'WHAT ARE THEY AFRAID OF?'
Pro-abortion groups file suit
against North Carolina "Woman's Right to Know"
law
WASHINGTON – Today, pro-abortion advocates in
North Carolina (including two Planned Parenthood
affiliates) filed suit in the U.S. District
Court for the Middle District of North Carolina
seeking to block the North Carolina "Woman's
Right to Know" law from going into effect. The
law, which was enacted in July over Governor
Beverly Perdue's veto, requires that mothers
seeking abortion be given information about the
abortion and that a real-time ultrasound image
of her unborn child be displayed so that she may
view the image before the abortion can be
performed.
“What are abortion advocates afraid of? Probably
that when mothers see the recognizable images of
their unborn children as they kick and move
inside the womb, with beating hearts,
abortionists will lose business, ”
said Mary Spaulding Balch, J.D., director of
state legislation for the National Right to Life
Committee.
Enacted by a bi-partisan override of Governor
Perdue's July veto, the informed consent law
provides that a booklet containing
scientifically accurate information about risks,
alternatives and information on the development
of the unborn child, compiled by the Department
of Health and Human Services, be offered to the
mother at least 24 hours prior to an abortion so
that she might have the opportunity to read and
understand the information. It also provides
that an ultrasound image of the unborn child be
displayed at least four hours prior to an
abortion so that the mother might view it.
Balch
added: “As U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in Gonzalss v.
Carhart in 2007, 'Whether to have an
abortion requires a difficult and painful moral
decision….The State has an interest in ensuring
so grave a choice is well informed. It is
self-evident that a mother who comes to regret
her choice to abort must struggle with grief
more anguished and sorrow more profound when she
learns, only after the event, what she once did
not know…'”
Founded in 1968, the National
Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the federation
of 50 state right-to-life affiliates and more
than 3,000 local chapters, is the nation's
oldest and largest grassroots pro-life
organization. Recognized as the flagship of the
pro-life movement, NRLC works through
legislation and education to protect innocent
human life from abortion, infanticide, assisted
suicide and euthanasia.