Opportunities, challenges, and power of media and information
Alveda King & Ryan Bomberger- Impact of Abortion on the African American Community
1. THE IMPACT OF ABORTION ON THE
AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY
Alveda King
National Silent No More Awareness Campaign Spokeswoman
Founder King for America
Ryan Bomberger, Founder
December 4, 2012
2.
3. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. who was prolife by
the way, once said that “injustice anywhere is a
threat to justice everywhere.”
At www.priestsforlife.org/africanamerican, the
candid analysis of the duplicity of Planned
Parenthood’s efforts to hijack the legacy of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. is exposed.
5. Along with children in the wombs,
and the health and stability of their mothers,
the historical and current day strengths of
Black marriages, parenting and families and
the essential and foundational role that they
have played in Black child, adult and
community well-being and uplift are all in deep
crisis.
www.hamptonu.edu/ncaamp/
6. http://www.couldhavebeenme.com/
•Of course there is a war on women and families underfoot that denies this
crisis.
•For the last several decades, radical feminism has told women that they
don’t need marriage
•and when these unmarried women become pregnant, the message expands
to say that Black women don’t need children either.
•What these liberal secularists have told women, especially Black single
women,
•is that we need sterilization (enter THE NEGRO PROJECT)
•and abortions
•and harmful contraceptives
•(enter PLANNED PARENTHOOD and the HHS MANDATE).
8. •In a recent study by www.protectingblacklife.org, an executive summary
reporting that Planned Parenthood Targets Black Neighborhood states that:
•
•2010 Census results reveal that Planned Parenthood is targeting minority
neighborhoods.
•It has located 79% of its 165 surgical abortion facilities within walking
distance of African American or Hispanic/Latino neighborhoods.
•Planned Parenthood located 62% of its abortion facilities within 2 miles of
African American neighborhoods, and 64% near Hispanic or Latino
neighborhoods, thus establishing them as "targeted neighborhoods.“
•Sadly, Black women are three times more likely to have an abortion than
White women, and Hispanic or Latino women are nearly twice as likely.
10. •Maybe Ruth Bader Ginsburg and her
friends at Planned Parenthood consider the
39 million African Americans alive today
to be too many;
•and there should be 54 million. Those
missing 15 million dear souls are not here
•because of Roe v. Wade and the targeting
of minorities by the abortion industry.
11. •The men and women living in our inner cities are
faced with horrendous obstacles.
•Yet the government only seems to offer them
hopelessness.
•The government discourages natural
marriage, sexual purity, natural family planning and
the sanctity of life.
•All of which study after study shows are the best
way for people to build a better future.
12. •The government’s alternative is to all too
often to encourage abortion,
•Which is nothing more than the destruction of
hope and the literal elimination of the future.
•
•Abortion is violence.
•Abortion is oppression.
•Abortion is death.
13. •America, as a society, has made great progress dealing with
discrimination against people born of color;
•but has done very little for those who can’t yet see color.
•Thus, our task as people who believe in equality under the law
and in loving our neighbor is to change our culture.
•To paraphrase the prophet Amos, we must make America’s inner
cities, her suburbs, and her country sides places where justice
rolls down like waters and righteousness like an everlasting
stream.
•That means no violence, no oppression, and no death for babies
in the womb. In short, no abortion.