J
JenDeMarie
Guest
I’m a recent convert to Catholicism – I just joined the church this Easter – and in all honesty, I went through a pretty rapid transition from extremely progressive liberal to fairly conservative Catholic (in about a year).
Initially, there were some newsletters and e-mail subscriptions that I procrastinated about canceling, during my year of conversion (because signing up for more e-mail alerts and newsletters than I need and keeping on top of my clutter are both things I struggle with). But as time went on and I found myself with some contrasting e-mail subscriptions I started noticing differences between, say, the pro-abortion lists that I had neglected to cancel and the pro-life lists that I had just recently joined.
Planned Parenthood, most of all, has a very organized, efficient, effective networking machine in place to put constant pressure on the government – both on the federal and local levels – and I’m not seeing anything remotely similiar in the opposite camp.
The thing that got me fired up today is that I just watched a massive Planned Parenthood campaign turn over the long-standing abstinence-only sex ed program for my state – and I saw no resistence to it from anyone except for one small online Protestent fundamentalist group. There were no e-mails from my diocese, no one else seemed to know about it – and almost overnight we went from having schools that proclaimed the significance of marriage to schools that automatically enroll children in progressive sex-ed in which they begin learning about birth control, various sexual lifestyle choices and abortion at the age of 12.
I believe the Susan B. Anthony list is the biggest pro-life organization I’m currently signed up with. Is there a more effective list that I’ve simply neglected to join or is there a different way of organizing in the pro-life movement or is this just a big hole in the pro-life, family values tent that needs to be filled?
Initially, there were some newsletters and e-mail subscriptions that I procrastinated about canceling, during my year of conversion (because signing up for more e-mail alerts and newsletters than I need and keeping on top of my clutter are both things I struggle with). But as time went on and I found myself with some contrasting e-mail subscriptions I started noticing differences between, say, the pro-abortion lists that I had neglected to cancel and the pro-life lists that I had just recently joined.
Planned Parenthood, most of all, has a very organized, efficient, effective networking machine in place to put constant pressure on the government – both on the federal and local levels – and I’m not seeing anything remotely similiar in the opposite camp.
The thing that got me fired up today is that I just watched a massive Planned Parenthood campaign turn over the long-standing abstinence-only sex ed program for my state – and I saw no resistence to it from anyone except for one small online Protestent fundamentalist group. There were no e-mails from my diocese, no one else seemed to know about it – and almost overnight we went from having schools that proclaimed the significance of marriage to schools that automatically enroll children in progressive sex-ed in which they begin learning about birth control, various sexual lifestyle choices and abortion at the age of 12.
I believe the Susan B. Anthony list is the biggest pro-life organization I’m currently signed up with. Is there a more effective list that I’ve simply neglected to join or is there a different way of organizing in the pro-life movement or is this just a big hole in the pro-life, family values tent that needs to be filled?