NRLC 2010: About as Good
as it Gets
Part Two of Three
By Dave Andrusko
Early and often,
throughout the three-day NRLC convention held in Pittsburgh I
heard some of the same words and descriptors: "amazing," "one of
the best ever," "buzz," and "where is the convention next year?"
[Hint: Jacksonville, Florida.]
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NRLC Education
Department Staff. (Left to right).
Dr. Randall K. O'Bannon, Lisa Andrusko, Marie Rivers, and
Joe Landrum. |
What explains what was
clearly one of the best-received conventions in recent memory?
For starters, the location. Pennsylvania is pro-life country.
And then there was the
quality of the general sessions at NRLC 2010, both in the sense
of topics that people thirsted to learn more about and quality
speakers who could deliver information in a way that the
audience could quickly assimilate, profit from, and be able to
share with folks back home.
To name just a few: Dr.
Steve Zelinski and the Pain of the Unborn; Steven Mosher and
Sex-Selection Abortions; Dr. Angela Franks' and Margaret
Sanger's eugenic legacy; the 25th anniversary of National Teens
for Life; a riveting account of a much-regretted abortion by
Mark and LaRee Pickup; a crystal-clear explanation of ObamaCare
presented by NRLC's Douglas Johnson and Burke Balch and a
leadership award given to pro-life House Minority Leader John
Boehner; and the immensely inspirational Monsignor James Lisante
whose speech closed the convention at the Saturday night
banquet.
There were many important
innovations at NRLC 2010. In the run up to the June 24-26
pro-life educational event of the year, attended by upwards of
1,000 people, NRLC staff sent the word out far and wide. In
addition to creating a website for the convention, staff worked
the social networks early and often. As evidence of the
Movement's recognition of the new technologies, there were four
separate workshops on how to best utilize the Internet in
general, social networks (such as Facebook and Twitter) in
particular. As someone who played a very small role in all this,
I can attest that grassroots pro-lifers grasp the enormous
potential.
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The National Teens
for Life (NTL) "elders" shared the spotlight
at Thursday evening's general session celebrating NTL's
25th Anniversary. (From left to right): Former NTL
president
Dr. Angela Franks; NTL co-advisor and director Wisconsin
Teens for Life Joleigh Little; NTL founding president
Jack St. Martin; and former NTL president and current
NRLC communications director Derrick Jones. |
The younger members of the
staff, who imbibed the new technologies with their mother's
milk, blogged through the convention. As Jonathan Rogers will
explain tomorrow, this generated an enormous stream of traffic.
Convention goers also had their pictures taken to share with
their local newspapers.
There were several
narratives running throughout our time together.
First and foremost, in
spite of Barack Obama and the pro-abortion Democratic majorities
in both Houses of Congress, there is real reason for optimism.
NRLC Executive Director David N. O'Steen, Ph.D., used a portion
of the Saturday morning general session to make three points:
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Jaime Thietten received a
standing ovation for her song, "My Chance."
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"Today in America, the
normal is to be pro-life. More people identify as pro-life than
pro-choice." (2) 61% of the public does not want government
healthcare providing any funding for abortion. (3) "To answer a
question from 2008, yes, we have hope," O'Steen said. "And we
will remember in November."
Second, the fractures in
the wall that has separated Americans from their consciences
grows more pronounced almost daily. Once almost invisible,
images of the unborn child can be found attached to
refrigerators all over the country. It's impossible to square
4-color real-time ultrasounds of squirming unborn babies with
nonsense about "blobs of tissue."
In the same vein, if a
pro-abortionist had snuck in while Steven Mosher talked about
the horrific practice of sex-selection abortion, how would
she/he merge support for "women's rights" with the systemic
annihilation of unborn baby girls?
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Young Bridget Maloney
eats lunch at NRLC 2010 |
Adding to the cognitive
dissonance, even for the hardest-hearted pro-abortionist, can
they really accept that it okay to tear apart unborn children
who are capable of experiencing pain? That is the challenge
posed by Nebraska's "Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act."
Pro-abortionists no doubt
felt better when a working group of the Royal College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologist ponied up a bogus study
purporting to prove that the unborn child can't experience pain
at even at 24 weeks, let alone at 20 weeks, and perhaps not
until considerably further along.
But I strongly suspect
that they fear if the Supreme Court hears the evidence, the
justices will uphold Nebraska's landmark legislation.
A tremendous convention,
from start to finish. We've talked about it since Monday,
including reproducing speeches, and will add additional details
over the next week. In short order we will post the list of CDs
that you can buy--the next best thing to being at NRLC 2010.
Please send all of your
comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com. If you like, join those who are now
following me on Twitter at
http://twitter.com/daveha.
Part Three
Part One |