Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Upheld; So What?
Don’t talk to me about Virginia Tech. Don’t you dare tell me that those 30 college students’ deaths are more to be mourned than the 47+ million killed by abortionists in the USA since the Roe v. Wade ruling. Think about that: 15% of this country’s population has been murdered for no good reason.
And then the Supreme Court upholds a partial-birth abortion ban (just barely: it was a 5–4 decision), and the pro-life community acts as if it’s some sort of major victory… but it’s not:
Hey Planned Parenthood, you can still legally dismember the fetus in the womb. You just can’t deliver 3/4 of the baby backwards leaving the head inside, cut a hole in the baby’s head with scissors, and suck the baby’s brain out any more. (The Harford Republican — Heroes)
Nearly 24 million of those “legally” murdered in the womb would now be as old as—or older than—those killed at Virginia Tech. 24 MILLION. So don’t tell me to put a Hokies ribbon on my sidebar.
We have given up our tithes and offerings, sacrificing our children to Mammon. In return, he has seen fit to bless us with wealth, comfort and prosperity. And we wouldn’t have it any other way. The United States of America is bathing in the blood of its own people, and they just love it.




April 19th, 2007 at 9:35 pm
Thanks for the comments. We have had a ‘holocaust x 8′ in America. I heard that the partial-birth murder, I mean abortion, would have only saved 3,000 humans last year.
April 19th, 2007 at 9:37 pm
I need to clarify. A ban on partial-birth murder would have saved only 3,000 humans last year.
April 24th, 2007 at 7:10 am
This was a good post and very though provoking.
April 24th, 2007 at 9:53 am
I don’t quite get the gist of the first sentence of your final paragraph, but other than that, compelling points, mister.
April 24th, 2007 at 10:29 am
@ Brian: Thanks… and to clear that up, I was saying that this nation has sacrificed over a tenth (tithe) of its children on the altar of materialism (Mammon). Just as God required agricultural tithes in the Old Testament and promised bountiful harvests in return, today we kill our children because “they’re expensive” and “they’re inconvenient”; thus, by ridding ourselves of them we seek a financial “blessing” of sorts.
April 24th, 2007 at 11:02 am
Ah … makes sense now! A very mighty metaphor.