[Active-seattle-l] [Active-l] (NEWS) NOT A REPEAT: Today's SECOND Cultural Warfare Update

Dara (R'ykandar Korra'ti) kahvi at murkworks.net
Wed Mar 1 21:53:27 PST 2006


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---- actual message starts here ----
I thought I was done today, but I'm not; there's just too much going  
on. Here's a second update. _This one is also important_, because  
there's a lot of more-frank-than-usual fundamentalist talk about the  
abortion agenda and their growing control over the courts and  
expectations for the near future. I also have transcribed Dobson's  
reading of the letter he and Focus on the Family got from Supreme Court  
Justice Samuel Alito, which you should read too.

Fundamentalists p0wn the Courts, Part 1: Focus on the Family claims 30  
states will ban abortion in complete or large part; urges activists not  
to count chickens before hatching, they don't know that they have the  
court votes for 100% sure yet;

Fundamentalists p0wn the Courts, Part 2: Justice Alito thanks Dobson  
for his and his listeners' support during confirmation hearings;

Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney endorses South Dakota's  
anti-abortion law, which does _not_ include exemptions for the health  
of the other, rape, or incest - so if you get raped by your dad and  
carrying the child will leave you blind or paralysed from the waste  
down but won't kill you, that's just too fucking bad for you;

Doctors working before _Roe v. Wade_ talk about life for women  
pre-abortion rights; _read this_;

Or, hell, just read this: Virginia woman shoots herself(!) to induce an  
abortion; charged with illegally attempting to induce an abortion in  
Virginia; _murder charges_ considered but set aside because of limits  
still in place until Roe v. Wade is overturned; _she's in jail_, faces  
up to 10 years in prison; _THIS IS THE FUTURE, SO WAKE THE FUCK UP,  
PEOPLE_;

Wisconsin to have anti-marriage-rights initiative on the ballot in 2006;

Focus on the Family condemns temporary lifting of ban on travel for  
HIV+ people for the Gay Games in Chicago, talks about how diseased fags  
pose a national health risk, demands ban be reinstated;

Missouri court upholds 24-hour "waiting period" for abortion;

Kentucky considering 24-hour "waiting period" and in-person  
"counseling" before abortion;

***** Concerned Women for America ACTION ITEM: CWA's Robert Stuber  
writes condemning the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of  
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) treaty, starts effort to reject  
any attempt at passage by US Senate;

***** Focus on the Family's main broadcast is an "issues update": it's  
a long sequence of updates on political issues. _Significantly, it  
includes the letter of thanks and support from Supreme Court Justice  
Samuel Alito_. It also includes a lot of rah-rah for South Dakota's  
near-absolutist abortion ban, support for their "ex-gay" bullshit  
conferences, and an update on installations of ultrasound in their  
anti-abortion evangelistic "pregnancy centres" that lure women in  
pretending to be health clinics. One particularly interesting quote is  
when Dobson starts rhapsodizing about "little human beings growing and  
learning to serve the Lord!" but there's all sorts of fun in this one.


----- 1 -----
STATES POISED TO BAN ABORTION IF ROE IS TOPPLED
Newfound energy appears to be fueling the pro-life side.
Focus on the Family
Family News in Focus
March 1, 2006
by Pete Winn, associate editor

http://www.family.org/cforum/news/a0039699.cfm

Pro-abortion groups have long said that there are dozens
of states that would ban abortion, if Roe v. Wade is ever
overturned. Are they prophetic?

In recent weeks, banning abortion has been a hot topic
with state legislatures:

[...]

What's going on?

Pro-abortion lobbyists like Nancy Northup, president of
the Center for Reproductive Rights, argue that the
nation's highest court is now more likely to reverse
itself on the abortion issue because of the addition of
Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justice Samuel
Alito.

They claim state lawmakers realize it -- and want to
capitalize on the prospect.

[...]

But Hausknecht and other pro-life conservatives have
adopted a "don't count your chickens before the hatch"
philosophy. Even with the presence of the two new members
-- assuming they would vote with Justices Scalia and
Thomas to strike -- that still wouldn't add up to the five
votes necessary to nix Roe.

And even if the votes were amassed, Hausknecht pointed out
that abortion in the U.S. would not be over.

"Even if Roe v. Wade was overturned tomorrow, there would
be some states that would allow abortion to continue," he
said. "So, abortion is not going away in this country
anytime soon, simply because a court decision may or may
not be overturned."

Still, it is encouraging, he said, that many states and
state legislatures, if allowed to do so, would heavily
restrict or ban abortion.

Hausknecht said pro-lifers must pray and work to see they
get the chance.

[Much more at URL]


----- 2 -----
Dobson says Alito sent thank-you note
By Colleen Slevin, Associated Press Writer  |  March 1, 2006

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/03/01/ 
dobson_says_alito_sent_thank_you_note/

DENVER --Focus on the Family founder James Dobson said Wednesday that  
new Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito sent him a letter thanking him  
and his radio listeners for their support during his Senate  
confirmation hearings.

Alito wrote that "the prayers of so many people from around the country  
were a palpable and powerful force. As long as I serve on the Supreme  
Court, I will keep in mind the trust that has been placed in me,"  
Dobson said on his radio broadcast.

[More at URL]


----- 3 -----
Romney veers right on abortion, gay adoption
By Maggie Mulvihill and Kimberly Atkins
Wednesday, March 1, 2006 - Updated: 06:06 AM EST

http://news.bostonherald.com/localPolitics/view.bg?articleid=128548

Lunging to the right on two red hot social issues, Gov. Mitt Romney  
said he would sign a bill outlawing abortion, even in cases of rape or  
incest, and agreed to meet with the state’s Roman Catholic bishops to  
discuss their bid to exempt Catholic Charities from gay adoptions.

On abortion, Romney spokeswoman Julie Teer said the governor would back  
a state ban on abortion if, as occurred in South Dakota, lawmakers  
passed such a measure.

“If Gov. Romney were the governor of South Dakota he would sign it,”  
Teer told political newsletter The Hotline yesterday. “The governor  
believes that states should have the right to be pro-life if that is  
the will of the people.”

On gay adoption, the governor is wading into an issue so volatile that  
three Catholic Charities board members quit last night over the  
church’s stance seeking to block such adoptions.

[More at URL]


----- 4 -----
Our Word
God Forbid
words by moiv posted January 23, 2006 - 3:58am

http://ourword.org/node/843#comment-3369? 
PHPSESSID=9d52cf303c1402abca5400b37a7d2a9a

In The War Between Heart and Mind, the Rev. Tom Davis, Clergy Advisory  
Board Chair for Planned Parenthood Federation of America, suggests that  
the Religious Right do some soul-searching about abortion.

If, God forbid, the "right to life" people actually get what they say  
they want — the criminalization of abortion — millions of them may be  
stunned at their reactions when they see or read about:

· Women forced to testify at the trial of doctors accused of doing  
abortions. Refusal to testify could result in charges of contempt.

· Hospitals required to report suspected illegal abortions.

· A startling increase in teen births on the part of women who cannot  
afford to travel to a state where abortion is still allowed.

· Police coming to the emergency room to question women who are  
suffering infections or other damage due to an illegal abortion.

Some will question whether all of these things will happen. Perhaps the  
enforcement will not be thorough at all. But if that proves to be the  
case, if the law is largely ignored and illegal abortions occur in  
great number, then what was the point of the law? Clearly it was not to  
stop abortions. It was to institutionalize a principle, the principle  
that women do not have this right. That principle is something that the  
mind can understand abstractly, but it also produces consequences that  
fill the heart with revulsion.

[Much more at URL]


----- 6 -----
Police: Woman shot self to induce an abortion
Richmond (Virginia) Times-Dispatch
By Bill Geroux
Times-Dispatch Staff Writer
March 1, 2006

RELATED: Police Beat

SUFFOLK -- A Suffolk woman who lost her unborn baby after suffering a  
bullet wound to the abdomen was arrested yesterday and charged with  
shooting herself to "illegally induce an abortion."

[...]

Skinner was rushed by ambulance to Sentara Norfolk General Hospital,  
where doctors listed her in good condition but her fetus was pronounced  
dead. Doctors had planned to induce labor for Skinner, who police said  
was seven to nine month's pregnant, that day.

[...]

Skinner turned herself in to police yesterday afternoon. She is charged  
with illegally inducing an abortion, a Class 4 felony punishable by two  
to 10 years in prison and a $100,000 fine. Authorities studied several  
possible charges against Skinner but decided not to charge her with  
murder because the fetus had not been born, George said.

[...]

She remained in jail yesterday after failing to post a $15,000 bond,  
George said.

[More at URL]


----- 7 -----
Wisconsin to Vote on Marriage Amendment
Focus on the Family
Newsbriefs
March 1, 2006

[Received in email; no URL]

Lawmakers in the Badger State voted Tuesday to place a
constitutional amendment on the November ballot that would
define marriage as the union of one man and one woman.

Critics called the move political posturing.

"This is a cynical right-wing attempt to motivate the base
for the fall elections," said Democratic Rep. Marlin
Schneider.

Rep. John Gard, a Republican, said the amendment would
defend marriage from legal challenges by activists seeking
to legalize gay marriage.

"An issue of this importance will be decided by the people
of this state," he said, "not an activist judge."

Matt Daniels, president and founder of Alliance for
Marriage, said Wisconsin's approval of the referendum is
an important step toward the protection of marriage.

"Wisconsin is a prelude to the real battle," he said. Only
a federal marriage protection amendment "can protect
marriage from radical activist lawsuits intended to strike
down marriage."

Similar state amendments will appear on the ballot in
Tennessee, South Carolina, South Dakota, Virginia, Alabama
and Idaho.


----- 8 -----
HIV Travel Restrictions Lifted for Gay Games
Focus on the Family
Newsbriefs
March 1, 2006

[Received in email; no URL]

Pro-family advocates are asking President Bush to
reinstate a federal ban that prohibits HIV-infected
travelers from coming to United States. A lobbying
campaign succeeded in getting the ban lifted in time for
Chicago's 2006 Gay Games.

Homosexuals from around the world will travel to Chicago
for the event slated for July 15-22. The official Web site
claims 8,000 people have registered.

Gay advocates, with the help of Chicago Mayor Richard
Daley, convinced the federal government to waive
restrictions on international travel for those with HIV so
they could attend the games. Pro-family analysts argue
that such a move is counter to the goal of stopping the
spread of the disease.

Peter LaBarbera, executive director of the Illinois Family
Institute, is calling on the president and Congress to
reinstate the ban. He said the people of Chicago should
not be subjected to activities that facilitate immoral and
reckless behavior.

"Mayor Daley has forgotten his role as 'chief protector'
of the people of Chicago," he said. "The public-health
goal of stopping the spread of HIV/AIDS must take
precedence over the political wants of homosexual
advocates."

The Gay Games Web site promotes dangerous sexual activity,
LaBarbera said. For example, Steamworks, a gay bathhouse
that offers anonymous sex for men, is listed as a business
sponsor and under "Parties and Events."

"The evidence is clear: the extracurricular activities
surrounding the Gay Games present a real health hazard to
those involved and the surrounding community," he said.
"Inviting thousands of HIV-infected visitors to a Gay
Games celebration that officially promotes promiscuity
will only put Chicagoans at risk and help spread HIV."


----- 9 -----
Missouri Court Affirms One-Day Wait for Abortion
Focus on the Family
Newsbriefs
March 1, 2006

[Received in email; no URL]

The Missouri Supreme Court ruled Tuesday the state's
mandatory 24-hour waiting period for abortion withstands
constitutional scrutiny, The Associated Press reported.

The law, passed in 2003, requires physicians to wait 24
hours after consulting with a woman seeking an abortion
before performing the procedure. It also requires the
doctor to provide information on the physical and
psychological risk factors associated with abortion.
Violators face possible revocation of their medical
licenses, jail time and a $1,000 fine.

Planned Parenthood challenged the law, arguing it was too
vague for doctors to understand and avoid prosecution.

The court disagreed, stating that the law places no
further duty on abortion doctors than they already have
under common law.

"There is no reason to construe the language in the
Missouri Constitution more broadly than the corresponding
language of the federal Constitution," the ruling read,
"and the United States Supreme Court already has
determined that such a waiting provision does not violate
the federal Constitution."

Patty Skain, executive director of Missouri Right to Life,
called it an important win.

"It's a victory for the women of Missouri who find
themselves in a crisis pregnancy," she said, "but need the
information and time to consider what's best for them."


----- 10 -----
Kentucky General Assembly
Bills require in-person counseling for abortion
Women would have to be told about risks and alternatives
By Tom Loftus
tloftus at courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal

http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060301/ 
NEWS0101/603010430

FRANKFORT, Ky. -- Women seeking abortions would have to be told in  
person of medical risks and alternatives at least 24 hours before the  
procedure, under two bills that advanced in the Senate and House  
yesterday.

Women now normally receive that information from a recorded telephone  
message.

But Senate Bill 125, which passed the Senate 34-3 and now goes to the  
House, would require the information to be delivered "orally" and "in  
person" by a doctor or a doctor's designee.

[More at URL]


----- 11 -----
Feminists Step Up Attempt to Ratify CEDAW Treaty
Concerned Women for America
3/1/2006
By Robert Stuber

http://www.cwfa.org/articles/10233/CWA/nation/index.htm

Liberal efforts for U.N. ratification of the radical United Nations  
treaty known as CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of  
Discrimination Against Women) is alive and well, as Concerned Women for  
America (CWA) President Wendy Wright found when she spoke at a December  
debate in the greater Washington, D.C., area sponsored by a group  
called Women Engaging Globally.

Wright was the only one of four on the panel who presented a pro-life,  
pro-family and anti-CEDAW viewpoint.

“The other speakers claimed that other countries—those that have  
already signed CEDAW—will not treat women decently unless the U.S. also  
ratifies it,” said Wright. “This is a form of blackmail.

[...]

“People should be concerned because the CEDAW treaty is everything that  
was bad about the ERA and much more,” said Wright. “I believe that  
liberal feminists are preparing the groundwork for the Senate to try a  
quick ratification strike that would give us little time to react.”

CEDAW could become the law of the land simply with Senate ratification.  
The U.S. Constitution doesn’t permit President Bush to veto its  
ratification, and the House of Representatives is similarly barred from  
any role in its approval.

Take Action: Ratification of CEDAW would require two-thirds of U.S.  
senators present to vote for the treaty. Ask your senators to vote no  
on CEDAW. Capitol switchboard: 202-225-3121. Or click here for  
additional contact information.

[More at URL]


----- 12 -----
Focus on the Family
Issues Update: March 2006
Main broadcast
March 1, 2006

Dr. Dobson and his guests report on a number of recent positive  
developments in the realm of social issues. Topics include the passing  
of an abortion ban in South Dakota and an Air Force decision allowing  
for greater freedom of religious expression for its chaplains.

Also, Dr. Dobson talks with Christian recording artist Rebecca St.  
James about the impact of prayers for our nation and reads a special  
letter he received from Justice Samuel Alito.

[Transcription begins. Summarised material in brackets; text in quotes  
is literal with ellipses indicating skipped (and unimportant) material.  
Speakers are identified as best I could.]

[First 10-minute section is with Rebecca St. James, which is not  
particularly important or politically relevant, tho' there is a lot of  
talk about the importance of "sexual purity," which continues to strike  
me as strange and fascist. Lots of pushing of the National Day of  
Prayer.]

[Two next guests: Tom Minnery, Senior Vice-President, Government and  
Public Policy at Focus on the Family; Dr. Bill Meyer; psychologist in  
residence and vice-president at FotF.]

Dobson: "First of all... you just got back, both of you, from the Love  
Won Out conference in St. Louis, and it was one of the most exciting  
Love Won Out conferences we've ever had."

Minnery: "...the Lord continues to bless that one day Saturday  
conference on homosexuality, explaining the causes and the ways out of  
homosexuality... we hoped for a thousand people, interest in this  
conference was very high, partly because the homosexual activists were  
very belligerent, there were two billboards that were erected to  
advertise the conference, both of them were defaced, one of them had an  
ugly saying written across it, it said, "right wing scum, your time  
will come," very ominous, very ugly, but see, that draws the press, and  
that draws the interest... lo and behold, when the day of the  
conference came we had nearly 1800 people... interest to continues to  
grow..."

Dobson: "You're meeting a need, that's why! And even though there are  
those who would like to stifle that message, that's why we're out  
there... there is no hate expressed, no disparagement, no name-calling,  
nothing to hurt anybody, it is a conference dedicated to those who want  
to understand homosexuality and want a way out."

[Editor's note: The lying here makes me want to hurl - FotF spews crap  
like diseased queers can't form actual emotional relationships and want  
to, in Dobson's words, _destroy western civilsation_. And that's a  
quote. What a fucking liar.]

Meyer: "It's all about compassion, and hope, and understanding, and  
actually, there's a very effective challenge to the church to be more  
understanding on this issue. One of the things Tom didn't mention is  
that the church that was hosting the event was egged... some gay  
activists came by before the conference [Ed. Note: they have no idea  
who threw the eggs.] and threw eggs at the entrance. And yet this  
pastor Jean Monez went outside to the two or three hundred protesters,  
set up a porta-potty for them, served them coffee, gave them  
sandwiches, engaged with them in dialogue -- that is what Christianity  
is all about. [Dobson: What church was it?"] the First evangelical free  
church of St. Louis County in Manchester, Missouri."

Dobson: "[We] used to have trouble getting churches "to even accept  
this conference. We put it on, but they wouldn't allow their churches  
to be used, that's not a problem now, is it?"

Minnery: "God bless the pastors, they understand how important the  
subject of homosexuality has become, because of the attack on marriage.  
We began several years ago to holding informational meetings for  
pastors several weeks priour to these conferences and we'd get 40, 50  
pastors... we had 345 pastors... they understand what's at stake."

Dobson: "Well, the world is changing, we said on this broadcast, the  
three of us, just 10 or 12 days, ago, there is some evidence that the  
pendulum seems to be swinging back on the moral and cultural issues.  
For 20 years I have decried what is going on, what the media was doing  
to us, what the cocongress was doing, in some cases, what the white  
house was doing, and we're seeing something different now, and that's  
why I said a few minutes ago that's why this will be an exciting update  
for our listeners... several news items... we will offer our  
interpretation of what's taking place."

_"First of all, our listeners know, I hope, that we fought very very  
hard to get both new Supreme Court justices confirmed. First was John  
Roberts, who went on to become the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court,  
and more recently Samuel Alito who is a good man - we do not know yet  
how these men will vote, but every indication is they _get it_. They  
_understand_. Two years ago I was decrying judicial tyranny - I mean,  
it _threatens everything_, including the decision that's about to be  
made on partial birth abortion, and the definition of marriage, and  
religious liberty, and so many other issues. Well, we fought hard, I  
mean, I poured my life into trying to let everybody know that  
everything was on the line, that Democrats, primarily in the United  
States Senate were determined to protect their liberal playground,  
which is what the Supreme Court has been, and they were not successful  
and these two men were confirmed."

"Well, so many people contacted Samuel Alito in response to our  
programme and he got so many letters that he wrote me this response,  
that arrived on my desk yesterday. At the top is the very understated  
heading, "Supreme Court of the United States - Washington DC" ... and  
that got my attention. And he wrote,<blockquote>"Dear Dr. Dobson;

This is just a short note to express my heartfelt thanks to you and the  
entire staff of Focus on the Family for your help and support during  
the past few challenging months. I would also greatly appreciate it if  
you would convey my appreciation _(Dobson: "which I'm doing now")_ to  
the good people from all parts of the country who wrote to tell me that  
they were praying for me and for my family during this period. As I  
said when I spoke at my formal investiture at the White House last  
week, the prayers of so many people from around the country were a  
palpable and powerful force. As long as I serve on the Supreme Court, I  
will keep in mind the trust that has been placed in me.

I hope that we'll have the opportunity to meet personally at some point  
in the future. In the meantime, my entire family and I hope that you  
and the Focus on the Family staff know how much we appreciate all that  
you have done.

Sincerely yours,

Samuel Alito</blockquote>_Minnery: "Wow."

Dobson: "Isn't that fantastic?"

Minnery: "You can live a long time on good feedback like that."

Dobson: "I sure can!"

Meyer: "And what a good man to take the time to write that kind of a  
letter, too!"

Dobson: "Absolutely! And what I appreciated most is that the people  
listening to us out there helped to make this happen.

Meyer? (hard to tell, talking under Dobson): "He gets it."

Dobson: "They responded. They called. It's the reason why those that  
wanted to defeat his confirmation in the United States Senate never got  
any traction, because the American people stepped up and made it  
happen. To the folks who are listening to us, thank you for doing that;  
please, I _beg_ you, when we come back to you on these issues, continue  
to participate; it makes a difference! And in this case, it absolutely  
affected history. And _just in time!_ Just in time, because partial  
birth abortion is now being considered by the Supreme Court. And that  
leads us to the next very exciting bit of news, Tom, I'm gonna let you  
explain that about what happened in South Dakota just five days ago."

Minnery: "The South Dakota legislature passed a law _prohibiting_ all  
forms of abortion South Dakota except an abortion to save the physical  
life of a mother. That is _astounding_, a very strong bill, it is now  
on the desk of governor Mike Rounds, who's indicated that he will sign  
it, though he is getting some opposition pressure now, but nonetheless,  
we _expect him to do so_, and certainly that'll be challenged, and that  
law will make its way to the US Supreme Court where now, we are still  
short _one vote_ to overturn _Roe v. Wade_, but it'll take several  
years for it to get to the high court, and _maybe, by then_, we'll have  
a chance to see another such Justice as Samuel Alito confirmed."

Dobson: "Nothing like that has happened since 1973, with _Roe v. Wade_,  
and we are hoping and praying, and I say again to our listeners, please  
be in prayer, that by the time that prohibition on abortion reaches the  
United States Supreme Court, there will be _one more conservative  
justice sitting there_. And that is very impossible, because the age  
and the health of some of the other members of the Supreme Court. [sic]  
Can anyone hear the creaking of the pendulum begin to turn in the other  
direction? I may be wrong about this, it's hard to predict the future  
and I've been wrong in the past, maybe again, but I'm seeing some good  
things."

Minnery: "Well, it requires always to be vigilant. We celebrated the  
election successes in 2004, and where are we? We're in 2006, another  
_very significant election year_, and the gains made in 2004 could be  
lost in other states when we consider who's up in the Senate and in the  
House of Representatives."

Dobson: "You never know! But _I believe_ what we started with at the  
top of this programme, talking about prayer, with Rebecca St. James, I  
believe that's why we're seeing what we're seeing. Now, man, it's,  
we're already 21 minutes in, we've got three or four very other  
important things, let's do this one very very quickly."

Dobson: "Tom, you and I came before these microphones very concerned  
because the Pentagon was beginning to change the rules, even for  
_chaplains_, not allowing them freedom to talk about Jesus Christ _[ED  
NOTE: the guidelines the fundamentalists disliked prohibited religious  
harassment and were in response to the religious harassment lawsuits at  
the Air Force Academy]_, there were guidelines that were issued that  
were not entirely satisfactory; _you and I got on a plane, we went to  
the Pentagon, we met with the Acting Secretary of the Air Force, he's a  
good man, he understood our concerns, he brought in his chief attourney  
for the Air Force, and she's a committed Christian, and, you know, this  
has gone back and forth, but _just last week new guidelines were  
issued_ saying what?_"

Minnery: "Essentially that chaplains are free to express their  
religious convictions according to the tenants of their faith, and what  
that means is, they are free to tell people about Jesus Christ! And at  
the Air Force Academy, there is free exercise of religion restored so  
that informal discussions, Bible studies can take place on [sic] that  
academy that has been _attacked_ [sic] which is why all of this came to  
the fore, so it's a great victory for free exercise of religion, and  
congratulations, Dr. Dobson on being invited to the Pentagon and having  
a part in advising them on this _very important_ set of religious  
guidelines."

Dobson: "Well, I don't want to overstate it, I don't want to say, 'look  
at us, look what we did,' we just played a role, we just played _our_  
role, and I just want to say to all these people out there who heard a  
couple of years ago that we were starting a 501(c)_4_ organisation in  
addition to the 501(c)3 in order to not only nurture the family but in  
order to defend the family, and that's why we've been able to do some  
of the stuff we couldn't have in the way that we did it priour to the  
Focus on the Family Action Ministry. And people have supported that and  
I'm very very grateful."

[Two other guests; Yvette Marr (vice-president, Community Impact  
Outreach of Focus on the Family) and Kim Conroy (director, Sanctity of  
Human Life at FotF)]

Marr: "I'll set it up and pitch it to Kim; Tom Minnery said we need to  
celebrate these victories, Doctor; we have a victory; in the life of  
what we call Option Ultrasound here at Focus on the Family that we  
started in 2004 to save the lives of babies, "a revealed life is a  
saved life," we are in celebration mode because we have hit a  
milestone, and I want to pitch it over to Kim to tell you exactly what  
that is."

Conroy: "We have. That milestone is that we have just signed our 200th  
placement of ultrasound services."

Dobson: "Isn't that unbelievable?"

Conroy: "Yeah, that's worth celebrating."

Marr: "200."

Dobson: "And that has been done in three years?"

Conroy: "Two years."

Dobson: "Two year's time?"

Conroy: "Two years this month, that's right."

Dobson: "This means in some cases these every small pregnancy resource  
centers, that we used to call crisis pregnancy centers, have been given  
the equipment in order for a young woman who comes in abortion-minded,  
she's thinking about doing that, and she sees her baby and what  
happens, Kim?"

Conroy: "Well, the vast majority of the time, that woman chooses life  
for that child, and we know that ultrasound has a very pivotal role to  
play in that, because she _does_ come face to face not just with the  
reality of that baby, but the reality of _her_ baby."

Dobson: "And Focus on the Family has now facilitated 200 such  
facilities." [Sic]

Conroy: "That's right!"

Dobson: "Yvette, I am proud of you guys, I really am."

Conroy: "It's been amazing."

Dobson: "How many babies do you suppose you have..."

_Conroy: "Well, I hesitate to say, because to be honest with you, the  
stat keeping has really been an uphill battle for us, because a lot of  
these centres have not kept stats, or they have not kept _consistent_  
stats one to another, but at our best guess, it is approximately 50  
babies annually per centre. That's how we're doing the math. So 50  
babies annually per centre times 200. Dr. Bill Meyer, what would that  
be?"_

Meyer: "That is 10,000, Yvette!"

Conroy: "Thank you! I am not the mathematician... I'm just here to get  
these services out!"

Dobson: "Ten thousand in two years!"

Conroy: "That's right."

_Dobson: "Imagine! Ten thousand little human beings growing and  
learning to serve the Lord! Could there be anything more thrilling than  
that?"_

Minnery: "Yes, I think there's cheering in Heaven at each one of these  
decisions, I think the Lord must be pleased."

Dobson: "Oh my goodness. Well, I think we have done a pretty good job  
of covering a lot of stuff... you know what, that's just the beginning,  
isn't it, Bill? You're keeping up with a lot of stuff that's going on,  
you too, Tom - we could devote the whole week's programme [sic] to  
exciting things that are taking place! We're still losing some battles,  
but we're winning more than we ever have before."

[Recap of guest names; Focus on the Family staff is at 1300; Kim Conroy  
actually meets Dr. Dobson here for the first time.]


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