Thread by GonzoII.
Think of the 2008 election as Katrina for the pro-life movement. What do you do after a disaster? You see what the damage is, and what your assets are. You marshal your assets to try to rebuild. The Register has listed we still have a pro-life majority as a major asset. This prompted readers to ask, What pro-life majority? Susan Wills spells out the polling data on abortion, and explains how pro-abortion folks manipulate it in last years The Slippery Art of Abortion Polling. Heres how we know that Roe is not supported by 66% of Americans, she writes. Polls with carefully-worded, neutral questions about allowing abortion in identified circumstances show minority and waning support for the policy of Roe. These are better measures of public opinion on whether abortion law should change. An April 2005 poll by the Polling Company inc., offering respondents six choices, found only 10% support for what Roe actually does. Similarly, an April 2004 poll by Zogby showed 56% of Americans taking a strongly pro-life position (18% never legal; 15% legal for mothers life only; 23% legal only for mothers life/rape/incest). Younger Americans were even more pro-life than older Americans: among 18-29-year-olds, 60% took a pro-life position, including 26% who said never legal. See more context in the article. We see hope in those numbers but only if we work confidently to deepen and broaden our majority. We arent a desperate, dying movement. We are a movement that has been winning hearts and minds. Theres no reason to stop now. Tom Hoopes See the Hope for America Series: 1. The Pro-Life Majority 2. The Marriage Majority 3. The New Springtime of the Faith Article URL: http://ncregister.com/what_pro_life_majority/
Thread by me.
London, England (LifeNews.com) -- Following the controversial screening of an assisted suicide on a television program last week, a new poll finds Britons favoring euthanasia. The YouGov poll also shows a majority of English residents had no problem with televising the disabled man's death.
The poll, conducted for the London Times, surveyed more than 2,000 people and found that half (61 percent) would consider an assisted suicide for themselves while 15 percent would not and the rest were undecided.
The survey also showed 61 percent believed there was no problem with Sky TV showing the death of Craig Ewert, who killed himself in an assisted suicide in Switzerland. Just 27 percent were opposed to the screening...