Pelosi will get her pro-abortion health care “one way or another”

Sometimes it’s hard to believe how in-your-face the pro-aborts are being when they force feed pro-life Americans government-funded abortion-on-demand.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi had the gall to suggest that, regardless of the outcome in MA, they will get their health care bill “one way or another.”  These pro-abortion radicals have no regard for the lives they are destroying.  It should come as no surprise.

Girl's looking haggard.

Windpipe Transplant Further Proof Embryonic Stem Cell Research Not Needed

Pro-lifers are constantly denounced as standing in the way of technological and medical progress when it comes to embryonic stem cells. Proponents of ESCR continue to protest their innocence as nobly motivated to help their fellow man. At most, they might acknowledge the occasionally difficult awkward moral qualms associated with experimenting on human embryo’s, but it’s considered “worth it.” What’s a miniscule organism in a petri dish next to the medical miracles they promise to deliver…someday.

Pro-lifers have in turn stuck to principle, the wanton destruction of human life won’t get you anywhere. And happily, over the last few years, we have been more and more vindicated by the news. For not only has there been little news on those wonder breakthroughs we’ve been promised, science is actually making quite a bit of headway in other areas. And this week, more good news:

LONDON — For more than a quarter of a century, Linda De Croock lived with constant pain from a car accident that smashed her windpipe.

Today, she has a new one after surgeons implanted the windpipe from a dead man into her arm, where it grew new tissue before being transplanted into her throat. The way doctors trained her body to accept donor tissue could yield new methods of growing or nurturing organs within patients, experts say.

Pro-lifers have cited the promising results of research using adult stem cells for a while, and this is in the same vein. Using cells grown from the patient’s own body don’t lead to any issues with rejection of outside tissue.

Oliver Stone To Contextualize “Lebensraum”

(H/t: Hot Air)

Granted, it shouldn’t surprise all and sundry that Oliver Stone is working on something controversial and eye-rolling worthy. But he’s going a little further than usual, even for him, and although it’s not directly related to the pro-life movement, there may be an interesting parallel or point of note (emphasis added in bold):

Director Oliver Stone’s upcoming Showtime documentary miniseries “Secret History of America” promises to put mass murderers such as Stalin and Hitler “in context.”

Stalin, Hitler, Mao, McCarthy — these people have been vilified pretty thoroughly by history,” Stone told reporters at the Television Critics Association’s semi-annual press tour in Pasadena.

“Stalin has a complete other story,” Stone said. “Not to paint him as a hero, but to tell a more factual representation. He fought the German war machine more than any single person. We can’t judge people as only ‘bad’ or ‘good.’ Hitler is an easy scapegoat throughout history and its been used cheaply. He’s the product of a series of actions. It’s cause and effect … People in America don’t know the connection between WWI and WWII … I’ve been able to walk in Stalin’s shoes and Hitler’s shoes to understand their point of view. We’re going to educate our minds and liberalize them and broaden them. We want to move beyond opinions … Go into the funding of the Nazi party. How many American corporations were involved, from GM through IBM. Hitler is just a man who could have easily been assassinated.”

The controversial director’s 10-part documentary series for Showtime promises to focus on events that “at the time went under-reported, but crucially shaped America’s unique and complex history of the last 60 years.” Subjects in “History” include President Harry Truman’s decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan and the origins of the Cold War with the Soviet Union.

You cannot approach history unless you have empathy for the person you may hate,” Stone said during the show’s trailer, which promised to put historical villains “in context.” “I don’t want to put out conventional History Channel product where it’s easy to like it.”

He’s not saying we’re going to come out with a more positive view of Hitler,” emphasized professor Peter Kuznick, the lead writer on the project. “But we’re going to describe him as a historical phenomenon and not just somebody who appeared out of nowhere.”

This is something both nowhere near as shocking or groundbreaking as it might first appear, yet also rather more sinister and illustrative of a deeper problem.

Any decent amateur student of history will tell you that “empathy,” “in context,” or “historical  phenomenon,” are primary requisites for the most basic and fundamental understanding of history. And to say that American’s as a rule tend to be ignorant of many important historical events and processes, is also a rather bland case of obviousness. Your average American probably can’t tell you much about the relationship between WWI and WWII in Germany (maybe a reference to Versailles at most), or the “stab in the back myth” that Hitler took advantage of on his rise to power. If Stone is going to do this “re-imagining” of Hitler well, one would hope he’d talk about interwar economics, politics (the Nazi’s were played off the Socialists by the traditional parties), and German history, including the German Empire, Prussian Nationalism, the unification of Germany, 19th century science including evolution and Darwinism, Race Theory, Romanticism, Hegelian Philosophy of History, and maybe even the French Revolution. It is not stretching a claim in historical circles to use all the above to “put Hitler in context.” And yes, Stalin led most of the fighting in the Second World War. Americans think the Normandy landings were the European battle, while in reality twenty million Russians were dying on the Ost Front.

So Stone is over-hyping his edgy “need to empathize” business. But empathy and sympathy are two very different things, and revisionist historians far to often fall into the latter while trying to re-portray history from a fresh or new angle. It’s not too difficult to put oneself “into Hitler’s shoes” as a dispossesed and disgruntled young German idealist, embittered over Versailles, fed on half-baked race theories, traditional anti-semitism, and steeped in Prussian Nationalism. That’s really all one need do in order to understand Hitler’s “context.” But the danger with Stone’s revisionist vision is that Hitler might emerge a more sympathetic character, the victim of other nations, someone driven to accidentally become a world monster. It’s all well and good to note how the rise of the Nazi party was influenced buy outside forces, but it doesn’t take away from their ultimate responsibility as willful moral agents. Just because America has a sometimes less than stellar record with ethnic minorities, it wouldn’t justify those same minorities having their own kristallnacht.

If there’s one interesting side note on this whole affair that pro-lifers migth want to keep an eye on, it’s the eugenics connection. It’s pretty commonly understood among pro-lifers that a lot of the early abortion advocates (e.g. Margaret Sanger) were also Eugenics proponents at one time or another. People forget that the Eugenics movement was pretty mainstream and popular in some circles in the first half of the 20th century. It was only WWII and the Nazi party taking Eugenics to its inevitable logical conclusion that put a damper on the race/population control enthusiasts back home.

Is Stone going to take a look at that angle? Could be interesting, and it could be either a bad, or actually, a good thing. If Stone’s trying to bring up dark secrets in American history and he choses to highlight the American Eugenics program, it might remind a lot of Americans that Hitler was simply the ultimate extension of an awkward fact in American history.

So here’s hoping. Not that I’m raising my expectations considerably. Hollywood’s ability to come down on the wrong side of issues time and again is rather impressive.

The Hidden Blessing of Pro-Abortion Presidents

The chief weapon of pro-aborts is apathy. Not apathy on the part of their activists, money  takes care of that. But it is apathy which protects their judicial mandate.

The pro-life position on abortion hinges upon the belief that abortion is biologically and morally the taking of a life, and those moral absolutes tend to bring along a faith in a non-relativistic human nature, which embraces those outdated concepts of good and wrong. In American civic history, we like to call them self-evident Truths. If the pro-life position is correct, then the necessary corollary is most of humanity is by nature inclined to recognize the inhumanity of abortion just as we would any murder. The reason that hasn’t led to near universal opprobrium of abortion is that for many many people, they don’t think about it.

I cant’ really say I blame them in a sense, it’s not a pleasant topic. Much easier to live your day pretending it’s not an issue, especially in an atomistic society where Smithian fellow-feeling has little pull. Most folks can live their lives in relative bliss, either whistling by the graveyard or vaguely hiding behind America’s vaunted individualism of “it’s not my life, let them do what they want.”

Generally, it’s only when directly confronted with abortion, or educated by pro-lifers, that the average uncaring moderate thinks about the issue. Planned Parenthood and Company are quite happy with this, content to downplay abortion to everyone but their base, passing themselves off as a benevolent and caring entity concerned with “women’s health.”

Political activity on the issue changes things, however.

Since the Stupak Amendment changed the playing field on Health Care Legislation, I’ve seen much more conversation in the news and blogosphere on abortion than normal. Abortion seems to have finally risen to become one of the chief flash points in the Health Care debate. And looking back over the year, abortion seems to have occupied more time in the public eye that an usual as well. And the chief person we have to thank for that:

Barack Obama.

Just this year, we’ve had the repeal of Mexico City, the Notre Dame commencement address, and now health care reform. All of these have brought abortion to the public’s attention. I think it’s no coincidence that in the same year as the most radically pro-abortion President ever took office, we had polls come out showing the highest support in history for pro-life positions and policies. Political agitation over abortion stirs up the news cycles, and occasionally shakes the apathetic undecided out of his indifferent reverie. There may not be a way to measure the impact of the health care reform debate on the public’s perception of abortion, but I doubt it’ll be bad.

So a silver lining as we cringe at what’s to come. Hearty thanks to all the pro-life Congressman and pro-life groups engaged in the health care debate right now, and some thanks to Nancy, Reid, and Barack right now as well. Showing your colors forces people to take sides, which generally involves some soul searching.




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