(A3a4d3) American pro life organizations
As of this date, 05-11-12, there are 3 items in this folder.
******* item 1 PRO-LIFE WOMEN'S GROUP MORE SUCCESSFUL IN ELECTIONS THAN ABORTION ADVOCATES
******* item 2 COLLEGES PROMOTE ABORTION OVER PREGNANCY IN STUDENT HEALTH CARE PLANS
******* item 3 LA TIMES ARTICLE PROFILES CONCERNED WOMEN FOR AMERICA
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******* item 1 PRO-LIFE WOMEN'S GROUP MORE SUCCESSFUL IN ELECTIONS THAN ABORTION ADVOCATES
******* From: "LifeNews.com"
******* Date: Sat, 6 Nov 2004 13:08:12 -0500 (EST)
******* For news updated throughout the day, visit LifeNews.com.
******* Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) -- Once again, a leading women's group that works to elect pro-life candidates to office outperformed its top pro-abortion rival on election day. Some eighty percent of the candidates the Susan B. Anthony List endorsed this election cycle won. "Our success rate shows that the pro-life issue is a winning issue," SBA List director Jennifer Bingham told LifeNews.com. "Despite the unprecedented millions spent by pro-abortion groups this election cycle to try and take back the Senate and President Bush, they lost over and over again," Bingham added. "Americans stand with us and women stand with us wanting abortion restricted in this country." With two new pro-life women elected to the House of Representatives, that brings the total number of pro-life women there to thirteen. Senator Elizabeth Dole (R-NC) is the sole pro-life woman in the Senate. SBA List's top rival, Emily's List, managed to elect only 39% of the candidates it supported, despite outspending the pro-life organization by an 8.5 to 1 margin. Emily's List raised over $45 million, the largest total ever for the pro-abortion political group. Comparatively, 75 percent of NARAL-endorsed candidates won, though the group was aided by the easy re-election efforts of more than fifty candidates. Some 72 percent of candidates with Planned Parenthood's backing won, but the group was also aided by supporting over 130 incumbents. SBA List backed just 22 incumbent candidates. WISH List, a pro-abortion PAC for Republican women, lost every race in which it helped a challenger or a candidate in an open seat and only 46 percent of the candidates endorsed by the pro-abortion Women's Campaign Fund won.
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******* item 2 COLLEGES PROMOTE ABORTION OVER PREGNANCY IN STUDENT HEALTH CARE PLANS
******* From: "LifeNews.com"
******* Date: Mon, 20 Dec 2004
******* For news updated throughout the day, visit LifeNews.com.
******* Columbia, NY (LifeNews.com) -- When it comes to providing support to students facing an unexpected pregnancy, far too many colleges are failing to make the grade. That's the assessment of Feminists for Life, which says that some university health plans, such as Yale University's, provide coverage for abortion but not for giving birth. "When students receive positive results on a pregnancy test, campus health clinic staff too often say �I'm sorry' and automatically refer women to abortion clinics," said Serrin Foster of Feminists for Life. "Women need to know the rest of their choices, including single parenting, married parenting, and adoption options." At Harvard, pro-life students can get a small rebate from the university if they don't want their student fees used to pay for abortions. Meanwhile, at Columbia University, a nurse practitioner told the student newspaper that most Columbia students who become pregnant choose abortion. It's that kind of mindset that Feminists for Life is trying to change. Foster notes that schools regularly address �other challenges students face, like depression and sexually transmitted diseases, but bury the fact that there are pregnant and parenting students who need support." The group's college outreach program was inspired by a former board member who shared her story of pregnancy during grad school. "Without housing, day care or maternity coverage, it didn't seem like I had much of a free choice," the woman told Foster and the Feminists for Life board. As a result, the woman miscarried under the stress. "That story haunted me. We had to do something," Foster said.
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******* item 3 LA TIMES ARTICLE PROFILES CONCERNED WOMEN FOR AMERICA
******* Date: Wed, 29 Dec 2004
******* From: "Mission America"
******* Los Angeles Times, CA
http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-women27dec27,0,581823.story?c
oll=la-home-headlines
******* They Stand Firmly for What's on the Right
******* Concerned Women for America has made its name taking the most
unwavering
stances.
******* By Richard T. Cooper and Johanna Neuman, Times Staff Writers
******* WASHINGTON - Among the droves of conservative Christian lobbyists
arguing their points of view in Washington, one relatively little-known
group has a simple formula for setting itself apart from the crowd:
Don't give an inch.
******* Concerned Women for America always takes the most uncompromising
positions. The group, founded some 25 years ago in San Diego, almost
never settles for half a loaf. And, at the first hint of backsliding,
it
attacks its conservative comrades with the same fury it unleashes on
liberals.
******* In a town run on the art of compromise, it is an unusual and lately
galvanizing strategy.
******* "We're not just antiliberal. We put principle above all," says chief
counsel Jan LaRue. "We hold anyone's feet to the fire if we think that
they're compromising on principle."
******* That unflinching strategy - plus an $11-million annual budget, more
than
$200,000 in political action money raised last year and 500,000 members
ready to flood Washington with letters, e-mails and personal visits -
has begun to make the once-marginal group a player to reckon with.
******* As the group's leaders see it, President Bush's reelection means their
moment has arrived.
******* "I believe God has built up an army," says Lanier Swann, director of
governmental relations, who just moved to the organization from the
offices of Sen. Elizabeth Hanford Dole (R-N.C.). "Following Nov. 2,"
Swann says, "they're ready to march."
******* What Concerned Women for America is ready to march for may be the most
zealous interpretation of what it means to be a Christian conservative.
******* Like other such groups, for example, it opposes abortion and marriage
for gays and lesbians. But the organization also objected to this
year's
proposed constitutional amendment banning gay marriage because,
officials say, the language did not go far enough - it did not ban
civil
unions. They hope a 2005 version will close loopholes that could have
sanctified marriage by any other name.
******* The group opposes hate crime legislation too, because it says making
attacks on gays a special crime suggests the government approves of
their orientation.
******* In addition to drawing immutable lines in the sand, the group finds
ways
to advance its interests. So its antiabortion efforts not only include
pressuring the Food and Drug Administration to rescind approval of the
RU 486 abortion pill, but also seek enactment of the Unborn Child Pain
Awareness Act. That measure, to be introduced in the coming Congress,
would require doctors to tell a woman seeking an abortion that the
fetus
would feel pain during the procedure and then would require doctors to
offer anesthesia to both the mother and fetus.
******* Still another proposal would give ultrasound machines to all
birth-control clinics - so a woman would be "more informed about the
life developing inside of her," explains spokeswoman Rebecca Jones.
******* Religious liberty, as the group defines it, includes lifting the
Internal Revenue Service ban on churches participating in politics. And
it includes cheering judges who display the Ten Commandments in public
places and championing courts that uphold the right of schoolchildren
to
say "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance.
******* Robert H. Knight, director of the group's Culture and Family Institute,
an in-house think tank, is among those who object to the use of
nonspecific holiday greetings instead of Christmas ones. He says
"millions of Americans are waking up to the fact that the phrase 'Happy
Holidays' is less a happy greeting than a pointed assault on our civil
liberties."
******* The organization also has been a leader in the attack on "Kinsey," the
movie about the life of sex-research pioneer Alfred C. Kinsey. The
"ultimate goal" of Kinsey and his followers, the group's website says,
has been "to normalize pedophilia, or 'adult-child sex.' "
******* In the group's view, Kinsey and the movie reflect much of what is
deplorable in contemporary American life.
******* "The agenda of the left is to make religion strictly private and
pornography public," says Knight. "And the people behind this agenda,
more often than not, are homosexual activists."
******* How quick the group is to attack those who deviate even slightly from
its principles was illustrated by the recent fight over whether
Pennsylvania Republican Sen. Arlen Specter, who supports abortion
rights, should become chairman of the Judiciary Committee.
******* Concerned Women for America joined other conservative Christian groups
in prompting Specter to make a public pledge not to oppose antiabortion
judicial candidates - and to assure all nominations reach the Senate
floor - as the price of getting his chairmanship.
******* But the group went a step further. It also blasted Sen. Rick Santorum
(R-Pa.) when he defended his fellow Pennsylvanian. Santorum is a
staunch
foe of abortion and a champion of conservative positions generally - in
a 2003 interview with Associated Press, he likened homosexuality to
bestiality.
******* Similarly, the group did not hesitate to cross swords with James
Dobson,
founder of Focus on the Family and a powerful voice among conservative
Christians, over his proposed Federal Marriage Amendment barring
same-sex marriage.
******* The White House endorsed Dobson's proposal, but Concerned Women for
America said the measure might permit states to sanction civil unions.
The proposed amendment was voted down in Congress and Dobson, whose
organization did not respond to requests for comment, was said to be
furious about the group's intransigence.
******* Dobson should not have been surprised. Concerned Women for America is
especially vigilant when it comes to anything involving homosexuality.
When Sen. George V. Allen (R-Va.), another staunch conservative, voted
for hate-crime legislation this year, the group attacked him too.
******* To some liberal groups, all this makes Concerned Women for America what
one gay-rights leader calls "the looniest of the loony." Referring to
the organization's tendency to turn on conservatives who it believes
compromise, he says, "This is an organization that has no problem
eating
their own."
******* But Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women, which
Concerned Women for America was formed in part to combat, says that
goes
too far. "They are not the super wackos," Gandy says. "They're just
very
conservative, very traditional in their view of the woman's place."
What
makes Concerned Women for America increasingly hard to ignore, however,
is not so much its message as the muscle behind it. The key is its
ability to generate floods of mail and personal visits to politicians
from activist members and a cadre of citizen lobbyists - women who
voluntarily come to Washington once a month to lobby for Concerned
Women
for America's causes.
******* "The power comes from the lobbying presence on the Hill and the women
who come to Washington every month," says Michael Schwartz, who
recently
left the group to work as chief of staff for Sen.-elect Tom Coburn
(R-Okla.)
******* "CWA's membership is very responsive," Schwartz says. "If the
organization says, 'Write to your House member,' they will. Apart from
AARP, CWA is the next best in generating mail." The AARP is a
35-million
member lobbying group for Americans older than 50.
******* At the grass-roots level, the organization has built a network of
several hundred prayer action groups, whose members meet monthly to
pray
and then mobilize for legislative goals sent from headquarters to 21
state directors.
******* In addition, so-called action alerts posted on the organization's
website, www.cwfa.org, tell members whom to criticize - or sometimes
applaud - and where to write. The membership includes men.
******* If there is a cloud on the group's horizon, it is its apparent
difficulty in building a steady team of top leaders in Washington,
especially a president: The organization has fired two chiefs in the
last few years.
******* The difficulty, some analysts say, lies with its founder and chairman
of
the board, 75-year-old Beverly LaHaye. The mother of four and wife of
bestselling Christian author Tim LaHaye founded Concerned Women for
America after experiencing a kind of political epiphany while watching
feminist leader Betty Friedan on television in 1978.
******* As LaHaye tells the story, when Friedan said that she spoke for
America's women, LaHaye stood up in her living room and declared,
"She's
not speaking for me."
******* LaHaye's husband has written more than 50 books, including the "Left
Behind" series and a sex manual he co-authored with her called "The Act
of Marriage" which sold more than 2 million copies. He also was a
pastor
at a church in San Diego and helped found a group of Christian schools.
******* Prior to founding Concerned Women for America, Beverly LaHaye had
little
to no personal involvement in conservative Christian causes.
******* After seeing Friedan, however, she called together eight friends. Then
she rented a hall in San Diego and put an ad in the newspaper inviting
women to a meeting opposing the Equal Rights Amendment. LaHaye said she
came up with "Concerned Women for America" because she couldn't rent
the
hall without a name.
******* She says she was stunned when 1,200 women showed up, and literally
trembled when she got up to speak.
******* But her message struck a chord and the organization took root.
******* Some 25 years later, LaHaye cannot seem to find a suitable person to
take over as president. "When the right woman comes along," she said in
a rare phone interview, "I will be happy to step aside."
******* That has not happened yet. And, since LaHaye now lives in Palm Springs
and visits Washington only twice a year, the organization's staff works
without day-to-day central direction. LaHaye says she has stayed in
touch by telephone, but critics say the lack of a president has hurt
the
group's effectiveness.
******* "The most difficult thing for any organization is the transition from
the charismatic founder to an institutional leader," says Schwartz, the
group's recently departed lobbyist. "I wish CWA were the exception but
it has had this endemic difficulty. There's no question the
organization
would be more potent if it solved its succession problem."
******* Meantime, the organization has developed a sort of expert-level
directorate. Every Monday, senior staff members brainstorm about
strategy. And they rally the membership with "action items," using
e-mails, calls, letters and, of late, appearances on mainstream media
outlets.
******* "It works because we are all Christians, we aren't big egos," says
Wendy
Wright, the group's senior policy director and its United Nations
lobbyist. "It isn't a territorial struggle. We have a common cause.
******* "God is in control," she says. "He helped to raise up the Concerned
Women for America to the position we are in now. We are faithful to the
work he has for us to do."
-------------------------------------
Mail service for Mission America provided by
American Family Online
www.afo.net
******* Mission America
www.missionamerica.com
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(A3a4d3a) American pro life educational organizations
(A3a4d3b) American pro life service organizations
(A3a4d3c) American pro life political organizations
(A3a4d3d) American pro life professional organizations
(A3a4d3e) American pro life spiritual organizations
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The following warning is a prophetic message given to me, Frank Wagner, in November of 1974. ******* LISTEN TO THE CRY OF THE ABORTED CHILDREN. THEIR CRY IS NO. THEIR CRY IS A CRY OF TERROR. HEED THEIR CRY. ******* This prophecy is now being fulfilled. ******* For details about the source, meaning and fulfillment of this prophetic message go to ******* http://ca.geocities.com/fwagner4/index.html ******* email me at *** [email protected] ***