From Canada: Pregnant inmate put in segregation on bread and water for refusing ‘early induction’ | LifeSiteNews.com

Pregnant inmate put in solitary on bread and water for refusing ‘early induction’ | LifeSiteNews.com.

Eva Donna Akinyi Okello, practiced nursing in Kenya, and apparently did a bit more of this after emigrating to Canada.  For this reason she was jailed for practicing nursing without a license.   Pregnant and at 7 months, she was offered an “early induction” by a female doctor, while in prison.  When she refused, as reported to Lifenews, she was put in segregation  and on a  bread and water diet.   Later she was visited by a male doctor who had her moved back to her regular quarters, and allowed the diet for pregnant prisoners.

Another visit from the female doctor, and another refusal to have an early induction had her put back into segregation , and back on the rather limited diet at the Vanier Center for Women in Milton Ontario.

An early induction for a seven months pregnant prisoner sounds like live birth abortion to this blogger, ever since the old accounts  from the Alberta Report about similar  practice at Calgary Foothills Hospital. 

The thought of a bread and water diet for a pregnant convict certainly would have human rights activists howling, if they weren’t so attached to promoting abortion.   The all you can eat fare for prisoners  at Guantanamo Bay  was considered ill treatment by our lefties in the U.S.

Planned Parenthood’s Exquisitely Bad Day

Over at Jill Stanek’s Place,   a smoking hot whistleblower case against Planned Parenthood is detailed.

The case, filed in the Eastern TX Lufkin Division of the United States District Court, alleges widespread fraudulent billing practices designed to maximize income drawn in from Medicaid.

Karen Reynolds, represented by the ACLJ,  worked as a health care assistant for 10 years, ending in 2009,  in the Lufkin, TX Branch of Planned Parenthood.  She reported a  practice of  maximizing income from Title XX, Medicaid and Womens Health Program using fraudulent billing practices which included charging for services not rendered nor appropriate, and for abortion related services disguised as otherwise.

Memos and email provided by Reynolds indicate that employees at Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast  were trained to provide and bill for services based upon what the patients’ coverage would pay for.  Cash payers would receive medically necessary services, and all sorts of extras were added to the bills of patients funded by other programs.  Post abortion visits were billed as though they were for another purpose, so that they became government funded.

Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast has 10 clinics in eastern TX and 2 in Louisiana.   These include the largest abortion clinic in the U.S. (Houston), a  likely  inspiration for the Onion Abortionplex parody.

PPGC entered a motion to stay the discovery process, which Judge Ron Clark denied.  Documentation has begun to trickle from PPGC …… (which had not yet been eaten by the shredder, opines Pharmer).

 

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey Sued for Coercing Nurses to Assist Abortions

The Alliance Defense Fund has filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court in New Jersey against the University of Medicine and Dentistry on behalf of 12 nurses.  The University has been threatening nurses with loss of their jobs if they refuse to train for and assist in abortions.  This is a due to a recent change in policy and supervision of the nurses.

The suit asks for removal of federal funding for the hospital until it ceases religious discrimination against the nurses whose beliefs forbid participation in killing the unborn.  It asks also for the hospital to return 60 million in federal funding which it received in 2011,  attorney fees  and relief for the nurses as the Court sees fit.

A Copy of the Complaint filed with the United States District Court in NJ can be found HERE.

Pharmer congratulates the 12 Nurses who have distinguished themselves  by courageously taking action against the hospital, and offers prayers for their success.  (Be encouraged.  There is life, and even a job after this kind of  lawsuit.  Been there, done that.)

Abortion Festers

Abortion was used to conceal the repeated rapes of an adolescent by her own father in Quebec City, Canada, reports the QMI agency. The Crown is going after the mother legally now, for her part in fostering the abuse. There is no word in the 10-25-11 article concerning reprisals against the abortion clinic for not questioning the pregnant state of the 12 year old. The abuse came to light when the girl, at age 13, confided in a teacher and the police were called.

Above is one reason for abortion to be so difficult to stop. Another is that so many people with these kinds of things in their past cannot repudiate the practice of abortion.

Rev. Walter Hoye deals with the particular problem of black leaders, who have had abortion affecting their own lives, and resist facing up to the rampant problem in the most targeted communities. Some are afraid of charges of hypocrisy if they confess the past and take a stand against abortion. Others have not let go of abortion as the method of dealing with social problems.

Two abortion clinic employees plead guilty to murder | Reuters

Two abortion clinic employees plead guilty to murder | Reuters.

The legal proceedings for employees of Kermit Gosnell’s house of horrors abortion clinic in Philadelphia have resulted in 2 guilty pleas for murder.  Adrienne Moton,  and Sherry West will be sentenced for 3rd degree murder, which carries a  maximum penalty of 40 years.

Gosnell’s clinic was closed due to unsanitary conditions, the meperidine overdose death of Karnamaya Mongar,  as well as the practice of infanticide.

Abortion Supporters Fear Legal Recognition of Biological Fact

Mississippi Abortion Amendment 26 Says Life Begins at Fertilization | Video | TheBlaze.com.

It’s in your developmental biology book, and your general biology text.   Life for an organism of sexually reproducing species begins when fertilization is complete.

Mississippi proposes to recognize this fact in law, amid objections from abortion supporters.

They complain that this amendment might affect the availability of many birth control pills.

This is an admission that birth control pills, which operate by multiple mechanisms, including interference with implantation, have been misbranded as contraceptives.

Maybe we can request a surgeon general warning on BC pill packs that says: WARNING: this pill may operate by stopping the life of an early human embryo.

The warning could be upgraded for Plan B, and especially for Ella, doses of which can be accumulated for use in home abortions.

It is feared that legal recognition of what developmental biologists have observed might hurt the pharmaceutical and abortion industry.   Maybe if they had been honest all along, such efforts as Mississippi amendment 26 would not have been necessary.

Women urge others to go public about abortions

Women urge others to go public about abortions.

Harriet Hills Stinson,  (85 year old member of the Hills Bros. Coffee family) has publicly announced that she had an abortion in her 20s, and does not regret it to this day.

She’s part of the NARAL push to get women to announce their post-abortive status in order to deter Congress from passing a bill that excuses the rest of us from funding the procedures.

Pharmer suspects that  NARAL, who bestowed honor on Ms. Stinson at their “Power of Choice” banquet,  may be taking unfair advantage of a elderly woman in mental decline.