February 11, 2007
OF COURSE, THE STUPID PARTY STILL THINKS IT LOST ON FBI:
States fund antiabortion advice: Public grants surge for the crisis centers. Some ban contraception talk. (Stephanie Simon, February 11, 2007, LA Times)
Most states still spend far more money subsidizing comprehensive family planning, but the flow of tax dollars to antiabortion groups has surged in recent months, as programs have taken effect in Texas and Minnesota.Posted by Orrin Judd at February 11, 2007 12:08 AMThe trend alarms abortion-rights supporters, who assert that the funds would be better spent -- and would prevent more abortions -- if used to expand access to birth control. But to antiabortion activists such as Nancy McDonald, the funding is both practical and symbolic, a way of putting the state's stamp of approval on their work.
"It's a subtle thing," said McDonald, who runs five crisis pregnancy centers in South Florida. "But people seem to think if you're affiliated with the state, you must be good." [...]
Tax dollars cannot be used for religious purposes, but federal law permits faith-based groups to participate in government programs and protects displays of religious symbols, such as the basket of plastic rosaries at the diocese's Gabriel Project Life Center.
Amy Chestnut coordinates the Gabriel Project now, but she was once a client, pregnant at 16. The lessons she got on abstinence -- she was told to commit to a "secondary virginity" -- didn't stick; she got pregnant again at 19.
But she said the emotional support she received from the counselors -- simple acts such as rubbing her belly and talking about the baby with delight, not dismay -- persuaded her to carry both pregnancies. Chestnut, 25, has since married the man who fathered both children; she keeps a family photo with her to show clients that even unwanted pregnancies can bring joy.
"People were always assuming that I'd have an abortion. To hear just one person say 'You can do this' made such a difference," Chestnut said.
Crisis pregnancy centers have received tens of millions of dollars from the federal government over the last six years, mostly for abstinence education.
On the state level, Florida, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota and Texas approved funding in 2005. Louisiana, Missouri and Pennsylvania have longer-running programs. Arizona and Kansas have offered one-time grants to antiabortion groups; several other states fund abortion alternatives from sales of "Choose Life" license plates.
All told, states will spend at least $13 million this year -- much of it from welfare or family-planning budgets -- to dissuade women from abortion.
In a related campaign, conservatives in several states are pushing to restrict or eliminate public funding for groups that support abortion rights, especially Planned Parenthood. They've had some success, notably in Missouri; six other legislatures will take up the issue this year.
Yeah, the Stupid Party will talk itself into thinking how they "lost" the South Dakota referendum. Never mind the fact that the pro-lifers conducted the debate on their own terms, as any analysis of the campaign will tell you.
See, pro-lifers, THIS is how you win.
Posted by: Brad S at February 11, 2007 10:59 AM