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The pro-life movement needs you

The pro-life movement needs you

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The pro-life movement needs you

It's been three years since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, and a pro-life leader says there's still work to do.

Justices ruled 6-3 on June 24, 2022 that the U.S. Constitution does not confer a right to abortion. To the dismay of abortion supporters, regulations were returned to the people and their elected representatives.

Earlier that year, Politico had obtained a leaked draft opinion from the U.S. Supreme Court, from a source who has never been publicly identified, and Justice Samuel Alito later confirmed the leak enraged abortion-supporting leftists and put the lives of the justices in danger.

As pro-life pregnancy resource centers became targets of firebombs and other attacks, then-President Biden went on to use the Clinton-era Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act to prosecute not the vandals, but the pro-lifers who continued to fight for preborn babies.

President Trump spent his first days in office earlier this year taking executive action to stop that weaponization of the government against conservatives and political enemies – a welcomed development in the pro-life community. 

Now, noting that most abortions are done chemically, Carol Tobias of National Right to Life says for starters, women need to understand that the abortion pill can be misused.

Tobias, Carol (NRLC) Tobias

"We have already had several court cases where a man got his hands on the abortion pill, gave it to the woman, unknowingly [to her], in an attempt to kill the child, even though she wanted the child," Tobias relays.

Supporters of the method tout it is "safer than Tylenol," but Tobias and other pro-life activists beg to differ.

"[Women] could end up in the emergency room; they could have a lot of complications afterwards," she warns.

Some of the danger is physical, even deadly, but abortion also takes an emotional and psychological toll.

"We have to make sure women understand that there is help available. If they are pregnant and not sure what to do, they don't have to go through that process or go down that path by themselves," Tobias submits.

She recommends that pro-lifers befriend, work with, and help expectant mothers who are going through what might be a scary time in their lives, letting them know that "we love them as much as we love the baby."

"There really is a lot to do," Tobias reiterates. "It doesn't matter what your talents are in the pro-life movement; there is a place for you, and there is work that you can do."

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