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The very depth of depravity

Revmitchell

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Leroy Carhart was at his abortion clinic near Omaha when he got the phone call. It was Sunday morning, a little after 10, and the doctor was in surgery. He felt his cell phone vibrate. Carhart ignored it, finishing the abortion before checking his phone. The number for George Tiller's head nurse in Wichita, Kans., flashed on the screen. The timing was unusual; Carhart didn't often hear from Tiller on Sunday mornings. He thought it might have to do with a patient, maybe an emergency. But when Carhart called back, Tiller's nurse was crying. "George is dead," she told him through sobs, relaying the news that Tiller, the late-term-abortion provider, had been fatally shot at his Lutheran church.

More Here
 

FlyForFun

New Member
As abhorrent as this man is, he shouldn't be receiving death threats or his house and barns burned down.

But...the fact that he lost 17 horses tells me this fellow is reaping quite the windfall through this brutal practice.

What a sad, sad tale all around.

:tear:
 

annsni

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
A very appropriate response to this in the article:

Past viability, no doctor will terminate a pregnancy without a compelling reason. But what is a compelling reason, and who decides? Some would count a serious fetal abnormality, mental or physical; others would not. What if the baby has a 50 percent chance of surviving outside the womb? A 30 percent chance? While most of us navigate these questions in theory, Carhart deals with them in practice.

Is this:

http://www.dallasnews.com/s/dws/photography/2009/thomas/
 

annsni

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
"We didn't not terminate because we were hanging on to some hope of some miracle, we didn't terminate because he was our son."

Exactly!

After watching that video, isn't that absolutely profound and the BEST response ever??
 
Having experienced first hand the pain of having a child with a genetic defect, my grandson was born with a defect known as Donohue's syndrome or leprechaunism, I know their agony. My son and his wife knew that there was a problem with the baby before he was born, but like the Laux family, they did not choose abortion. He lived only 2 months before death, most of the time he was in intensive care. We did get to know him and the love was there from his birth. We are comforted by the knowledge that one day we will be re-united with him in heaven, where we will see him as he really is. :godisgood::jesus:
 

OldRegular

Well-Known Member
Having experienced first hand the pain of having a child with a genetic defect, my grandson was born with a defect known as Donohue's syndrome or leprechaunism, I know their agony. My son and his wife knew that there was a problem with the baby before he was born, but like the Laux family, they did not choose abortion. He lived only 2 months before death, most of the time he was in intensive care. We did get to know him and the love was there from his birth. We are comforted by the knowledge that one day we will be re-united with him in heaven, where we will see him as he really is. :godisgood::jesus:

I will have to give that a hearty AMEN brother!:godisgood::jesus:
 
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