Sunday, March 13, 2011

Defund Planned Parenthood

11 comments:

John Myste said...

I don't watch videos on my computer. Can you summarize?

Darrell Michaels said...

Yep. Defund Planned Parenthood.

If that isn't enough, it goes on to show that a vast majority of the business done by PP are abortions, that the founder Margaret Sanger was a horrific racist and intentionally wanted the culling of undersirable "colored people", and how a vast majority of PP clinics are in minority areas ironically.

Matt@StBlogustine said...

I'm glad you picked up on this. It's important that this video go viral. When I saw it on YouTube it had only 300 visits. Post it on Facebook and email friends with blogs to post it. Everyone needs to see it!

Darrell Michaels said...

And yet there are myriads of liberals that tar conservatives/libertarians with the label of "racist".

Margaret Sanger was a vile and disgusting human being. It is sadly ironic that the left idolizes her "accomplishment" in the form of Planned Parenthood.

I wonder how many of the ignorant among them would even change their minds about Planned Parenthood if they were to be made aware of some of the quotes you provided from her? I wonder if they would be repulsed, or just say that the necessity of Planned Parenthood outweight her racist attitudes?

free0352 said...

I dunno, but Hillary Clinton thinks that genocidal lunatic was equivilant to a founding father and Barbara Boxer called her one of the greatest civil rights heros in American history. How freak'n ironic is that!?

Darrell Michaels said...

Free, that doesn't even surprise me really.

S.W. Anderson said...

Paine, as I pointed out in my response at Oh!pinion, Sanger favored contraception and did not favor abortion. What's more, she was associated with Planned Parenthood for only a few years — ages ago.

Planned Parenthood provides a broad range of women's health services to mostly low-income women. It's policy is to encourage responsible behavior, including use of contraception if pregnancy is not a good idea.

PP does provide abortion services. You're kidding yourself and being grossly unfair if you buy into the notion that they are the main thing PP clinics do. You're also accepting a fallacy if you believe abortions are mainly provided to give women an "easy" way out of the consequences of their own shabby behavior. Just as they wind up pregnant for many reasons — including rape and incest — women get abortions for many reasons.

Whatever the reason, abortion is always tragic. But we know from historical experience they're always going to be sought after by a few. We also know that driving them underground is the worst thing that can be done about them. That is as true from the standpoint of the individual as it is from society's standpoint.

If you want to discourage abortions, do what you can to provide more better alternatives. Encourage women to behave responsibly. Seeking prohibition by eliminating PP and other properly staffed and operated clinics that provide abortions is not the way.

Darrell Michaels said...

Anderson, abortions represented between 63.3% and 71% of Planned Parenthood Federation of America's total clinic revenue in 2003-04. And that's a fact straight from their own Annual Report.

Abortions were the end result in 93% of all pregnancies seen by Planned Parenthood.

While abortion, except in saving the life of the mother, is always wrong, I typically do not hate those having abortions. Rather I feel great sorrow for them and the pain for which they have and will go through for having done so.

Removing tax payer funding for this grim and evil practice really is a moral imperative.

I do agree that we need to educate and become a society that explains and fosters an understanding that abortion is not a good option in order to make them far more rare.

Continuing to subsidize this practice would seem to be contrary to that goal, wouldn't you think, sir?

John Myste said...

"Removing tax payer funding for this grim and evil practice really is a moral imperative."

Once we assume moral imperatives, we play a dangerous game indeed. From this place, all kinds of evil can be justified.

Darrell Michaels said...

John, to a certain extent I understand your point; however, please explain how this evil practice brings about good in the world ultimately?

John Myste said...

T. Paine: "Removing tax payer funding for this grim and evil practice really is a moral imperative."

John: “Once we assume moral imperatives, we play a dangerous game indeed. From this place, all kinds of evil can be justified.”

T. Paine: "John, to a certain extent I understand your point; however, please explain how this evil practice brings about good in the world ultimately?"

I just told you in a different comment:

John: "If absolute morality existed, we could not detect it or have definitive proof of what it was (we could not devise a list of moral imperatives."

Therefore, to believe we have found a moral imperative, and then act on and enforce our belief, we create a very dangerous situation. This is how some fundamentalist Muslims justify blowing things we need to bits, like our brothers and sisters.

For the sake of discussion of moral imperatives, read about Kant's Categorical Imperative. Anything that does not fall into that definition, leads to a contradiction. Perhaps it will not be you contradicting yourself, but will be someone else contradicting what you have said. We cannot claim ownership of truth unless it can truly be owned. If your truth is my deception, and vice versa, then we should be very careful about acting to enforce our opinion as if it were a moral imperative. You can say that you think it is wrong. To say that it is always wrong you know exceeds the boundaries of reason. Do you then disregard the opinions of those who have the exact same data you have and are equally intelligent, yet “know,” that you are mistaken?

I know you could use the same argument to justify Nazism, for example. However, the majority of civilized society would disagree. When a nation is split 50/50 on an issue, one side cannot take extraordinary measures to enforce their “morally imperative” opinion, or society does not work and civil war or oppression follows. A moral imperative cannot be disputed with logic. Surely you will acknowledge that tons of very logical people use logic to dispute your moral imperative? So, your moral imperative is really a strong opinion on a very important matter. It is not, however, an imperative.