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Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Maggie Gallagher :: Townhall.com Columnist
Is Planned Parenthood Above The Law?
by Maggie Gallagher
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Planned Parenthood likes to think of itself as above all reproach -- a champion of women's rights and also (as its annual report claims) the nation's "social justice movement."

But this week, in front of Planned Parenthood offices at 1108 16th St. NW in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, a group of black pastors and pro-life activists (joined by two GOP congressmen) will demand a congressional audit of what the group alleges are a pattern of racist practices, funded by taxpayers, at Planned Parenthood abortion clinics.

Planned Parenthood's latest trouble began when a feisty pro-life student magazine called Planned Parenthood offices in seven states, posing as an openly racist donor seeking to make sure his check could be earmarked to abort "a black baby." The resulting phone conversations are horrifying listening. (Judge for yourself at www.youtube.com./watch?v=zwif0VMW3c4.)

According to the group, Planned Parenthood officers in at least four states agreed not only to accept the racists' check, but to actually earmark the donation for that purpose. "The less black kids the better," the caller tells one Planned Parenthood employee. "For whatever reason we'll accept the money," was one typical response.

The Planned Parenthood Action Fund is promising to spend $10 million this election cycle. "These donations come even as Planned Parenthood is defending itself against a range of civil and criminal complaints in several states, and critics charge that the organization is trying to buy influence in Congress," notes ABC News.

It's a smart investment for an affluent organization (a budget surplus of $114 million and assets of more than $1 billion) that gets more than one-third of its income, or almost $337 million in 2006, from the taxpayers.

The current racism charge can't help but revive memories of a similar sting operation that revealed many Planned Parenthood clinic employees were willing to tell a caller posing as a 13-year-old girl with a 22-year-old boyfriend how she could avoid triggering mandatory child sex abuse reporting requirements at the clinic.

In each case, Planned Parenthood's national leaders have responded poorly, seeking to deflect attention away from the behavior of its own employees to the motivations of those who made the phone calls.

Sure, these are pro-life activists doing these sting operations. But here's the real question: What is it about Planned Parenthood employees that makes them so easy for pro-life activists to target? Why do Planned Parenthood officers lack the minimal sense of decency to tell a man who wants to make sure there are fewer black kids in the world where he can go with his money? Or even worse: When faced with a child sexually exploited by a pedophile, why didn't Planned Parenthood employees want to call the police? Continued...

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About The Author

Maggie Gallagher is a nationally syndicated columnist, a leading voice in the new marriage movement and co-author of The Case for Marriage: Why Married People Are Happier, Healthier, and Better Off Financially.

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Subject: Rich D..
It might surprise you to know that one of my absolute favorite books of all time, is "The Prophet". by Kahlil Gibran.
It's beautiful words of inspiration. Although a Lebanese Catholic, Gibran doesn't mention Jesus in the book. But God. The place is somewhat mythic, as are the characters Amustafa and Almitra. I give this book away often as gifts to my friends.
Why?
Because as I said, I believe in LOVE. Love commands us to be open to our fellow human beings. Their pain, their right to enjoy their lives at no expense to our own, and even to recognize love within another. You never have talked about love. Kahlil Gibran's book deserves it's accolades for it's inspirational passages.
Get a clue. I can believe in love because I know it's served me better than anything else.
But I know that Jesus, and Buddha and Moses and Gandhi and any number of brothers of peace and justice knew it.
It's not MY BELIEF, it's the founding principle of moral justice and destiny. That's what love is.
And you only talk of control of, but without any care to see gay people for who they really are. It's legitimate to step into another's skin BEFORE you judge them. That's only right and fair. That you have that against a single group known before your own religion even existed is what doesn't make a whole lot of sense.

so it's on you
There comes a time when other tests require an opportunity for results. Your beliefs and opinions are acting without enough opportunity for gays and lesbians to prove things one way or another. Traditions have excluded them from such opportunity. Yet you want to judge them as if that hasn't happened or without enough time or options.
Well, eventually the test requires the SAME standards, and gays and lesbians keep getting presented with different standards or impossible ones they know heterosexuals are not required to meet.
Fairness is also a component of moral values, so is justice for all, Rich D.
Committing to equal standards is also. Your constant invokation of YOUR idea of moral values ring hollow when you can't even discuss what that REALLY means. You and true2 have a strange way of running from that. You start preaching instead of just using plain language to a fair question.
And yes, both of you have stated that God's laws should trump any of man.
As IF no one in America was ever abused by that before. Another thing you won't acknowledge. Since Christians have broken trust before, it's crazy looking that you insist that ALL Christians should be trusted regardless of that legacy.
You're been called on your own Christian values, and you can't even see where you fail them.
Even Christians get to make progress when it comes to another human being's civil rights that heretofore were abused by religious directives.
Period.
of the Golden Rule or the Bill of Rights.
Give the belief bit a rest. It's old.
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