Devotion to Legalized Genocide: Dr. Gosnell’s Abortion Trial Shames America
Since the U.S. Supreme Court legalized the murder of innocents, the black community has lost nearly well over 12 million babies which are about “1,452 babies each and every day.” In effect, abortion has become the leading cause of murder in the black community. Yet where is the outrage from the religious community?
What is even more sickening is that Obama could work his lips to utter the words, “Thank you, Planned Parenthood. God bless you.” In some twisted way, the president believes that God would bless the killing of millions of innocent unborn babies who have their lives extinguished before and after first breath.
So it is no small wonder that Dr. Gosnell sits in Philadelphia in smug silence without mounting a defense. He and his legal team appear confident that the jurors, like the mainstream media, will dismiss his alleged murders as incidental and of no consequence.
After all, Margaret Sanger, who spoke before the Ku Klux Klan in New Jersey in the early 1930’s, stressed, “Colored people are like human weeds and are to be exterminated.” These words did not come from a conservative or a Republican or from those who would be Tea Party members. Those words came from Sanger, who like Gosnell, was affiliated with liberals who support planned death.
Wake up America because, whether practiced with care or with the alleged heinous intentions of a Dr. Gosnell in his abortionist death dungeon, murder is still murder. Sanger’s words spoken decades ago are a harbinger of why the Dr. Gosnell’s of the nation are allowed to practice freely now. “Eugenic sterilization is an urgent need … We must prevent multiplication of this bad stock.”
Abortionists are the true bad stock and through continued legal and moral actions in the state legislatures, all life will progressively be protected from the likes of Sanger’s modern day disciples like Dr. Gosnell.
This is America’s urgent need!
Image: Cover of Birth Control Review magazine; source: Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College; author: Margaret Sanger