

Three pro-abortion feminists wrote an incredibly well researched book entitled “RU486 – Myths and Misconceptions”  in 1992,  describing RU-486 as a “new form of medical violence that endangers women’s lives and violates their right to be free from bodily harm”.

One of the authors, Renata Klein, wrote an open letter to MPs in Australia in 2005 , stating that:

“Then, as now, some of you will be astonished that as an internationally recognized feminist and academic who has worked on reproductive issues for 25 years and strongly supports a woman’s right to safe legal abortion, I will side with what are seen as conservative and anti-abortion views.

However, then, as now, I cannot support the view that chemical abortion is seen (a) as good reproductive choice for women, and (b) as a safe alternative to already available abortion by aspiration. I write to you because I am appalled by the misinformation given to the public by supporters of RU-486, who continue to claim chemical abortion is safe, and who portray it as a simple procedure; take three RU486 pills and –bingo! You are no longer pregnant.”

Any person who would dare to support chemical abortion, RU-486, must read this book and the other real-life testimonies of women who have suffered the days, even weeks, of agony and gore as a result of this monstrous chemical concoction.

 

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts, Reproductive Technologies

Magnificant series on marriage from around the world

November 21, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen Leave a Comment

Screenshot 2014-11-21 15.45.41

The ancient, organic, and timeless design of man and woman has been revered across all cultures throughout human history. There is a singular wisdom and beauty of this complementarity that “fits” with the universe. The family, founded on marriage, is our first school in what it means to be human, how to love, to seek communion with and be a gift to another person: man for woman, and woman for man. This relationship between man and woman—including their sexual union and its fruits—is the very “grammar” of society.

This is the introduction to a beautiful series on marriage that has been part of a three day, international, inter-religious conference on marriage held at the Vatican.  It touches on all aspects of marriage and is superbly put together.  What I like about it is that it considers marriage from both western and eastern worldviews.

Here is another snippet from one of the videos:

Most all cultures have seen the yin and the yang, masculinity and femininity threaded throughout the cosmos. Men and Women “fit” into this design. Gender theory portrays men and women in conflict with each other, but the reality beyond stereotypes is that men and women actually enrich and complement each other in their differences. Men and women are not the same. We’re different but equal. Culture is always changing but it builds on real differences, and cannot be changed without profound consequences, because complementarity is rooted in a human, social, and even cosmological reality.

Presented with great wisdom drawn from the ages, and from cultures the world over, this beautiful and inspiring series of short videos is a MUST SEE.

[youtube:http://youtu.be/n_lvf337xZw]

 

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts, Feminism

Life’s real angels

November 17, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen 1 Comment

origin_3023750420(1)

True love is infectious, and nothing could be more fetching than seeing love emanating from a big, happy family.

This family is particularly special.  Janet and Keith accepted their first son, born with severe disabilities, with so much love that the experience of caring for him opened their hearts to later adopting another little girl with Down Syndrome.  This would be their third child.

The example of friends who had adopted three siblings with Downs also inspired them to adopt and they went on to adopt and foster dozens of disabled children.

Their own love and example inspired family members to open their homes to adoption and foster care.  What a beautiful testimony to the wonder and beauty of all human life.

This week I will have the opportunity to view this movie, about a pastor and his wife who did something similar to Janet and Keith. Again, through the acceptance and love that they gave to their son born with severe disabilities, they became open to the lives of other abandoned and disabled children.

The movie DropBox is about their journey from regular parents to heroic lovers of life and the little children who come to them through a tiny door built into the side of their home.

May the world be graced with many, many more people like them.

 

Photo credit

Filed Under: Charitable, Featured Posts

Women die in botched sterilizations

November 12, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen Leave a Comment

small__6119486736
I hate to be the bearer of bad news, especially when tragedy of this scope could have been avoided.

This Reuters article reports on ten women who died this week in India through botched sterilizations.  Fourteen other women are in serious condition.

But deaths due to sterilization is not news in India.

Between 2009 and 2012, the government paid compensation for 568 deaths resulting from sterilization, the health ministry said in an answer to a question in parliament two years ago.

What grieves me most is that these women were undergoing sterilizations presumably because they already had children and couldn’t afford to have more.  That means that there are countless little children who have lost their mothers, in a country that is already hampered by disease and poverty.  What will the prospects be for their lives now?

Essentially these mothers have perished and their children’s lives have been substantially impoverished all because of ignorance; ignorance of the benefits and the life saving potential of Natural Family Planning.

We need to take a page out of the book of a little Saint, Mother Teresa.

Rather than trying to secure funds for condoms, hormonal contraception, clinics, and medical personnel to run the clinics, the Missionaries of Charity (the religious order founded by Mother Teresa) simply taught the people Natural Family Planning (NFP).

Most people roll their eyes at the mere suggestion of NFP, but wait, do they know about the successes of this simple, easy to learn method in some of the poorest nations of the world?  In 1993, the British Medical Journal published a study regarding the effectiveness of NFP in India.*

This blogger writes regarding this very study:

In India, where the poor learned NFP and relied on abstinence during the fertile phase, a study of 19,483 poor women had a pregnancy rate of less than 1%.

Further to that, she confirms what the Reuters article made obvious; that women are coerced into receiving these dangerous sterilizations through various means.  NFP however, seems not only to empower women to understand how their bodies work, but it also exempts them from government pressure.

The benefits they received went beyond the ability to plan their family size, however. Mercedes Wilson tells of how women in India would be dragged away and forcibly sterilized against their will. Women could be spared this violation, however, by carrying a card with them that stated they used NFP. In this instance, not only were the poor empowered with the knowledge of their own bodies, its use also protected them against government abuse.

*R.E.J. Ryder, “‘Natural Family Planning’: Effective Birth Control Supported by the Catholic Church,” British Medical Journal. 307 (18 September 1993).

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts, International

Mass sterilizations underway in Kenya by UNICEF and the WHO

November 7, 2014 by Natalie Sonnen 4 Comments

Screen Shot 2014-11-07 at 12.15.44 PM

Earlier this year a letter was sent out by the Bishops of Kenya.  I was forwarded a copy of the letter  alerting the international community that a UN campaign to inoculate against tetanus was underway in Kenya.  The reason for the alert was because the campaign was rather unorthodox.  It was only targeting women and girls of reproductive age.

The Bishops were asking some very pointed questions.

-Is there a tetanus crisis on women of child bearing age in Kenya? If this is so, why has it not been declared?
-Why does the campaign target women of 14 – 49 years?
– Why has the campaign left out young girls, boys and men even if they are all prone to tetanus?
– In the midst of so many life threatening diseases in Kenya, why has tetanus been prioritized?

What the Bishops were concerned about was the following:

Information in the public domain indicates that Tetanus Toxoid vaccine (TT) laced with Beta human chorionic gonadotropin (b-HCG) sub unit has been used in Philippines, Nicaragua and Mexico to vaccinate women against future pregnancy. Beta HCG sub unit is a hormone necessary for pregnancy.
When injected as a vaccine to a non-pregnant woman, this Beta HCG sub unit combined with tetanus toxoid develops antibodies against tetanus and HCG so that if a woman’s egg becomes fertilized, her own natural HCG will be destroyed rendering her permanently infertile.

In other words, UN vaccination programs are moving into developing nations and permanently sterilizing whole segments of the population without their knowledge or consent.

Their worst fears have been confirmed. According to this LifeSiteNews article, Kenya’s Catholic bishops are charging UNICEF and the WHO with sterilizing millions of girls and women with a tetanus vaccine that has been laced with HCG.

According to a statement released Tuesday by the Kenya Catholic Doctors Association, the organization has found an antigen that causes miscarriages in a vaccine being administered to 2.3 million girls and women by the World Health Organization and UNICEF.

We sent six samples from around Kenya to laboratories in South Africa. They tested positive for the HCG antigen,” Dr. Muhame Ngare of the Mercy Medical Centre in Nairobi told LifeSiteNews. “They were all laced with HCG.”

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • …
  • 13
  • 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 © 2023 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in