Posts Tagged ‘history’
Are the unborn persons? (video by Lia Mills)
We’re glad this young lady is on our side!
We first became aware of Lia Mills about a year ago (link to previous story/video). Here’s another one of her gems. These are all very good arguments that we incorporate in our own Pro Life Training Academy.
Christian Heritage | US Capitol Tour with David Barton
Did you know the first Bible printed in the United States was actually printed by the US Congress? For what purpose, you ask. For use in public schools. Check out the video!
Pro-life students in Knoxville for major training conference
You know about our Pro Life on Campus (GAP) display. We have displayed this project more than 150 times on major college campuses all over the USA. But we do more than that.
Today, pro-life college students have flocked to Knoxville to learn how to be more effective on their own campuses. Peggy English of Silent No More has just wrapped up her talk. I’ll be speaking later this morning about the history of social reform.
Social reformers of history used images to show the humanity of the victim and the horrifying nature of the crime. They confronted the culture. They were willing to accept persecution. I will be showing students how they can put these principles to work on campus.
Are you an extremist?
We are indebted to Shirley Moore of Knoxville for this excellent essay.
They were accused of disturbing the peace in the churches, a peace [William Lloyd] Garrison did not believe they were entitled to enjoy.
Are you an extremist?
Extremists, self-righteous, judgmental, violent (or the cause of violence). These terms, familiar to pro-lifers, were also applied to the 19th Century abolitionists, and most particularly to William Lloyd Garrison, the editor of the anti-slavery newspaper, The Liberator. He renewed an anti-slavery movement that had languished during the first part of the 19th Century and agitated against slavery from 1829 until it was abolished at the time of the Civil War.
Because he challenged the core morality of the US and because he never lost sight of the moral issues (the sanctity of life, the equality of the races, and the obligation of Christians to oppose slavery), he was hated, mocked in newspapers, and persecuted throughout his life. However, he had a loving family and loyal circle of friends.
After a century and half, at least one book has given him his just due: All On Fire by Henry Mayer. Mayer is a veteran of the 60s-era Civil Rights Movement. Few books have been written about Garrison because the image of him as a “holier-than-thou nut” has persisted to this day. He put justice above peace and has never been forgiven by the culture he challenged.
As many pro-lifers experience today, the churches of the 19th Century despised abolitionists. They were perhaps “too” Christian for the men and women in the pews. They were accused of disturbing the peace in the churches, a peace Garrison did not believe they were entitled to enjoy. Like many pro-lifers, they were “outsiders” in their own congregations and parishes.
Sometimes, being effective and being liked are incompatible. In social reform movements, this is almost always the case. Which will you choose?
Lila Rose says horrifying pictures drive social reform
You have heard of Lila Rose of Live Action. You may have seen her under-cover videos that show how Planned Parenthood employees cover up the illegal sexual abuse of children.
In this video, Ms. Rose describes how CBR employs the exact same strategy that was used by other successful reformers in history, including the movements to stop the slave trade in England, to abolish slavery here, to end abusive child labor here, and to galvanize the civil rights movement in the 1950s.
Ms. Rose reports from Sproul Plaza at the University of California at Berkeley during our GAP presentation last October.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ldxict4AZD4
Besides college campuses, what other venues are appropriate for abortion pictures? Please comment!
Pro Life Advocates Attend Freedom Ride
A number of CBR volunteers attended the Freedom Ride that started in Birmingham and ended in Atlanta on Saturday, July 24. The event was organized by CBR board member Fr. Frank Pavone.
The TV coverage by the CBS affiliate in Birmingham was actually very well done. Several women appeared on camera to express regret for their abortions and describe how they were deceived by the abortion industry.
Pastor Cecil Clark of True Vine Baptist Church in Knoxville was interviewed for that story (video below). He appears at about the 1-minute mark.
More coverage by Fox News, the Birmingham News, and the National Catholic Register.
Question for you: What kind of effect will demonstrations such as this have on the larger culture? Please comment below!
Pro Life Strategy | How We Can Win
My talk last night at the Atlanta Right to Life was very well received, I think. The subject was “Learning From the Past: How We Can Win.” This is a similar talk to the one I gave to a group of pro-life Georgia Legislators a couple of years ago and the talk I gave to a group of pro-life Congressmen in DC.
This was a fairly easy audience. We’ve been working with these folks to display abortion images for many years (GAP, RCC, etc.), so they are very familiar with the need to educate the public. I didn’t need to convince them so much as to help solidify in their minds the connection between our work to educate the public using horrifying images and the work of other social reformers in history who achieved success using the same strategy. Examples:
- The anti-slave-trade movement in England (William Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson) used images to show the humanity of the Black slave and the inhumanity of the slave trade.
- Abolistionists in this country used similar images, and later used photographs, to expose the injustice of slavery.
- Lewis Hine, who was concerned about abusive child labor practices, took pictures of children working in coal mines and textile mills and turned them into a traveling display.
- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said that “America will not stop racism until America sees racism.” He arranged for video and photos of Black men and women being attacked with dogs and water cannons to be shown on TV and in magazines.
You can download my slides by clicking here. It is a fairly large file (38 MB); it might take 10 minutes or so to download. Just save it to a file; a pop-up window will ask you where to file it and will tell you how long it will take to download the file.
Please take a look at the slides and leave your comment on this post!
Knoxville’s Pro Life, Pro Family, Pro God Monument
When we were on Market Square in Knoxville last week, we were stunned but pleased to see that the City of Knoxville had put up a monument to the pro-life position. It wasn’t just pro-life, it was pro-family and pro-God. It was awesome!
In fact, the pro-life monument has been there since 2006, but we enjoyed pretending that the City of Knoxville put it up just to endorse our message.
You all know about the pro-life convictions of Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Perhaps we could add Lizzie Crozier French (1851-1926) to that list. She was the founder of the Knoxville Equal Suffrage Association. She wrote these words that appeared on the monument:
Thanks be to God that in giving Woman the crown of motherhood He made her the giver not the taker of life. Woman has no greater claim to the rights of the ballot than that she is the producer not a destroyer of life.
Pro Life in Atlanta | Speaking at Georgia Right to Life Meeting
I was honored to be invited to address the Atlanta Chapter of the Georgia Right to Life next week. Here’s the announcement that went out to their members and other pro-lifers in the area:
You are invited to come and hear a presentation by Fletcher Armstrong PhD, Southeast Director of The Center for Bio-Ethical Reform, entitled, “Lessons From the Past, Learning How to Win,” sponsored by the Atlanta Chapter Georgia Right to Life. CBR is well know for Genocide Awareness Project (GAP), which is the world’s first large-scale abortion photo outreach to college students. Fletcher will explain how this and other CBR projects are effective because they are modeled upon the most successful social reform movements in history, including the movements to end the slave trade in England, slavery in America, abusive child labor in the early 20th Century, and racial injustice in the 1960s.
When: Thursday, July 22, 2010 7:00 PM
Where: Cathedral of Christ the King, Hyland Center
Some comments about GAP:
- “I saw minds and hearts changed right before my eyes. I believe in GAP and its ability to effect change.” (Tanya Comer, President, [University of] Georgia Pro-Life)
- “There is no doubt in my mind that GAP is the most effective pro-life project that any pro-life club can bring to their school.” (President, Students for Life, U of New Hampshire).
- “It is saving babies like nothing the pro-life movement has ever undertaken and is worthy of our heartiest support.” (Fr. Frank Pavone, Director, Priests for Life)
- “I’ve been doing this my whole adult life. And yet I have never heard a more compelling way of presenting the pro-life message.” (Hon. Trent Franks, U.S. House of Representatives)
If you know people in Atlanta, please let them know about this event. Thanks! I’m scheduled to speak in Athens on the evening of Wednesday, July 21. I will link to my slides for both of these talks sometime next week.
If I can speak to your pro-life group or event, use the feedback form on our website to let us know.