www.makingabortionrare.com
Abortion Holocaust Deniers Are Losing Battle
Host of New "Making Abortion Rare" Television Series Comments
Springfield, IL -- "The abortion industry is a house of cards ready
to collapse," said David C. Reardon, Ph.D., host of
a new television program that will premiere in
January on the Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN),
during the week of the anniversary of Roe v. Wade. The program is
based on Reardon's book Making Abortion Rare: A
Healing Strategy for a Divided Nation, which has
been endorsed by the leaders of many national pro-life
organizations.
"A recent public opinion poll has shown that most Americans believe that
abortion causes more harm than good in women's lives," said Reardon,
director of the Elliot Institute, a post-abortion research
organization based in Springfield, Illinois. "Even
the majority of those who call themselves 'pro-choice'
are realizing that abortion is actually a poor
choice. This is a sign that the winds are changing. The collapse of
the abortion industry will happen much faster than
most people imagine, just like the fall of the
Berlin wall."
Reardon, the author of numerous medical studies on abortion
complications, says the public's increased awareness of the "ugly
side" of abortion is the unavoidable consequence of
exposing over 30 million women to one or more
abortions. He says that nearly every American has either been
directly scarred by an abortion or has seen ways in which it has
affected loved ones.
"Most people today know that abortion is an ugly, haunting experience,"
he said. "This intuition has people oriented in the right
direction, but most are still unaware of just how
devastating the effects of abortion have been in
the lives of so many women, men, and families.
"This unawareness is similar to the way most Americans viewed Jewish
persecution under Hitler prior to the Allied victory. They knew
from scant reports and rumors that Jews were being
oppressed, even killed, but they had no conception
of the extent of the Holocaust until after the war. When the
truth became known, the resulting shock, shame, and compassion
permanently changed many aspects of our culture.
The same will happen as Americans become more aware
of abortion's evil."
Reardon compares today's "poor-choice advocates" with Holocaust
deniers who were aware of the problem but said
nothing.
"The denial of the Holocaust didn't originate with skin-heads and
neo-Nazis of the 1980s," he said. "American political leaders and
the media downplayed the extent of Jewish
persecution both before and during the war for many
different reasons. Some were eugenicists who were sympathetic
to the Aryan agenda. But the majority of these leaders of public
opinion, who had seen at least some evidence of the
problem, dismissed, understated, or ignored the
issue simply because they wanted to avoid drawing 'too much'
public attention to the problem of Jewish genocide. They wanted to
protect and promote 'more important' political
concerns, and they didn't want the suffering of a 'few'
to distract from 'bigger' issues.
"The same phenomenon is occurring today. There are abortion holocaust
deniers who have little or no regard for how abortion is hurting
individual women because they are far more
concerned about their overarching social agenda:
advancing population control efforts, eliminating the birth of
handicapped persons, suppressing the birth rate of low-income
minority groups, or merely protecting the abortion
industry's profits.
"These are today's holocaust deniers. They insist that the deaths of
girls like Holly Patterson are such 'rare exceptions' that should
not arouse a review of medical protocols or changes
in public policy. They insist that the testimonies
of disabling depression and grief from post-abortive women
like actress Jennifer O'Neill are just the 'whining' of a few women
who were already psychologically 'weak.' They
insist that every study linking abortion to breast
cancer, miscarriage, premature birth, substance abuse,
psychiatric illness, and elevated mortality rates is flawed or
should be concealed from abortion patients, at
least until more research has proven the causal
connections between abortion and these complications to their
satisfaction. In short, there will never be enough evidence to
convince abortion holocaust deniers that the
injuries women suffer outweigh the 'benefits' of
population control, or whatever their favorite cause may be.
"Because the denials of Planned Parenthood and other poor-choice
advocates are faithfully reported by the media, they have largely
succeeded in preventing most Americans from fully
waking up to the devastation that abortion is
wreaking on women and families," Reardon said. "But the nation
is stirring. More and more are waking up, because every abortion
adds new evidence on the side of truth. Every
abortion spiritually and emotionally scars another
woman, another man, another family. And with every scarred
heart, there is another soul that yearns for understanding,
compassion, mercy, and, eventually, a chance to
proclaim the truth.
"The fall of the abortion industry is inevitable precisely because it
is creating its own pool of witnesses and accusers.
Just as the Nazi's evil was exposed by the
testimony of the victims who survived, so the evil of
abortion is being exposed by the women and men who, through the
healing mercy of Christ, are now coming forward to
proclaim the truth.
"This is why a key aspect of the pro-woman/pro-life strategy discussed
in 'Making Abortion Rare' is simply to serve the real needs of
abortion survivors. We are helping them to find
spiritual, emotional, and physical healing. We are
helping them to defend and secure their authentic rights.
We are helping to call attention to their voices, which give the
most powerful witness to the abortion holocaust.
And through these means, the poor-choice house of
cards will collapse much faster than most people
imagine. God willing, this will happen within years, not decades."
Reardon believes the public has never been better prepared to receive
and respond to a pro-woman/pro-life message. In addition, he says,
Christian and pro-life groups are steadily integrating the
pro-woman/pro-life strategy into all of their efforts.
"As the public begins to more clearly see the pro-woman side of the
pro-life movement, they will quickly join in our efforts to protect
women from unwanted, unnecessary, and dangerous
abortion," he said. "Most people do not object to
the goal of ending abortion; they just want it done in a
way that helps women. The more we help women, both before and
after their abortions, the more public opinion will
follow our lead."
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