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NRL News
Page 7
September 2009
Volume 36
Issue 9
Mock
Debates, Visit with Rep. Chris Smith Bring
NRLC Academy to a Thrilling Conclusion
BY Dave Andrusko
How does
the cliché go? What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger? Imagine you
are one of NRLC’s Academy students and your assignment is to take on
the senior staff of National Right to Life (as well as an
experienced state lobbyist) in a series of mock debates—with the
wily veterans arguing the anti-life position!
“NRLC
staff know the ins-and-outs of the most effective anti-life
arguments because they’ve seen it all in their own work promoting
pro-life legislation across the country,” said Megan McCrum, the
Academy program director. “But the students held their own, bringing
together everything they’ve learned over the summer.”
Preparing
these young men and women to go up against the best of the best is a
big part of what the Academy is all about. For those who might not
know, the Academy is a rigorous six-week-long course which brings
college students to Washington, D.C. This year there were ten
students, six women and four men, from states as far away as
California and as nearby as Virginia.
The range
of topics is enormous, everything from assisted suicide and denial
of lifesaving medical treatment, to the rationing of health care,
to, of course, abortion. The core of this schedule, the piece that
ties it all together, is the daily “practicum” session—a simulation
exercise where students must articulate the information they learned
about a topic in a persuasive and natural way.
The
amount of information the students must master combined with the
rigor of the curriculum makes it the equivalent of any collegiate
course load. McCrum said each student leaves with four two-inch
binders—“their own mobile pro-life libraries.”
The July
31 debates concluded this year’s Academy session. They followed on
the heels of one of the most exciting experiences of the summer
which they shared with NRLC’s interns and law clerks: a meeting with
Congressional Pro-Life Caucus Co-Chair Chris Smith (R-NJ). Smith,
now in his 15th term in the House, is “one of us,” having begun his
career as executive director of New Jersey’s right to life
organization.
“Representative Smith took them on the House floor, talked to them,
had them back to his office for coffee and donuts,” McCrum said.
“His staff may have been worried about keeping him on schedule, but
he was eager to keep talking to the students about how pro-life is
the fundamental human rights issue and answering their questions.”
She
smiled and added, “They just didn’t want him to stop.” After their
time together with Rep. Smith, his staff took them on a tour of the
Capitol building.
McCrum
emphasized that learning how to debate the life issues and mastering
the ins and outs of the legislative process are only two of the many
goals established for Academy students.
“We want
each of them to be leaders—first on their college campuses, then in
their respective states and regions,” she said.
“They
will be pro-life missionaries, if you will, passing on all they have
learned to the grassroots.” |