Tag Archives: national-center

ABC Pushes Taxpayer Funded Abortions with Misleading Incident, Mashed Terms and Only Pro-Abort "Experts”

MSM’s propaganda to keep taxpayer funded abortion in Obamacare has begun. But the article ABC posted yesterday entitled, “Immigrants lured to cheap, do-it-yourself abortion,” was 1) totally misleading; 2) misplaced blame; 3) seriously mashed terms; and 4) led with a fraudulent sob story. ABC reporter Susan Donaldson James wrote a truly shoddy piece and should be ashamed of herself, although I’m sure she’s not. About #s 1, 3, and 4, from the article: Kelly , a part-time hairdresser from Atlanta , took 5 little white pills at 7 a.m. and will take 5 more before her 6-week-old fetus is completely aborted . “I am going through this as we speak,” said Kelly, who did not want her last name used. “What I read about it was really scary. I didn’t sleep at all last night, I was so anxious.” At first, the cramping pain and bleeding was “like a bad period” – but later “it got worse” and even the painkiller hydrocodone didn’t help. But Kelly could deal with the emotional event in the privacy of her own home and at about half the cost of a surgical abortion . Kelly induced a miscarriage with misoprostol , sold under the brand name Cytotec , an FDA-approved drug for treating stomach ulcers…. Safe and effective, the drug is used globally to prevent women from post-partum hemorrhaging and is widely prescribed in combination with RU-486 in the US to induce miscarriage . But for some low-income women, misoprostol has become a do-it-yourself abortion tool . That wasn’t the case with Kelly. An ultrasound revealed her fetus had no heartbeat and she would eventually miscarry. But like many women, she elected a medical rather than a surgical procedure because it was cheaper and carried a lower out-of-pocket cost — about $20 for the prescription. Kelly is under the care of a doctor , but many women, particularly immigrants, are uninsured or don’t have access to health care, and end up in emergency rooms or without professional care when things go wrong. How confused and misleading! Kelly wasn’t undergoing an induced abortion, which is defined as such if the baby has a heartbeat when the procedure is initiated. Kelly was medically inducing a miscarriage (not mentioned until the 7th paragraph). Her baby had died naturally. Furthermore, Kelly was under a doctor’s care (not mentioned until the 8th paragraph). Donaldson James also engaged engaged in opposite-world terminology. The one time in her story to this point the term “abortion” would have been appropriate was when describing the use of Cytotec for the 2nd half of the RU-486 abortion cocktail. But then D-J called it “induc[ing] miscarriage.” And if Cytotec abortions are so “safe and effective,” why did D-J get so dramatic with descriptions of pain and fear and secrecy – of a mother given a prescription by her physician to complete a miscarriage? I’m confident that had D-J’s intended spin been to promote a legal RU-486 abortion obtained through Planned Parenthood she would have nixed any drama and conveyed only happiness and relief. Actually, I don’t understand the point of this story. In large part it was written to promote public funded abortions in healthcare: Health experts say illicit use of the drug underscores the barriers that many women face when trying to access reproductive care, particularly immigrants and women of color. They worry that the amendment in the passage of the new health care law to ban the use of federal funds in Medicaid and insurance exchanges for abortion could further marginalize women’s access to reproductive care. “What the amendment does is if you are poor, you cannot get an abortion,” said Jessica-Gonzalez-Rojas , deputy director of the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health . “Wealthy women can pay out of pocket and have access to clinics and services.” But that’s the way it has always been. Rich women have always had access to abortion. Legalizing abortion in 1973 was supposed to erase the access barrier between wealthy and poor.  Furthermore, most abortion mills are located in poor and minority areas. What more do they want? Oh yes, for us to pay for them. But why now the urgency? The federal government hasn’t subsidized elective abortions for 34 years, since the Hyde Amendment was enacted . But I digress. As I said, I don’t understand the point of this story, because it concludes with ominous concerns about making abortion illegal again: “There is a perception that Latinas are not pro choice, and many women we work with have different feelings about abortion, but we all agree about access,” said Jessica Gonzales-Roja. “It shouldn’t be restricted. We have all seen friends die in underground abortions. We know the reality of what happens when abortions are not legal.” What the heck? And another kicker? The mother whose baby tragically died of natural causes at the beginning of the story, Kelly, doesn’t support taxpayer funding of abortion: Kelly understands the prohibitive cost of abortion, but supports restrictions on federal funding. “A woman can choose to do what she wants, but it’s up to her to pay for it,” she said. “It’s not up to insurance or Obama care. It’s not the government’s responsibility. I stand 100% for choice, but not with my tax dollars.” D-J never mentions whether Kelly has insurance, but I’m betting she does. And about my #2 complaint about this article, “misplaced blame,” whose fault and responsibility is it when a woman gets pregnant? I thought comprehensive sex ed and wanton, free access to birth control was supposed to stop that? Finally, all those “experts” quoted in the story?  Every single one promotes or commits abortion. In order of appearance: National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health Guttmacher Institute Ibis Reproductive Health Gynuity Health Projects (including its spokesperson, Dr. Daniel Grossman ) National Center of Excellence in Women’s Health at U of IL How much different this article would have looked had it been fair and balanced. And had it crazily only included thoughts from life affirming organizations and spokespersons? I can already hear the accusations of right wing ideological spin.

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ABC Pushes Taxpayer Funded Abortions with Misleading Incident, Mashed Terms and Only Pro-Abort "Experts”

Mother broadcasted child sex abuse on webcam

Pamela K. Ortega, 30-year-old woman from Grant County, Washington has beenarrested abd is accused of performing various sex acts on her own children and her neighbors 2-week-old boy. Ortega allegedly took photos and shoot videos of herself performing sex acts on the children, and then distributed them on the Internet. Authorities were alerted by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Ortega was interviewed at her apartment at 800 S. County Road in Warden in May, where she reportedly admitted to sexually abusing two relatives and a 2-week-old boy she babysat. Ortega told police she was a methamphetamine addict who filmed herself abusing the children at the behest of people she chatted with on the Internet. Police is also investigating a bestiality claim against Ortega and a Moses Lake man’s dog, but no charges have so far been filed. On at least a dozen occasions, Ortega forced her kids to stimulate her while men watched on a live feed. She also molested a 2-week-old baby on the webcam. read more: http://femalesexoffenders.com/fso/index.php/the-news/157-pamela-ortega-arrested added by: b2r

Creationists Lose Again

http://scottklarr.com/media/atheism/creationistPosterFull.png Some good news from Texas! Yeehaw! The Institute for Creation Research — one of the biggest nonsense-peddlers in the 6000 year history of the world — was handed a nice defeat this week. That link to the National Center for Science Education (the good guys) has all the info you need, but to summarize: the ICR moved from California to Texas. In the previous state, for reasons beyond understanding, they were able to grant Master’s degrees in their graduate school. But Texas didn’t recognize their accreditation, so they filed to get it approved. Not so surprisingly, scientists and educators rose in protest, and in 2008 the Texas Higher Education Coordination Board — the organization that grants accreditation — denied the ICR. The creationists appealed. In the meantime, they also tried to extend their ability to grant degrees temporarily while the lawsuit continued. What happened this week is that the extension as denied. And I mean denied. Check out what the court said: It appears that although the Court has twice required Plaintiff [the ICR] to re-plead and set forth a short and plain statement of the relief requested, Plaintiff is entirely unable to file a complaint which is not overly verbose, disjointed, incoherent, maundering, and full of irrelevant information. That’s not surprising, as that’s the only kind of information the ICR is capable of producing. Not to mention wrong. See the Related Posts links below for lots more on the ICR’s recent follies. As far as I can tell, this defeat means that the ICR is still seeking accreditation, but until and unless it does, it cannot grant degrees in Texas. added by: mindcruzer

Perez Hilton Loses ABC Ads after Posting Miley Cyrus Upskirt Photo

ABC has pulled its ads from gossip blogger Perez Hilton’s Web site, PerezHilton.com, after he caught legal flack for posting upskirt photos of 17-year-old Disney star Miley Cyrus. However, several big-name companies still have ads running on the snarky blogger’s site. Amid speculation that Hilton may be slapped with kiddie-porn charges over the lurid photos, ABC has removed its ads for “The View” from the popular gossip site. But other advertisers appear to be sticking by Hilton. TV Land still had a full-page background promotion and two smaller ads on PerezHilton.com, and Apple iTunes and Microsoft’s search engine Bing still had advertisements up as of Wednesday afternoon. The drama started Monday, when Hilton posted a link to a photo of Cyrus getting out of a car in a tight white dress – and apparently, no underwear. Outrage erupted over the photo, with some calling the image “child pornography” since Cyrus is legally a minor. Hilton quickly removed the picture, but has brushed off the incident as a “fake” controversy. It’s odd that Microsoft, which owns Bing, would opt to keep advertising. It has recently been touting its own crusade against kiddie-porn. “These photos live on the Internet forever and every time they are shared or viewed, the children in them are re-victimized. It’s not enough to stop the perpetrators. The real point is getting these images off the Internet,” said Microsoft senior vice president Brad Smith at the company’s summit in late May. In 2009, Microsoft also donated a new technology to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children that finds hidden photos of child sexual exploitation on the internet. Microsoft uses the technology in its own search engine, Bing. In addition, Microsoft promotes its “fight against child pornography” on its website . Apple, which owns iTunes, has been ensnared in child porn scandals in the past. Last summer, the tech giant was forced to pull an iPhone application from its iTunes store after customers were using it to upload explicit images of minors. Hilton, who has used his gossip blog to become somewhat of a celebrity himself, is no stranger to controversy. The self-proclaimed “Queen of the media” was embroiled in scandal in 2009 when he served as a judge for the Miss U.S.A. pageant and asked finalist Carrie Prejean whether she supported same-sex marriage laws. Prejean said she believe marriage should be between a man and a woman, and Hilton slammed the beauty queen as prejudiced . The blogger later flamed the controversy on, calling Prejean a “dumb bitch” and saying her “awful, awful” answer “alienated so many people.” In June of 2009, Hilton posted a video blog in which he tearfully claimed to have been assaulted by Black Eyed Peas’ operation manager Polo Molina after the MuchMusic Video Awards. At the time of the alleged scuffle, Hilton called Black Eyed Peas member will.i.am a “faggot,” and he later told The Advocate that he had wanted to call the musician, who is black, the N-word instead. Last year, CMI reported on the cold reception Hilton received on ABC’s The View, after the show’s hosts criticized the blogger for posting provocative photos of Demi Moore’s 15-year-old daughter Rumer Willis.

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Perez Hilton Loses ABC Ads after Posting Miley Cyrus Upskirt Photo

Only 1 in 3 who want H1N1 shot can find it

Only about a third of adults who have tried to get a swine flu vaccine have been able to get it, according to a new national poll released Friday. That's true even for people who are at extra risk for severe complications and should be at the front of the line

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Only 1 in 3 who want H1N1 shot can find it