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Enjoy these beautiful souls

November 21, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek 3 Comments

What a lovely tribute to her sister. Seriously worth watching.

[youtube:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bbO-PMT7t-U]

 

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Shopping for that perfect Christmas gift

November 21, 2015 by Faye Sonier 6 Comments

Then check out these beautiful pendants:

pendant

I just received one as a gift, and I have already bought one for a co-worker. They start at $45 and feature a mother caressing her womb on one side and an unborn child on the other. A portion of the proceeds go to pro-life charities. They’re Canadian and a wonderful pro-life gift to give and receive at Christmas.

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts, Motherhood, Other

Selective causes

November 20, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek 6 Comments

Very interesting to me how otherwise compassionate people, like Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, can advocate for child rights in some circumstances, but not in others. Certainly, once you establish that human beings are human beings regardless of where they are located or their size, then this becomes a hollow statement indeed.

Each child deserves to be raised in a world free of discrimination, violence, and exploitation, and each one deserves to grow up with proper nutrition and health care, a good education, and safe communities.

 

Hmmm. A world free of violence and discrimination–for those that make it.

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Margaret Thatcher and dressing for success

November 13, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek 6 Comments

You can love Margaret Thatcher’s policies. You can hate Margaret Thatcher’s policies.

You cannot deny she was a very strong woman.

A very cool look at her wardrobe–which is also, by extension, a look at the woman. Neat.

maggie

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Abortion as birth control–that’s how Planned Parenthood exec director uses it

November 12, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek 3 Comments

It remains hotly contested to say that abortion is backup birth control. I think it is obvious that abortion is used that way. With few exceptions, the personal stories of abortion women have shared with me were essentially abortion as a backup to failed birth control stories.

And so it is, from Cecile Richards herself:

It was a decision my husband and I made. It was a personal decision. And we have three children that we adore and that are the center of my life. And we decided that was as big as our family needed to be. That was really the story. It wasn’t anything more dramatic than that.

Easy peasy, lemon squeezy.

One more comment: Pregnancy and child bearing–they sound like a choice you plan out until they aren’t. The women who know this most profoundly are the women experiencing infertility, for whatever reason. They’ve been told they can have a child at the time of their choosing. When that doesn’t pan out, they hit the non-choiceness of it all hard.

Cecile Richards

Cecile Richards: “We have three children… That was as big as our family needed to be.

 

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Modern heroes

November 11, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

Following up on my last post, I just read this one, written by Canada’s own Jonathan Van Maren, a stalwart pro-life activist. Five Things You Need to Know from the Leaked Planned Parenthood Footage is an important read. He concludes with this:

David Daleidan is today’s Harriet Beecher Stowe and these videos are our modern Uncle Tom’s Cabin

(Being today’s Harriet Beecher Stowe means being maligned publicly, until the tide shifts and then you are not.)

Jonathan Van Maren

Jonathan Van Maren

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The Abolitionists

November 11, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

Outrage

This extraordinary documentary about key figures in the fight to eradicate slavery in the United States is available for free at your public library. Go and get it right now, it’s that good. (If you live or work near the downtown Ottawa public library, wait a couple of days for me to return it.)

Here’s the trailer.

[youtube:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMrWeKILvps#t=19]

Here’s some commentary about the documentary:

This group of individuals took on the greatest obstacle to America achieving the ideals of its founding: slavery…They took it on, dead on when the vast majority of people simply wanted the issue to go away. They would not let this original sin on the American soul go forgotten and they pushed it and they pushed it and they pushed to the fore and eventually war came and slavery was ended and these people were at the heart of that. They are true American heroes and hardly anyone knows who they are.”

These individuals were societal outcasts, initially. Angelina Grimke couldn’t go to her home in the South–she would have been put in jail. A fellow named William Lloyd Garrison was attacked by the mob. Frederick Douglass had to flee to England and Canada at various points to avoid being re-captured. They held a unique vision of an America without slavery, and they held it as they endured defeat after defeat after defeat. Even at the start of Lincoln’s presidency it was absolutely unclear which way things would go.

So too did these activists endure divisions within their own movement–people who viewed the issue differently, or wanted to push in different ways. The documentary is a fascinating look at the hearts of activists and does not exclude their Christian faith, as many a Hollywood film has done with fascinating people; faith so often gets whitewashed out. That would be truly impossible here, as each person acted in accordance with their deeply held Christian faith. They all felt accountability to an everlasting and eternal God, and saw humanity in African Americans as a result. As such, there were theological differences that bubbled up too–pacifist versus non-pacifist Christian practice, for example. (Garrison was a pacifist, but one activist named John Brown believed military force to be inevitable and pursued the end of slavery using violence, for which he was hung.)

So. By now you know I took much of this documentary as a microcosm for the struggle lonely pro-life activists face. After watching this documentary, I thought of those who work tirelessly for life in Canada, to eradicate the stain of abortion today as slavery was the stain of yesteryear. I thought of all those who endure disparaging comments, or professional sanction because they call us to remember, remember, remember that we could be a more decent society to everyone in it. I thought of those like Linda Gibbons, in jail, even today. Always remember, never forget, that today in Canada, far from the fear mongering of pro-choice activists, the only women in jail because of abortion are pro-life activists.

The biggest problem we face is that the victims of abortion do not (generally) escape and do not get to go on speaking tours. The other problem is that the oppression is self-inflicted. Yes, many, many women face soft coercion toward abortion. But in the end, these women still walk themselves, or let themselves be walked to the abortion clinic. We have failed to convince that abortion is a far greater trauma than bearing a child with a disability, or being fearful about not having enough money to support a child, or being fearful about not being able to pursue a particular career. If women would not choose abortion, if men would not let them, acting instead as responsible, loving encouragement to the mothers of their children, then abortion clinics would not have any clients.

Canada without abortion. By choice. It’s our tagline, here, and we at ProWomanProLife have been successful in creating a solid internet presence, a place for pro-life women to go when they feel and indeed are treated as social outcasts. But it’s not quite enough, is it? Just having a space for pro-life women, to ensure we are represented, when the bigger and better funded voices pipe up with drivel like “my body, my choice,” is not enough. How to encourage women sitting on the fence? How to take the great number of women who would never personally have an abortion but still insist on saying they could never tell another woman what to do and transform them into pro-life supporters? How to move people of means and less means so that they give generously to support the fight for human rights for all human beings? How to do all this without it coming to violence, as it did eventually in the fight against slavery in America?

I don’t have all the answers, yet. But a three hour PBS documentary called The Abolitionists has put a renewed fire in my heart to try.

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Two child policy just as bad

October 29, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek 3 Comments

It’s the fact that they have any policy at all that is the problem. China now has a two child policy instead of the one child policy they had in place before. 

From an expert, Reggie Littlejohn:

However, instituting a two-child policy will not end forced abortion, gendercide or family planning regulations in China.  Couples will still have to have a birth permit for the first and the second child, or they may be subject to forced abortion,” Littlejohn said. “The core of the One Child Policy is not whether the number of children the government allows.  It’s the fact that the government is setting a limit on children, and enforcing this limit coercively.  That will not change under a two-child policy.  The One Child Policy does not need to be modified. It needs to be abolished. Women will still be forcibly aborted under a universal 2-child policy.  We need to keep up the pressure until China abandons all coercive population control,” Littlejohn added.

Screen Shot 2015-10-29 at 14.01.49

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Health risks of abortion (that no one is allowed to discuss)

October 27, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek 5 Comments

“My ‘ideology’ is therefore pro-scientific research that is untainted by political correctness, and pro-informed consent. But our culture can’t seem to get beyond the “rights” aspect of abortion into the “data” aspect.” –Barbara Kay

 

Great article. And I can’t wait to see the documentary, Hush.

 

Punam Kumar Gill, Director of the film Hush

 

 

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Someone get this woman her smelling salts!

October 22, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

This journalist is in shock there’s a feminist prime-minister elect.

I’m in shock that she thinks of herself as a feminist.

A feminist is a strong woman, regardless of world view or ideological conviction. When you get your underoos into this big of a tangle for the lack of government dole outs, I think we can all agree you aren’t that. Her article should run on The Onion.

Feminists across the country are emerging from their bomb shelters, and blinking in the stark light of day to assess the damage of the past decade.

Did she actually say that? Yes! And more. Read and enjoy.

Catherine Porter, self-described "feminist" can't do it--not without a lot of government money, hand holding and support. From a man, no less.

Catherine Porter, self-described “feminist” can’t do it–not without a lot of government money, hand holding and support. From a man, no less. 

 

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts, Free Expression

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