The intention in abortion and contraception is always either to kill or to prevent a child from coming into being by frustrating the natural sexual act.
Not exact matches
Spain's new
abortion law, as LifeSiteNews reported
in an earlier dispatch, «abolishes penalties for all
abortions during the first fourteen weeks of pregnancy» and «allows minors to obtain
abortions without parental permission, although they must first inform their parents of their
intention to do so.»
But
in their elaborate excavations of sinister «systematic symbolizations» and «analogous»
intentions, they manage to overlook the most tangible and widespread type of technological murder
in all modern societies:
abortion.
Or is it being used with «a eugenic
intention which accepts selective
abortion in order to prevent the birth of children affected by various types of anomalies»?
Somewhat similarly, Malliotakis proclaimed herself as «personally pro-life» but appeared to disclaim any
intention to change the law or act
in a manner intended to prevent or restrict the legal right to
abortion.
He found that —
in contrast with the apparent
intention of the restrictions —
abortion rates were more than twice as high
in countries heavily affected by the policy as they were
in those that weren't.
Second, President Obama signaled his
intention to repeal a rule promulgated
in the last days of the Bush administration that codified previous law ensuring that no health care providers at institutions receiving federal funds should be discriminated against for refusing to participate
in abortion or sterilization procedures.