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The Difference a
Pro-Life President Makes --
Part
One of
Two
Editor's note. As is
our custom, the day I go to the printer's to watch that month's
NRL
News
roll off the presses I run an article from the edition in TN&V. The
following is the editorial from the special January Commemorative Issue. If
you have not ordered copies, you still have time to call 202-626-8828. We
will resume TN&V on Wednesday or Thursday.
My son is now 23 years old, 6'2", and about twice as big as I am. But it
seems like only yesterday I was picking up him from soccer practice on a
frigid November night 15 years ago.
David, although only 8, knew that pro-life President George H.W. Bush was
the underdog in his fight against two pro-abortionists: Gov. Bill Clinton
and businessman and gadfly Ross Perot. He took one look at my face and
quietly asked who had won. I told him Gov. Clinton.
As I wrote at the time, we grabbed a quarter-pounder and ate in silence. I
could tell he was thinking. After a while, David asked a question which no
doubt crossed the minds of many pro-lifers that night: "Dad, do you think
God has a plan if Clinton wins?"
I explained that God is in control of everything, but that we must remember
that there are a great many things that God permits to happen that are not
in His plan for mankind. I inquired of David, if he could think of a reason
God would allow this defeat for the babies. He paused for a minute and then
responded, "To see if pro-lifers will stay on the job?"
The memories of that night--the devastation so many of us felt yet the
courage that millions of grassroots pro-lifers displayed in taking up the
gauntlet when all hope seemed lost--are forever burned into my memory. It is
no exaggeration to say that the next eight years were the ultimate gut-check
for pro-lifers.
Clinton, as slick as they come, won the presidency a second time four years
later. During his two terms in office, there were many times our backs were
pressed up against the wall. But I am proud to say that pro-lifers never
blinked, never wavered, even in the first terrible year of the Clinton
presidency when pro-abortionists ran the House and Senate, buoyed by strong
majorities in both chambers.
Bookies place odds on almost anything. But passage of the radical "Freedom
of Choice Act" (FOCA) was such a "done deal" that even Las Vegas would have
taken a pass. How could FOCA not be enacted when the pro-abortionists
wielded every lever of power and the media insisted FOCA would merely
"codify Roe"?
But FOCA didn't pass, thanks to a brilliant strategy created by NRLC that
worked because of an amazing grassroots lobbying effort by people just like
those reading these words. To this day, it remains a shining example of what
"people power" can do.
As we look ahead to the presidential election, compare the records of
President George H.W. Bush, President Clinton, and President George W. Bush.
The conclusion is inescapable: who occupies 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue makes a
life-and-death difference. That knowledge is the beacon that will guide us
over the next 10 months, especially on the inevitable dark days when we will
need encouragement.
Pope John Paul II introduced a powerful idiom and idea into our
conversation: the "culture of life." From the very beginning, President
George W. Bush vowed to do all in his power to create such a
culture, a
society where all children are welcomed in life and protected in law.
The summary on
page 11 illuminates the point that the policies and principles championed by
President George W. Bush are as different from President Clinton's as day is
from night.
But what is not so easily captured is how President Bush's courage
forestalled what could have been a catastrophe: a wide-open federal spigot
out of which flowed millions of dollars to fund experiments harvesting stem
cells from helpless human embryos.
The President drew a line in the sand in his first televised speech, August
9, 2001. As a result of his refusal to buckle under, six years later we hear
talk of the "end to the stem cell wars." Why? Because a lot of researchers
(some of whom already had serious qualms about scavenging stem cells from
human embryos) put their energies into finding other methods.
One of the lead scientists, Dr. Shinya Yamanaka, recalled for the New
York Times the time he looked into a microscope at a fertility clinic.
"When I saw the embryo, I suddenly realized there was such a small
difference between it and my daughters." he told Gina Kolata. "I thought, we
can't keep destroying embryos for our research. There must be another way."
In November two teams of scientists reported that they had reprogrammed
ordinary human skin cells into stem cells. One scientist gushed, "This work
represents a tremendous scientific milestone the biological equivalent of
the Wright Brothers' first airplane."
There are a number of very helpful stories in this special edition of NRL
News to equip you to do your job more effectively--to do more with
less--and more enthusiastically--because
you'll know people just like you are ensuring that our Movement continues to
grow its grassroots. This is a great time to be a pro-lifer. Why?
Because there is a plentiful harvest just waiting for us and the
babies.
I have no doubt that we will have more than enough workers. Will you be one?
Please send your comments to
Daveandrusko@hotmail.com.
Part Two |