Bishop Robert Barron Calls New Extreme Abortion Bill the "worst kind of barbarism" - VIDEO


 In the US state of Minnesota the Democratic Governor Tim Walz signed the most extreme abortion bill in the country: Protect Reproductive Options (PRO) Act, on January 31st, 2023. The Catholic Bishops' Conference of Minnesota had issued a letter (See Full Text at Bottom) to legislators urging a "no" vote. However, it was signed and Bishop Robert Barron of the Diocese of Winona-Rochester released a video giving his opinion: "over this terrible law that was just signed by the governor in Minnesota; the most really extreme abortion law that’s on the books in the wake of the Roe vs. Wade reversal..." 


The pro-life organization Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, released the following: Democrats Rejected 60+ Amendments to Safeguard Unborn Children & Mothers, Including a Ban on Brutal Partial-Birth Abortions

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Today Minnesota’s Democratic Governor Tim Walz signed the most extreme bill in the country enshrining abortion on demand until birth. The legislation narrowly passed the state Senate on Saturday after Democrats rejected more than 60 Republican amendments, including amendments to ban partial-birth abortions, painful dismemberment abortions, sex-selection abortions, and discriminatory abortions when an unborn child is thought to have Down syndrome; an amendment to require parental notification before an abortion for minor girls; and many others.

Every Senate Democrat and all but one House Democrat voted in favor of passage.

Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America slammed Democrats’ pro-abortion extremism in a statement:

“Governor Walz has shamefully signed a death sentence for thousands of unborn children in Minnesota – enshrining abortion on demand for any reason at any point in pregnancy, with no protections whatsoever for unborn children or their mothers,” said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of SBA Pro-Life America. “Led by Biden and Harris, Democrats in blue states are competing to be the most radically pro-abortion. Seven in ten Americans want more protections for the unborn and less abortion, not more. Yet one after another, Minnesota Democrats blocked commonsense safeguards to protect unborn babies from excruciating pain; stop lethal discrimination against unborn children because of their sex, race or disability like Down syndrome; end the abortion industry’s exploitation of young girls; and many more. They even voted down a ban on barbaric partial-birth abortions.

“We thank the courageous pro-life legislators and all our local allies who fought this cruel bill. The pro-life movement will work tirelessly to expose the Democrats’ extremism and hold them accountable, until the day when every child is protected in law.”

The signing of the law comes as the Biden-Harris administration considers declaring a “public health emergency” to expand abortion on demand until birth nationwide. Vice President Harris was widely criticized for omitting the right to life from the Declaration of Independence during a recent speech promoting the administration’s pro-abortion agenda.

Fifteen states have strong pro-life laws in effect, with the potential to save over 125,000 lives annually. Every state with strong pro-life laws on the books allows necessary and timely medical treatment to save the life of a pregnant woman.

Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America is a network of more than one million pro-life Americans nationwide, dedicated to ending abortion by electing national leaders and advocating for laws that save lives, with a special calling to promote pro-life women leaders.

Source: https://sbaprolife.org/newsroom/press-releases/mn-gov-signs-extreme-law-enshrining-abortion-on-demand-until-birth

Bishops letter to legislators urging a no vote on H.F. 1/S.F. 1

Dear Legislator:

As the Catholic bishops of Minnesota, we encourage you to vote no on H.F. 1/S.F. 1. The legislation undermines our state’s credibility as a protector of the most vulnerable, and, coupled with bills such as H.F. 91/S.F. 70, attempts to create an unlimited abortion regime in Minnesota that is out of step with Minnesotans’ actual views and those of the rest of the world.

We are disappointed to see the quick pace at which these destructive bills are moving, and we hope to give legislators pause. When contemplating policy on any issue, we must consider all those who will be affected. In this case, that includes the mother, father, and most especially, the unborn child whose life is being taken.

In a post-Dobbs world in which states that allow abortion have the responsibility to both regulate the practice and protect nascent human life, we should be working to find common ground on the challenges before us in Minnesota. We stand firm that every child should be welcomed in life and protected by law.

We cannot ignore the child in the womb

We are deeply troubled by Minnesota’s current situation: in spite of the fact that scientific inquiry has definitively determined that human life begins at conception, a woman can procure an abortion for almost any reason at any stage of pregnancy up till birth. To put this in perspective, in 2021 there were 222 abortions involving viable babies older than 20 weeks. Almost half of all abortions are paid for with taxpayer funds. Currently, an 11-year-old girl can get an abortion without even one parent knowing. There is no requirement in place that a licensed physician perform an abortion. And abortion proponents, including some elected officials, are working proactively to shut down pregnancy resource centers, who work diligently to give women a choice other than abortion.

As inconvenient as it is for some, we cannot ignore the reality of the unborn child in the womb—a living human being who is owed the protection of the community. We cannot allow state-sanctioned violence against a whole class of human beings. At the very minimum, we should all be able to agree that post-viability abortions, except to save the life of the mother, should not be allowed; that taxpayers not be required to fund any more abortions than those already required by the courts; and that medical professionals should not be punished for refusing to participate in abortion.

A better Minnesota: common ground for the common good

Rep. Kotyza-Witthuhn stated in her remarks in the House State and Local Government committee that no one is pro-abortion. If so, it seems that we should all be working together to limit the demand for abortion and properly welcome children into the world. Part of that welcome is establishing right relationships (“prenatal justice”) between the community and the mother, father, and child. We must encourage marriage and family stability, and ensure that parents are supported when necessary due to economic hardship.

This support means, among other things, policies that fund: nutritional aid for expectant mothers; healthcare coverage during and after pregnancy for both mother and child; childcare assistance; and adequate housing. Enacting reasonable paid family and caregiver leave laws would help people retain work and care for their newborns. Reconsidering whether our adoption policies are unreasonably burdened by excessive costs or barriers to participation is also an imperative. And rather than attacking programs such as the Positive Alternatives grants (H.F. 289/S.F. 336), we should strengthen those that help us walk with women in need during crisis pregnancies.

We also contend that there is a social duty to remove unnecessary barriers to contracting marriage, having children, and being able to raise them well. By raising the family to the top of our state’s policy priorities, we can help restore the family to its proper position as the foundational building block of society where children best flourish.
The work to limit demand for abortion does not, however, absolve the legislator from the responsibility to protect the living human being in the womb. No amount of support for public assistance programs is sufficient to exonerate one from complicity and cooperation in creating legal frameworks that facilitate the death of other human beings through legal abortion.

The bill’s implications for the courts beyond abortion

We also wish to express our concern that the bill goes beyond abortion in its misguided attempt to protect the rights to reproductive freedom and to make decisions about reproductive healthcare. The bill directs state courts to protect these “rights” in a variety of novel legal and bioethical contexts that may arise. As was seen in the Senate Judiciary and Public Safety Committee, both the scope and legislative intent of this language is unclear, and this should give legislators pause lest they open a Pandora’s box in the courts.

Defined appropriately, it is the case that people do have such a right to reproductive freedom, but the immunity from government involvement in such decisions extends only to the right to conceive a child. As noted above, however, once a child is conceived the broader community has an interest in its protection and well-being. And the community assuredly has an interest in promoting sound ethics in the creation of life and to ensure that, for example, economically disadvantaged women are not exploited, and children are not turned into commodities. The irresponsibly broad and open-ended definition of reproductive healthcare in this bill needs to be limited.

More fundamentally, we wish to remind our lawmakers that no individual has unlimited autonomy over the making and taking of life. To assert such unlimited autonomy is to usurp a prerogative that belongs to God alone. Authorizing a general license to make and take life at our whim will unleash a host of social and spiritual consequences with which we as a community will have to reckon. Can we really deny, for example, that legal abortion is a root cause of the violence and disrespect for the human person rampant in our culture?
We close by reiterating our commitment to work with legislators to find common ground to protect unborn children, but also to create a more welcoming world for them to flourish after birth and thereby limit the demand for abortion. Thank you for your consideration.

Respectfully yours,

Archbishop Bernard A. Hebda
Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis

Bishop Joseph A. Williams
Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis

Bishop Andrew H. Cozzens
Diocese of Crookston

Bishop Daniel J. Felton
Diocese of Duluth

Bishop Chad W. Zielinski
Diocese of New Ulm

Bishop Donald J. Kettler
Diocese of Saint Cloud

Bishop Robert E. Barron
Diocese of Winona-Rochester

Source: https://www.mncatholic.org/bishops_letter_to_legislators_on_hf1_sf1

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