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This is all they have to fall back on

This is all they have to fall back on


This is all they have to fall back on

A Baptist pastor says inviting Planned Parenthood to be a part of its convention this week is just more evidence that the Democratic Party is wildly anti-family.

Planned Parenthood Great Rivers from the St. Louis and southern Missouri region sent the so-called mobile health clinic (pictured above) to Chicago to offer free vasectomies and chemical abortions to convention-goers.

The appointment-only slots were filled before the convention even started, and by Tuesday, 25 babies had lost their lives in what organizers call a promotion of reproductive healthcare accessibility.

Jeffress, Rev. Robert (FBC Dallas) Jeffress

Dr. Robert Jeffress of First Baptist Dallas says the Democrats are focusing on abortion because they have no successful policies on which to run: "Vote for us so that we can continue our failed policies on immigration and the economy. The only thing we want to do differently is kill even more innocent babies in the womb."

But abortions and vasectomies are just the beginning of their anti-family values. Their social policies include tax proposals that penalize the natural family, and the internet is filled with posts from what GOP Vice Presidential candidate JD Vance has called "childless cat ladies" bragging about not having kids.

"They're showing, again, their basic hostility toward the family as God designed it," Jeffress submits.

Some on the Republican side of the aisle think it is a good thing that liberal Democrats are not rearing another generation of godless anti-Americans, but that is too cynical for Pastor Jeffress.

"There can be wonderful, godly children that come out of the union of two ungodly parents, and history is replete with examples of that," he tells AFN.

Still, he believes the government should implement and champion pro-family policies.

"Our policies as a government need to be pro-life and pro-family, and I think God will honor a nation that makes that a priority," says Jeffress.