Planned Parenthood Wins Right to Keep Aborting Babies with Down Syndrome

Why not let them kill already born children with Downs or other 'defects too?

Some families have the means to care for and support children with birth defects. Most poor families do not. That's what "pro-choice" means. The family chooses whether or not to bring a baby into the world. Not you, not the state, only the people who must provide for or care for these children.

Again, (using YOUR justifications) why can't we use the same justification to kill handicapped children in the minutes, hours, days or weeks AFTER they are born?

By your reasoning, shouldn't we apply the death penalty to drivers with a taillight out?


My logic is that all human beings are equally entitled to the protections of our laws, regardless of whether they are wanted, sick or even capable of breathing on their own. . .

You seem to be intentionally confused about my "logic"
Human beings are equally entitled to the protections of law. You seem to be intentionally confused about when a fetus becomes a human in the eyes of the law. It's birth, not conception.


If a HUMAN BEING IN THE FETAL STAGE OF LIFE is NOT a HUMAN being. . . Do tell us all just what the fuck kind of BEING it is. . . Inquiring minds want to know.

Also, give us a link to the scientific resources you are using to support your claim that we HUMAN BEINGS reproduce by way of complete metamorphosis like frogs and butterflies do.
 
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Your ignorance shows again, leftard.

When will you ever learn that nobody really needs a belief in "god" or religion of any sort to know that an abortion kills a child in the womb?

You are a fake Opie. Like the other pro-birthers. You spend your time typing, rather than saving lives which could be saved.

You've made your choice.


Your leftarded opinion of whether or defense of children in the womb is real or fake is not going to change anything in the least in our push to defend their rights.

We don't need the fucking trust or understanding of Dickstain like you to know our standing on the issues are fucking solid.

In fact, in many way, I hope that many of you fucktarded snowflakes stay just as steeped in denial as you are today. . . All the way up to the very end.

It will make your defeat that much sweeter.

Oh you are an angry. Fake anger I'm sure to go with your motif.

I notice you are...still typing. A child dies every 4 seconds and you just let 150 more die in the last ten minutes. Oh but you vomited on your keyboard and hit send. What a humanitarian you are.


Yeah. I get it! The only ones who are less of a humanitarian than myself are those fucktarded piles of human waste (like you) who want me to stop fighting for childrens rights on forums like these and to adopt your ignorance and denials of their rights instead.

It's hilarious that you call me a fake on my humanitarian efforts while at the same time wanting me to deny human rights to children in the womb. . . Like YOU do.


Run along Chub. I know you have a list of memes you use to defend yourself so feel free to post them all in order starting......NOW.


Funny, I don't see the need in defending myself against a fucktarded pro abort like you.

Should I?
 
Some families have the means to care for and support children with birth defects. Most poor families do not. That's what "pro-choice" means. The family chooses whether or not to bring a baby into the world. Not you, not the state, only the people who must provide for or care for these children.

Again, (using YOUR justifications) why can't we use the same justification to kill handicapped children in the minutes, hours, days or weeks AFTER they are born?

By your reasoning, shouldn't we apply the death penalty to drivers with a taillight out?


My logic is that all human beings are equally entitled to the protections of our laws, regardless of whether they are wanted, sick or even capable of breathing on their own. . .

You seem to be intentionally confused about my "logic"
Human beings are equally entitled to the protections of law. You seem to be intentionally confused about when a fetus becomes a human in the eyes of the law. It's birth, not conception.


If a HUMAN BEING IN THE FETAL STAGE OF LIFE is NOT a. HUMAN being. . . Do tell us all just what the fuck kind of BEING it is. . . Inquiring minds want to know.

Also, give us a link to the scientific resources you are using to support your claim that we HUMAN BEINGS reproduce by way of complete metamorphosis like frogs and butterflies do.
Don't bitch to me, bitch to the founding fathers.
 
Again, (using YOUR justifications) why can't we use the same justification to kill handicapped children in the minutes, hours, days or weeks AFTER they are born?

By your reasoning, shouldn't we apply the death penalty to drivers with a taillight out?


My logic is that all human beings are equally entitled to the protections of our laws, regardless of whether they are wanted, sick or even capable of breathing on their own. . .

You seem to be intentionally confused about my "logic"
Human beings are equally entitled to the protections of law. You seem to be intentionally confused about when a fetus becomes a human in the eyes of the law. It's birth, not conception.


If a HUMAN BEING IN THE FETAL STAGE OF LIFE is NOT a. HUMAN being. . . Do tell us all just what the fuck kind of BEING it is. . . Inquiring minds want to know.

Also, give us a link to the scientific resources you are using to support your claim that we HUMAN BEINGS reproduce by way of complete metamorphosis like frogs and butterflies do.
Don't bitch to me, bitch to the founding fathers.


Funny you think being asked to support your fucking claims is 'bitching'

How about slavery. . . We're the founding fathers right to own slaves too, fucktard?
 
By your reasoning, shouldn't we apply the death penalty to drivers with a taillight out?


My logic is that all human beings are equally entitled to the protections of our laws, regardless of whether they are wanted, sick or even capable of breathing on their own. . .

You seem to be intentionally confused about my "logic"
Human beings are equally entitled to the protections of law. You seem to be intentionally confused about when a fetus becomes a human in the eyes of the law. It's birth, not conception.


If a HUMAN BEING IN THE FETAL STAGE OF LIFE is NOT a. HUMAN being. . . Do tell us all just what the fuck kind of BEING it is. . . Inquiring minds want to know.

Also, give us a link to the scientific resources you are using to support your claim that we HUMAN BEINGS reproduce by way of complete metamorphosis like frogs and butterflies do.
Don't bitch to me, bitch to the founding fathers.


Funny you think being asked to support your fucking claims is 'bitching'

How about slavery. . . We're the founding fathers right to own slaves too, fucktard?
It is a developing fetus. When it is born, it is a human being. Don't know why you are so damn obtuse about such a simple matter.

As far as the founders go, I'm sure they got lots of things wrong including slavery. They got a lot of things right though in limiting the power of the government to interfere with the doings of citizens including unenumerated rights such as privacy and family planning. Hopefully, we will never see the day when women are reduced to being unwilling brood mares with no say in their own biological functions.
 
My logic is that all human beings are equally entitled to the protections of our laws, regardless of whether they are wanted, sick or even capable of breathing on their own. . .

You seem to be intentionally confused about my "logic"
Human beings are equally entitled to the protections of law. You seem to be intentionally confused about when a fetus becomes a human in the eyes of the law. It's birth, not conception.


If a HUMAN BEING IN THE FETAL STAGE OF LIFE is NOT a. HUMAN being. . . Do tell us all just what the fuck kind of BEING it is. . . Inquiring minds want to know.

Also, give us a link to the scientific resources you are using to support your claim that we HUMAN BEINGS reproduce by way of complete metamorphosis like frogs and butterflies do.
Don't bitch to me, bitch to the founding fathers.


Funny you think being asked to support your fucking claims is 'bitching'

How about slavery. . . We're the founding fathers right to own slaves too, fucktard?
It is a developing fetus. When it is born, it is a human being. Don't know why you are so damn obtuse about such a simple matter.

As far as the founders go, I'm sure they got lots of things wrong including slavery. They got a lot of things right though in limiting the power of the government to interfere with the doings of citizens including unenumerated rights such as privacy and family planning. Hopefully, we will never see the day when women are reduced to being unwilling brood mares with no say in their own biological functions.

Our fucking Fetal HOMICIDE laws define a "child in the womb" in ANY fucking stage of development as a fucking HUMAN BEING mother fucking fucktard.

Do tell me why I should ignore that legal definition and adopt your ignorant mother fucking denials instead.
 
There are certain people, even types of people, I'd like to define as not-human beings. I'm glad this is a thing now, because I no longer have to feel guilty.
 
According to Planned Parenthood, who evidently enjoys assuming the role of 'God' in helping decide who should live and who should die, babies diagnosed with Down syndrome do not have the right to an opportunity to live and potentially be very successful people. They continue to defend their 'right' to leep aborting babies with Down Syndrome.

Planned Parenthood Wins Right to Keep Aborting Babies with Down Syndrome

"An Indiana judge has found for abortion giant Planned Parenthood in a suit brought against HEA 1337, a state law banning gender-selective abortions and those based on a prenatal diagnosis of disabilities such as Down syndrome.


U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Walton Pratt, an Obama appointee, has issued a permanent injunction against Indiana’s “Sex Selective and Disability Abortion Ban” in a 22-page
decision, saying that provisions of the law “violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

HEA 1337 was signed into law in 2016 by Governor and now Vice President Mike Pence, and prohibited abortions based on the sex or race of the child or a prenatal diagnosis of “Down syndrome or any other disability.” The law also required that the remains of aborted babies be disposed of in a dignified fashion proper to human remains, rather than merely thrown out in the trash.

In her ruling, Judge Pratt defended sex-selective and disability-based abortions, stating that “it is a woman’s right to choose an abortion that is protected, which, of course, leaves no room for the State to examine, let alone prohibit, the basis or bases upon which a woman makes her choice.”


“The right to a pre-viability abortion is categorical,” Pratt declared, regardless of the particular motivation that drives a woman to seek it.

By this logic, the decision to eliminate an unborn child simply because the child is black, or a girl, or has Down syndrome must be protected."



(It should be emphasized how the liberal can not even call it what it is - 'KILL', not 'eliminate', 'MURDER an unborn baby', not 'ELIMINATE'. as if the bay was a typo in a document.)



If Planned Parenthood had it's way, these 9 amazing people with Down Syndrome would have been 'ELIMINATED' as babies:


1.
Angela Bachiller. In 2013 in Valladolid, Span, Angela became the first person with Down syndrome ever to be elected councilwoman. She worked for three years in Social Welfare and Family as an administrative assistant, and loves reading and traveling. She hopes to shine a light on the normalcy of life with Down syndrome and make a difference in the lives of those with disabilities.

2.
Megan McCormick. The first person with Down syndrome to graduate with honors from a technical college, Megan attended Bluegrass Community Technical College. She wants to work in education at the elementary level. She proves that with the right support and resources, people anywhere can reach their goals, Down syndrome or not.

3.
Tim Harris. Tim is the owner of his own restaurant called Tim’s Place. In high school he was elected homecoming king (by the highest margin of votes in the school’s history), and was named Student of the Year as well. He dreamed of owning a restaurant, so he found jobs in the industry to learn as much as he could. And, according to the Tim’s Place web site, former employer Red Robin says that the store’s revenue went up during Tim’s shifts. He graduated from college with certificates in Food Services, Office Skills, and Restaurant Hosting. In addition, Tim recently created Tim’s Big Heart Foundation to help other people with disabilities start their own businesses.

4.
Pablo Pineda. Pablo earned a bachelor’s degree in educational psychology and has gone on to be a writer, speaker, and actor. Born in Spain, he is a successful actor in his home country, receiving the Silver Shell award for his acting skills as well as the San Sebastian International Film Festival’s “Concha de Plata” as best actor of 2009 for his lead role in the film Yo Tambien.

5.
Christian Royal. School never came easy to Christian, but that is just fine because he holds a skill many of us admire. Christian is highly talented at making pottery. He sells his beautiful dishes and bowls online and at an art gallery in South Carolina.

6.
Bernadette Resha. Bernadette is also an artist who has made a name for herself. She and her work have been featured on television shows, in music videos, commercials, and magazines. In addition to creating beautiful paintings, she is a public speaker and violinist as well.

7.
Michael Johnson. A painter, Michael is a self-taught Naïve Folk Artist. He has painted more than 500 commissioned portraits and had a solo exhibition at Vanderbilt University in 2001. His art has been featured in posters and on the cover of the American Journal of Public Health.

8.
Sujeet Desai. A musician, Sujeet graduated from high school with a 4.3 grade average and went on to graduate from the Berkshire Hills Music Academy. He plays seven instruments including the violin, piano, trumpet and saxophone. He has received numerous awards and was even featured in the Wall Street Journal and Time Magazine as well as on 20/20 and the Oprah Winfrey Show. In 2006 he married Carolyn Bergeron who also has Down syndrome.

9.
Melissa Reilly. Melissa has accomplished quite a lot in her life. She has travelled the country as an inspirational speaker. She is a decorated, gold medal winning skier, cycler, and swimmer and she has interned for a state senator. Melissa also teaches reading and math to preschoolers with Down syndrome. She says she loves her life 100%, and she proves that you can have a very fulfilling life with Down syndrome.

The world is a very different place for people with Down syndrome than it was 50 years ago, in both positive and negative ways. People with Down syndrome are no longer automatically placed in group homes, but instead are raised by their parents who nurture their child’s talents and abilities rather than focusing on any disabilities.

However, in this day and age, a person with Down syndrome is lucky to be born at all due to prenatal testing and recommendations from uninformed doctors to abort. Thankfully there are many successful and happy people with Down syndrome sharing their story so that fewer and fewer parents who receive a prenatal Down syndrome diagnosis will be pressured into aborting their child."


You don't get to impose your beliefs on the constitutional rights of another individual.


Also, the 9 Down syndrome people you mentioned are here because their mom made that choice not a government.
 
According to Planned Parenthood, who evidently enjoys assuming the role of 'God' in helping decide who should live and who should die, babies diagnosed with Down syndrome do not have the right to an opportunity to live and potentially be very successful people. They continue to defend their 'right' to leep aborting babies with Down Syndrome.

Planned Parenthood Wins Right to Keep Aborting Babies with Down Syndrome

"An Indiana judge has found for abortion giant Planned Parenthood in a suit brought against HEA 1337, a state law banning gender-selective abortions and those based on a prenatal diagnosis of disabilities such as Down syndrome.


U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Walton Pratt, an Obama appointee, has issued a permanent injunction against Indiana’s “Sex Selective and Disability Abortion Ban” in a 22-page
decision, saying that provisions of the law “violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

HEA 1337 was signed into law in 2016 by Governor and now Vice President Mike Pence, and prohibited abortions based on the sex or race of the child or a prenatal diagnosis of “Down syndrome or any other disability.” The law also required that the remains of aborted babies be disposed of in a dignified fashion proper to human remains, rather than merely thrown out in the trash.

In her ruling, Judge Pratt defended sex-selective and disability-based abortions, stating that “it is a woman’s right to choose an abortion that is protected, which, of course, leaves no room for the State to examine, let alone prohibit, the basis or bases upon which a woman makes her choice.”


“The right to a pre-viability abortion is categorical,” Pratt declared, regardless of the particular motivation that drives a woman to seek it.

By this logic, the decision to eliminate an unborn child simply because the child is black, or a girl, or has Down syndrome must be protected."



(It should be emphasized how the liberal can not even call it what it is - 'KILL', not 'eliminate', 'MURDER an unborn baby', not 'ELIMINATE'. as if the bay was a typo in a document.)



If Planned Parenthood had it's way, these 9 amazing people with Down Syndrome would have been 'ELIMINATED' as babies:


1.
Angela Bachiller. In 2013 in Valladolid, Span, Angela became the first person with Down syndrome ever to be elected councilwoman. She worked for three years in Social Welfare and Family as an administrative assistant, and loves reading and traveling. She hopes to shine a light on the normalcy of life with Down syndrome and make a difference in the lives of those with disabilities.

2.
Megan McCormick. The first person with Down syndrome to graduate with honors from a technical college, Megan attended Bluegrass Community Technical College. She wants to work in education at the elementary level. She proves that with the right support and resources, people anywhere can reach their goals, Down syndrome or not.

3.
Tim Harris. Tim is the owner of his own restaurant called Tim’s Place. In high school he was elected homecoming king (by the highest margin of votes in the school’s history), and was named Student of the Year as well. He dreamed of owning a restaurant, so he found jobs in the industry to learn as much as he could. And, according to the Tim’s Place web site, former employer Red Robin says that the store’s revenue went up during Tim’s shifts. He graduated from college with certificates in Food Services, Office Skills, and Restaurant Hosting. In addition, Tim recently created Tim’s Big Heart Foundation to help other people with disabilities start their own businesses.

4.
Pablo Pineda. Pablo earned a bachelor’s degree in educational psychology and has gone on to be a writer, speaker, and actor. Born in Spain, he is a successful actor in his home country, receiving the Silver Shell award for his acting skills as well as the San Sebastian International Film Festival’s “Concha de Plata” as best actor of 2009 for his lead role in the film Yo Tambien.

5.
Christian Royal. School never came easy to Christian, but that is just fine because he holds a skill many of us admire. Christian is highly talented at making pottery. He sells his beautiful dishes and bowls online and at an art gallery in South Carolina.

6.
Bernadette Resha. Bernadette is also an artist who has made a name for herself. She and her work have been featured on television shows, in music videos, commercials, and magazines. In addition to creating beautiful paintings, she is a public speaker and violinist as well.

7.
Michael Johnson. A painter, Michael is a self-taught Naïve Folk Artist. He has painted more than 500 commissioned portraits and had a solo exhibition at Vanderbilt University in 2001. His art has been featured in posters and on the cover of the American Journal of Public Health.

8.
Sujeet Desai. A musician, Sujeet graduated from high school with a 4.3 grade average and went on to graduate from the Berkshire Hills Music Academy. He plays seven instruments including the violin, piano, trumpet and saxophone. He has received numerous awards and was even featured in the Wall Street Journal and Time Magazine as well as on 20/20 and the Oprah Winfrey Show. In 2006 he married Carolyn Bergeron who also has Down syndrome.

9.
Melissa Reilly. Melissa has accomplished quite a lot in her life. She has travelled the country as an inspirational speaker. She is a decorated, gold medal winning skier, cycler, and swimmer and she has interned for a state senator. Melissa also teaches reading and math to preschoolers with Down syndrome. She says she loves her life 100%, and she proves that you can have a very fulfilling life with Down syndrome.

The world is a very different place for people with Down syndrome than it was 50 years ago, in both positive and negative ways. People with Down syndrome are no longer automatically placed in group homes, but instead are raised by their parents who nurture their child’s talents and abilities rather than focusing on any disabilities.

However, in this day and age, a person with Down syndrome is lucky to be born at all due to prenatal testing and recommendations from uninformed doctors to abort. Thankfully there are many successful and happy people with Down syndrome sharing their story so that fewer and fewer parents who receive a prenatal Down syndrome diagnosis will be pressured into aborting their child."


You don't get to impose your beliefs on the constitutional rights of another individual.


Also, the 9 Down syndrome people you mentioned are here because their mom made that choice not a government.


You claim (and I agree) that nobody has the right to infringe upon the Constitutional rights of another. I'm hoping that includes children

Do you agree that a child's Constitutional rights should begin when their life does?
 
According to Planned Parenthood, who evidently enjoys assuming the role of 'God' in helping decide who should live and who should die, babies diagnosed with Down syndrome do not have the right to an opportunity to live and potentially be very successful people. They continue to defend their 'right' to leep aborting babies with Down Syndrome.

Planned Parenthood Wins Right to Keep Aborting Babies with Down Syndrome

"An Indiana judge has found for abortion giant Planned Parenthood in a suit brought against HEA 1337, a state law banning gender-selective abortions and those based on a prenatal diagnosis of disabilities such as Down syndrome.


U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Walton Pratt, an Obama appointee, has issued a permanent injunction against Indiana’s “Sex Selective and Disability Abortion Ban” in a 22-page
decision, saying that provisions of the law “violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

HEA 1337 was signed into law in 2016 by Governor and now Vice President Mike Pence, and prohibited abortions based on the sex or race of the child or a prenatal diagnosis of “Down syndrome or any other disability.” The law also required that the remains of aborted babies be disposed of in a dignified fashion proper to human remains, rather than merely thrown out in the trash.

In her ruling, Judge Pratt defended sex-selective and disability-based abortions, stating that “it is a woman’s right to choose an abortion that is protected, which, of course, leaves no room for the State to examine, let alone prohibit, the basis or bases upon which a woman makes her choice.”


“The right to a pre-viability abortion is categorical,” Pratt declared, regardless of the particular motivation that drives a woman to seek it.

By this logic, the decision to eliminate an unborn child simply because the child is black, or a girl, or has Down syndrome must be protected."



(It should be emphasized how the liberal can not even call it what it is - 'KILL', not 'eliminate', 'MURDER an unborn baby', not 'ELIMINATE'. as if the bay was a typo in a document.)



If Planned Parenthood had it's way, these 9 amazing people with Down Syndrome would have been 'ELIMINATED' as babies:


1.
Angela Bachiller. In 2013 in Valladolid, Span, Angela became the first person with Down syndrome ever to be elected councilwoman. She worked for three years in Social Welfare and Family as an administrative assistant, and loves reading and traveling. She hopes to shine a light on the normalcy of life with Down syndrome and make a difference in the lives of those with disabilities.

2.
Megan McCormick. The first person with Down syndrome to graduate with honors from a technical college, Megan attended Bluegrass Community Technical College. She wants to work in education at the elementary level. She proves that with the right support and resources, people anywhere can reach their goals, Down syndrome or not.

3.
Tim Harris. Tim is the owner of his own restaurant called Tim’s Place. In high school he was elected homecoming king (by the highest margin of votes in the school’s history), and was named Student of the Year as well. He dreamed of owning a restaurant, so he found jobs in the industry to learn as much as he could. And, according to the Tim’s Place web site, former employer Red Robin says that the store’s revenue went up during Tim’s shifts. He graduated from college with certificates in Food Services, Office Skills, and Restaurant Hosting. In addition, Tim recently created Tim’s Big Heart Foundation to help other people with disabilities start their own businesses.

4.
Pablo Pineda. Pablo earned a bachelor’s degree in educational psychology and has gone on to be a writer, speaker, and actor. Born in Spain, he is a successful actor in his home country, receiving the Silver Shell award for his acting skills as well as the San Sebastian International Film Festival’s “Concha de Plata” as best actor of 2009 for his lead role in the film Yo Tambien.

5.
Christian Royal. School never came easy to Christian, but that is just fine because he holds a skill many of us admire. Christian is highly talented at making pottery. He sells his beautiful dishes and bowls online and at an art gallery in South Carolina.

6.
Bernadette Resha. Bernadette is also an artist who has made a name for herself. She and her work have been featured on television shows, in music videos, commercials, and magazines. In addition to creating beautiful paintings, she is a public speaker and violinist as well.

7.
Michael Johnson. A painter, Michael is a self-taught Naïve Folk Artist. He has painted more than 500 commissioned portraits and had a solo exhibition at Vanderbilt University in 2001. His art has been featured in posters and on the cover of the American Journal of Public Health.

8.
Sujeet Desai. A musician, Sujeet graduated from high school with a 4.3 grade average and went on to graduate from the Berkshire Hills Music Academy. He plays seven instruments including the violin, piano, trumpet and saxophone. He has received numerous awards and was even featured in the Wall Street Journal and Time Magazine as well as on 20/20 and the Oprah Winfrey Show. In 2006 he married Carolyn Bergeron who also has Down syndrome.

9.
Melissa Reilly. Melissa has accomplished quite a lot in her life. She has travelled the country as an inspirational speaker. She is a decorated, gold medal winning skier, cycler, and swimmer and she has interned for a state senator. Melissa also teaches reading and math to preschoolers with Down syndrome. She says she loves her life 100%, and she proves that you can have a very fulfilling life with Down syndrome.

The world is a very different place for people with Down syndrome than it was 50 years ago, in both positive and negative ways. People with Down syndrome are no longer automatically placed in group homes, but instead are raised by their parents who nurture their child’s talents and abilities rather than focusing on any disabilities.

However, in this day and age, a person with Down syndrome is lucky to be born at all due to prenatal testing and recommendations from uninformed doctors to abort. Thankfully there are many successful and happy people with Down syndrome sharing their story so that fewer and fewer parents who receive a prenatal Down syndrome diagnosis will be pressured into aborting their child."

Nobody aborts babies, shithead. Fetuses, you know-- clumps of goo-- are aborted.

You don't know what you are talking about. What do you think late term abortion means? No goo. Infants. Google, nurses testify in front of Congress about abortions. They weren't scooping goo up out of the trash and holding it until it's heart stops. Some times the infants struggle to survive for over an hour. And yes, the cut up and preserve body parts is also popular. Those infants don't even get an anesthesia..
And man thinks he is evolving. It is barbaric.

So, let's eliminate Downs Syndrome children. And midgets, and their never ending medical care to straighten spines and shit. Am I right? And absolutely get rid of the annoying Autistic kids. Geeze, what a pain in the ass those retards are to raise. Let's make our country a little bit brighter, and tidy..
 
According to Planned Parenthood, who evidently enjoys assuming the role of 'God' in helping decide who should live and who should die, babies diagnosed with Down syndrome do not have the right to an opportunity to live and potentially be very successful people. They continue to defend their 'right' to leep aborting babies with Down Syndrome.

Planned Parenthood Wins Right to Keep Aborting Babies with Down Syndrome

"An Indiana judge has found for abortion giant Planned Parenthood in a suit brought against HEA 1337, a state law banning gender-selective abortions and those based on a prenatal diagnosis of disabilities such as Down syndrome.


U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Walton Pratt, an Obama appointee, has issued a permanent injunction against Indiana’s “Sex Selective and Disability Abortion Ban” in a 22-page
decision, saying that provisions of the law “violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

HEA 1337 was signed into law in 2016 by Governor and now Vice President Mike Pence, and prohibited abortions based on the sex or race of the child or a prenatal diagnosis of “Down syndrome or any other disability.” The law also required that the remains of aborted babies be disposed of in a dignified fashion proper to human remains, rather than merely thrown out in the trash.

In her ruling, Judge Pratt defended sex-selective and disability-based abortions, stating that “it is a woman’s right to choose an abortion that is protected, which, of course, leaves no room for the State to examine, let alone prohibit, the basis or bases upon which a woman makes her choice.”


“The right to a pre-viability abortion is categorical,” Pratt declared, regardless of the particular motivation that drives a woman to seek it.

By this logic, the decision to eliminate an unborn child simply because the child is black, or a girl, or has Down syndrome must be protected."



(It should be emphasized how the liberal can not even call it what it is - 'KILL', not 'eliminate', 'MURDER an unborn baby', not 'ELIMINATE'. as if the bay was a typo in a document.)



If Planned Parenthood had it's way, these 9 amazing people with Down Syndrome would have been 'ELIMINATED' as babies:


1.
Angela Bachiller. In 2013 in Valladolid, Span, Angela became the first person with Down syndrome ever to be elected councilwoman. She worked for three years in Social Welfare and Family as an administrative assistant, and loves reading and traveling. She hopes to shine a light on the normalcy of life with Down syndrome and make a difference in the lives of those with disabilities.

2.
Megan McCormick. The first person with Down syndrome to graduate with honors from a technical college, Megan attended Bluegrass Community Technical College. She wants to work in education at the elementary level. She proves that with the right support and resources, people anywhere can reach their goals, Down syndrome or not.

3.
Tim Harris. Tim is the owner of his own restaurant called Tim’s Place. In high school he was elected homecoming king (by the highest margin of votes in the school’s history), and was named Student of the Year as well. He dreamed of owning a restaurant, so he found jobs in the industry to learn as much as he could. And, according to the Tim’s Place web site, former employer Red Robin says that the store’s revenue went up during Tim’s shifts. He graduated from college with certificates in Food Services, Office Skills, and Restaurant Hosting. In addition, Tim recently created Tim’s Big Heart Foundation to help other people with disabilities start their own businesses.

4.
Pablo Pineda. Pablo earned a bachelor’s degree in educational psychology and has gone on to be a writer, speaker, and actor. Born in Spain, he is a successful actor in his home country, receiving the Silver Shell award for his acting skills as well as the San Sebastian International Film Festival’s “Concha de Plata” as best actor of 2009 for his lead role in the film Yo Tambien.

5.
Christian Royal. School never came easy to Christian, but that is just fine because he holds a skill many of us admire. Christian is highly talented at making pottery. He sells his beautiful dishes and bowls online and at an art gallery in South Carolina.

6.
Bernadette Resha. Bernadette is also an artist who has made a name for herself. She and her work have been featured on television shows, in music videos, commercials, and magazines. In addition to creating beautiful paintings, she is a public speaker and violinist as well.

7.
Michael Johnson. A painter, Michael is a self-taught Naïve Folk Artist. He has painted more than 500 commissioned portraits and had a solo exhibition at Vanderbilt University in 2001. His art has been featured in posters and on the cover of the American Journal of Public Health.

8.
Sujeet Desai. A musician, Sujeet graduated from high school with a 4.3 grade average and went on to graduate from the Berkshire Hills Music Academy. He plays seven instruments including the violin, piano, trumpet and saxophone. He has received numerous awards and was even featured in the Wall Street Journal and Time Magazine as well as on 20/20 and the Oprah Winfrey Show. In 2006 he married Carolyn Bergeron who also has Down syndrome.

9.
Melissa Reilly. Melissa has accomplished quite a lot in her life. She has travelled the country as an inspirational speaker. She is a decorated, gold medal winning skier, cycler, and swimmer and she has interned for a state senator. Melissa also teaches reading and math to preschoolers with Down syndrome. She says she loves her life 100%, and she proves that you can have a very fulfilling life with Down syndrome.

The world is a very different place for people with Down syndrome than it was 50 years ago, in both positive and negative ways. People with Down syndrome are no longer automatically placed in group homes, but instead are raised by their parents who nurture their child’s talents and abilities rather than focusing on any disabilities.

However, in this day and age, a person with Down syndrome is lucky to be born at all due to prenatal testing and recommendations from uninformed doctors to abort. Thankfully there are many successful and happy people with Down syndrome sharing their story so that fewer and fewer parents who receive a prenatal Down syndrome diagnosis will be pressured into aborting their child."
Abortion should be a states issue, the federal government has no credibility on the matter
 
According to Planned Parenthood, who evidently enjoys assuming the role of 'God' in helping decide who should live and who should die, babies diagnosed with Down syndrome do not have the right to an opportunity to live and potentially be very successful people. They continue to defend their 'right' to leep aborting babies with Down Syndrome.

Planned Parenthood Wins Right to Keep Aborting Babies with Down Syndrome

"An Indiana judge has found for abortion giant Planned Parenthood in a suit brought against HEA 1337, a state law banning gender-selective abortions and those based on a prenatal diagnosis of disabilities such as Down syndrome.


U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Walton Pratt, an Obama appointee, has issued a permanent injunction against Indiana’s “Sex Selective and Disability Abortion Ban” in a 22-page
decision, saying that provisions of the law “violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

HEA 1337 was signed into law in 2016 by Governor and now Vice President Mike Pence, and prohibited abortions based on the sex or race of the child or a prenatal diagnosis of “Down syndrome or any other disability.” The law also required that the remains of aborted babies be disposed of in a dignified fashion proper to human remains, rather than merely thrown out in the trash.

In her ruling, Judge Pratt defended sex-selective and disability-based abortions, stating that “it is a woman’s right to choose an abortion that is protected, which, of course, leaves no room for the State to examine, let alone prohibit, the basis or bases upon which a woman makes her choice.”


“The right to a pre-viability abortion is categorical,” Pratt declared, regardless of the particular motivation that drives a woman to seek it.

By this logic, the decision to eliminate an unborn child simply because the child is black, or a girl, or has Down syndrome must be protected."



(It should be emphasized how the liberal can not even call it what it is - 'KILL', not 'eliminate', 'MURDER an unborn baby', not 'ELIMINATE'. as if the bay was a typo in a document.)



If Planned Parenthood had it's way, these 9 amazing people with Down Syndrome would have been 'ELIMINATED' as babies:


1.
Angela Bachiller. In 2013 in Valladolid, Span, Angela became the first person with Down syndrome ever to be elected councilwoman. She worked for three years in Social Welfare and Family as an administrative assistant, and loves reading and traveling. She hopes to shine a light on the normalcy of life with Down syndrome and make a difference in the lives of those with disabilities.

2.
Megan McCormick. The first person with Down syndrome to graduate with honors from a technical college, Megan attended Bluegrass Community Technical College. She wants to work in education at the elementary level. She proves that with the right support and resources, people anywhere can reach their goals, Down syndrome or not.

3.
Tim Harris. Tim is the owner of his own restaurant called Tim’s Place. In high school he was elected homecoming king (by the highest margin of votes in the school’s history), and was named Student of the Year as well. He dreamed of owning a restaurant, so he found jobs in the industry to learn as much as he could. And, according to the Tim’s Place web site, former employer Red Robin says that the store’s revenue went up during Tim’s shifts. He graduated from college with certificates in Food Services, Office Skills, and Restaurant Hosting. In addition, Tim recently created Tim’s Big Heart Foundation to help other people with disabilities start their own businesses.

4.
Pablo Pineda. Pablo earned a bachelor’s degree in educational psychology and has gone on to be a writer, speaker, and actor. Born in Spain, he is a successful actor in his home country, receiving the Silver Shell award for his acting skills as well as the San Sebastian International Film Festival’s “Concha de Plata” as best actor of 2009 for his lead role in the film Yo Tambien.

5.
Christian Royal. School never came easy to Christian, but that is just fine because he holds a skill many of us admire. Christian is highly talented at making pottery. He sells his beautiful dishes and bowls online and at an art gallery in South Carolina.

6.
Bernadette Resha. Bernadette is also an artist who has made a name for herself. She and her work have been featured on television shows, in music videos, commercials, and magazines. In addition to creating beautiful paintings, she is a public speaker and violinist as well.

7.
Michael Johnson. A painter, Michael is a self-taught Naïve Folk Artist. He has painted more than 500 commissioned portraits and had a solo exhibition at Vanderbilt University in 2001. His art has been featured in posters and on the cover of the American Journal of Public Health.

8.
Sujeet Desai. A musician, Sujeet graduated from high school with a 4.3 grade average and went on to graduate from the Berkshire Hills Music Academy. He plays seven instruments including the violin, piano, trumpet and saxophone. He has received numerous awards and was even featured in the Wall Street Journal and Time Magazine as well as on 20/20 and the Oprah Winfrey Show. In 2006 he married Carolyn Bergeron who also has Down syndrome.

9.
Melissa Reilly. Melissa has accomplished quite a lot in her life. She has travelled the country as an inspirational speaker. She is a decorated, gold medal winning skier, cycler, and swimmer and she has interned for a state senator. Melissa also teaches reading and math to preschoolers with Down syndrome. She says she loves her life 100%, and she proves that you can have a very fulfilling life with Down syndrome.

The world is a very different place for people with Down syndrome than it was 50 years ago, in both positive and negative ways. People with Down syndrome are no longer automatically placed in group homes, but instead are raised by their parents who nurture their child’s talents and abilities rather than focusing on any disabilities.

However, in this day and age, a person with Down syndrome is lucky to be born at all due to prenatal testing and recommendations from uninformed doctors to abort. Thankfully there are many successful and happy people with Down syndrome sharing their story so that fewer and fewer parents who receive a prenatal Down syndrome diagnosis will be pressured into aborting their child."
Abortion should be a states issue, the federal government has no credibility on the matter

Huh?

Read my signature.

So, when the Supreme Court ruled in Roe that once ANY state establishes personhood for a child in the womb, the arguments in favor of abortion collapses. (Because of their 14th amendment right). . They were wrong because. . .

Why?
 
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