Wednesday, March 8, 2023

HOW MANY BLACK BABIES WILL BE MURDERED TODAY??? - Chris Rock on Abortion: 'Let's Not Get Twisted, It Is Killing a Baby'

 

FDA Claims There's a 'Therapeutic Benefit' to Killing Unborn Babies With Drugs

TERENCE P. JEFFREY | MARCH 8, 2023 | 4:16AM EST
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Pro-life Americans gather outside of the U.S. Supreme Court on November 1, 2021 as the Justices prepare to hear challenges to Texas' pro-life laws. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)
Pro-life Americans gather outside of the U.S. Supreme Court on November 1, 2021 as the Justices prepare to hear challenges to Texas' pro-life laws. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

When then-Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton accepted the Democratic presidential nomination in 1992, he told the crowd at that party's convention, "Abortion should be safe, legal and rare."

That was in July. The following January — two days after his inauguration — Clinton made promoting abortion a central focus of his new administration.

"Mr. Clinton signed five abortion-related memorandums on the 20th anniversary of Roe v. Wade," The New York Times reported on Jan. 23, 1993.

Clinton's abortion directives, as reported by the Associated Press, included allowing "abortion counseling at federally supported clinics," permitting "research using fetal tissue from abortions," allowing "abortions at military hospitals," permitting "funding for overseas population control programs" and reviewing "a ban against importation of RU-486, the French abortion pill."

In his written memorandum directing the Food and Drug Administration to carry out this last provision, Clinton also stated, "I direct that you promptly assess initiatives by which the Department of Health and Human Services can promote testing, licensing, and manufacturing in the United States of RU-486 or other antiprogestins."

In September 2000, not long before Clinton finished his second term in office, the FDA approved the use of abortion-inducing drugs in the United States.

In a legal complaint filed last November in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, lawyers for the Alliance Defending Freedom, who are representing a number of medical organizations and doctors in a suit against the FDA, challenged this FDA action.

"First, the FDA never had the authority to approve these drugs for sale," says their complaint.

"In 2000, the FDA approved chemical abortion drugs under 21 C.F.R. Section 314, Subpart H," it says. "This regulation authorizes the FDA to grant 'accelerated approval' of 'certain new drug products that have been studied for their safety and effectiveness in treating serious or life-threatening illnesses and that provide meaningful therapeutic benefit to patients over existing treatments.'"

"But chemical abortion drugs," says the complaint, "do not treat serious or life-threatening illnesses. Indeed, pregnancy is a normal physiological state that many females experience one or more times during their childbearing years."

"Pregnancy is not an illness," says the complaint.

"Likewise," it says, "chemical abortion drugs do not provide a 'meaningful therapeutic benefit' to women and girls over existing treatments."

"Defendants lacked the authority to approve mifepristone for chemical abortion under Subpart H in 2000," it says.

The complaint then asks the court to: "Issue a preliminary and permanent injunction ordering Defendants to withdraw mifepristone and misoprostol as FDA-approved chemical abortion drugs and to withdraw Defendants' actions to deregulate these chemical abortion drugs."

In a response to this complaint prepared by lawyers for President Joe Biden's Justice Department and the FDA, the administration does not deny that the FDA used 21 C.F.R. Section 314, Subpart H to justify its approval of these abortion drugs. Instead, it argues that the FDA complied with the terms of the regulation.

"Subpart H is available for new drugs that (1) 'have been studied for their safety and effectiveness in treating serious or life-threatening illnesses,' and (2) 'provide meaningful therapeutic benefit to patients over existing treatments,'" the administration says in its brief.

"Both prongs were satisfied here," it says.

"On the first prong, Plaintiffs' contention that '(p)regnancy is not an illness' ... ignores FDA's consistent construction of its own regulation," says the administration's brief. "In the final rule, FDA explained that Subpart H was available for serious or life-threatening 'conditions,' whether or not they were understood colloquially to be 'illnesses.' 57 Fed. Reg. 58,942, 58,946 (Dec. 11, 1992); see also App. 565 (confirming that 'the subpart H regulations are intended to apply to serious or life-threatening conditions as well as to illnesses or diseases')."

"As to the second prong of Section 314.500," says the administration's brief, "Plaintiffs' attempt to second-guess FDA's determination that mifepristone offers a 'meaningful therapeutic benefit' ... is unavailing."

But the Biden administration's argument for the alleged "therapeutic benefit" of a chemical abortion focuses entirely on the ramifications for the human being seeking the abortion, not the human being who is aborted.

"Avoidance of surgery," says their brief, "provides therapeutic benefits by minimizing the risk of complications from anesthesia or sedation, including 'a severe allergic reaction, a sudden drop in blood pressure with cardiorespiratory arrest, death, and a longer recovery time' as compared to medication."

The administration completely ignores the fact that not only is there a death associated with the use of these drugs, it is the very purpose of these drugs.

An unborn child is a human being. A drug that is designed to abort the life of that unborn child is a drug designed to kill a human being.

This is what the FDA approved when it approved drugs that induce abortion: the killing of a human being.

(Terence P. Jeffrey is the editor-in-chief of CNSNews.com.)

Chris Rock on Abortion: 'Let's Not Get Twisted, It Is Killing a Baby'

MICHAEL W. CHAPMAN | MARCH 7, 2023 | 5:09PM EST
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Comedian and actor Chris Rock.  (Getty Images)
Comedian and actor Chris Rock. (Getty Images)

In his new comedy special on Netflix, "Chris Rock: Selective Outrage," the actor and comedian says he is "absolutely pro-choice" when it comes to abortion, but he also understands that abortion "is killing a baby."

Rock also echoes Pope Francis by saying that abortion is like hiring a "hitman." 

“There’s a part of me that’s pro-life,” Rock says in the show. 

He then says, “I believe women should have the right to kill babies. That’s right, I’m on your side. I believe you should have the right to kill as many babies as you want. Kill them all, I don’t give a f***."

"But let’s not get it twisted, it is killing a baby," Rock explains.

“Whenever I pay for an abortion, I request a dead baby,” he says. “Sometimes I call up a doctor like a hitman: ‘Is it done?’”

He then says, “I am absolutely pro-choice” because “I want my daughters to live in a world where they have complete control of their bodies.” 

He also jokes, “I think you should be able to kill a baby until you get that first report card.”

Pope Francis.  (Getty Images)
Pope Francis. (Getty Images)

As reported by the Catholic News Agency, on Oct. 10, 2018, Pope Francis said, “Is it right to take a human life to solve a problem? ... It’s like hiring a hitman. Violence and the rejection of life are born from fear.” 

In a July 2022 interview, the Pope said, “I ask: ‘Is it licit, is it right, to eliminate a human life to resolve a problem?’ It’s a human life — that’s science. The moral question is whether it is right to take a human life to solve a problem. Indeed, is it right to hire a hitman to solve a problem?”

Since 1973, more than 63 million children have been killed by abortion in the United States. 

h/t Catholic News Agency

(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

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