Impressions

It’s been said that you never get a second chance to make a good first impression.  While first impressions are important, they often don’t paint an accurate picture.  Look at President Obama.  He made one good speech in 2004, that someone else wrote for him, and was immediately anointed as a future President.  Fast forward from his American Idol ascendance to the Presidency in 2008 to the present, and it’s painfully obvious that first impressions can be deceiving.

Take a look at a Planned Parenthood brochure.  The pictures of smiling, attractive young people would lead you to believe that a Planned Parenthood clinic is anything but a place you go to pay to have your child killed.  Even though abortion is their principle source of revenue, they go to great pains to make you believe otherwise.  They know that practicing truth in advertising and publishing pictures of the bloody dead bodies of the children that entered their clinics alive would probably be bad for business.  Pointing out in their literature that they kill over 300,000 children every year would put a damper on the happy-feely impression they are trying to make.

We all make our unique impressions on the world with our words and actions; but it’s never a complete picture.  While the things we say and do leave an impression, the words we don’t say and the actions we choose not to take leave an equally indelible mark.  When we choose to not speak out or take action in the face of evil, we allow evil to advance its agenda.  We all choose our paths as a result of the impressions made upon us by others.  We make our greatest impressions when we act with an inner knowing that we are playing our role towards a goal that is much bigger and much more important than either of us.

When we choose our paths and answer our callings we must do so with a courage of conviction that is unwavering. Only when we are willing to lose everything for the cause we believe in, are we able to manifest miracles and bring about true change.  The world’s unborn children represent the unbroken chain of humanity that confirms intelligent design and the existence of our Creator.  Our duty to protect His creations is our most important obligation, and the results of our actions in the pursuit of this endeavor yield the impressions that change the world.

One life saved is a worthy goal of a lifetime of toil.  A lifetime of toil, absent a focus on service to others, is a wasted opportunity to make an impression that inspires others to perform works they had once only dreamed of.  The impressions we leave behind are evidence of the brief flash of light that represents the life we were given, and the manner in which we embraced it.  Life is fleeting, but priceless.  Preserve it, protect it, and strive to inspire others to hold it in reverence.

 

Letter to Hillary Clinton #1

Hillary ClintonHillary Rodham Clinton

120 West 45th Street

Suite 2700

New York, N.Y.  10036

 March 7, 2015

 Ms. Clinton:

You don’t know me and probably wouldn’t want to.  I’m one of the millions of Americans who would vote against you if you ran for President in 2016.  About a year ago I predicted that you wouldn’t run, and based on your latest scandal, I’m feeling pretty confident right now.  Speaking of scandals, let’s recap some of your more infamous ones; shall we?  We have the Whitewater Real Estate swindle, Travel-Gate, the Rose Law Firm billing records, your role as the enforcer in the Clinton Bimbo Brigade while Bill was President, the Vince Foster suicide, your Universal Health Care debacle as First Lady, the Clinton Global Initiative receiving donations from foreign governments while you were Secretary of State, your incompetence, lies, and cover-up of the facts surrounding the Benghazi terrorist attack, and now, your email issues as Secretary of State, which will most likely end up with you being charged with multiple felonies.  Did I miss anything?

Ms. Clinton, let’s face it; you’ll never be the President of the United States.  Based on the current mess you’re in, and the abject distain the Obama administration has for you, you’ll be lucky not to end up in jail.  Bill will never get the chance to relive his glory days and nights in the White House, doing God knows what with God knows who, and you will just be an average American citizen worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

In spite of all the scandals you’ve been involved in; most Americans probably don’t know that you were the recipient of Planned Parenthood’s Margaret Sanger Award in 2009.  As you know, or would probably deny knowing, the Margaret Sanger Award is named in honor of Planned Parenthood’s racist, eugenicist founder.  During your acceptance speech you stated that you admired Margaret Sanger’s vision.  Her vision included the extermination of the black race and any other human being she determined to be unfit to live.  She referred to blacks as “human weeds” and established Planned Parenthood’s first abortion clinics in poor, inner city neighborhoods with the express purpose of killing black children.

Ms. Clinton, you bring a lot of baggage to the table, figuratively and literally.   Looking at the big picture, the facts that the Clinton Global Initiative spent $50 million on travel and entertainment last year and that you had to run interference and destroy the lives of your husband’s extra-marital dalliances during his Presidency, are small potatoes when viewed against the backdrop of your total body of work in sleaziness and skirting the law.  As a rabid supporter of the abortion industry, you have shown me all I need to see about your character and your disregard for the lives of America’s unborn children.  I think I can safely assume that you could care less about what I think; or as you would say, “What difference does it make?”

My letters to you are published on my pro-life blog at www.prolifepoppop.com.  Write back and I’ll publish it, unedited.  You could email me, but due to your current email issues, that might not be a good idea.

 

 

 

 

The Problem With Abortion

Contrary to popular opinion, the problem with abortion isn’t that it’s legal; the problem is that otherwise rational people don’t have a problem with it.  Abortion is the end result of a systemic erosion of basic values in our society and a conditioned response to a no consequences mindset.  We got to this point by entertaining ourselves with senseless acts of violence, and in the process became desensitized to senseless acts of violence; like abortion. We’ve abandoned the concept of personal responsibility and bought into a herd mentality that we’ve been tricked into thinking will absolve us of the consequences of our individual actions.

In January of 1973, five out of nine old white guys in black robes declared that Roe v Wade was the law of the land. Over the last 42 years nearly 60 million unborn children have been legally killed under cover of law.  The law isn’t the problem. The demand for abortion is the problem.  Legal or not, if the demand for abortion wasn’t there, there would be no Planned Parenthood or the parasitic leaches like NARAL and the NAF that depend on them.  If the demand for abortion wasn’t there, another unborn child wouldn’t be killed every 26 seconds of every hour of every day in America.

We all share in the blame for the thousands of children killed every day in our nation’s abortion mills.  Those of us on the pro-life side could have worked harder on behalf of today’s innocent victims.  The citizens of America making a living in the abortion industry, could have gone home and looked into the eyes of their own children, and realized the shared humanity between their children and the ones they helped kill today.  Our elected leaders  could look inside their hearts and realize that, like it or not, they are looked upon by those they lead as role models.  The positions they support and the behaviors they endorse are deemed the norm by the ones that put them in office.

The problem with abortion is its definition; the act of killing an unborn child.  The problem with trying to justify killing an innocent child is that there is no justification.  I can continue to write about the horror of killing innocent children and the moral ramifications to a society that allows abortion on demand until my fingers wear to the bone.  If my actions don’t save lives or help end the practice of abortion, I’ve accomplished nothing.  If I give up and hope that someone else will take my place, I’ve wasted the gift of life I was given and turned my back on the calling I feel in my heart.

The problem of abortion won’t go away on its own.  Neither will I.