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Talking Abortion
REV. FRANK A. PAVONE
Father Frank Pavone, the national director of Priests for Life, explains how best to communicate the pro-life message to others.

Seeing Abortion
BISHOP ROBERT BARRON
"Unplanned" doesn't so much argue as show.  "Abortion" becomes, accordingly, not an abstract issue, but an in-your-face, real, and bloody fact.

Abortion and Logic
DONALD DEMARCO
John Irving is a well-known novelist and short story writer. In his latest book, My Movie Business: A Memoir (Knopf, 1999), he presents his view on abortion and his attitude toward Right-to-Life advocates. This passage is quite remarkable in that it contains well over a dozen logical fallacies within a relatively brief span of words.

Sex, Lies, and Abortion
DINESH D'SOUZA
Recently I was invited to speak at a fundraiser organized by a Michigan right-to-life group, which had asked me to reflect on this question: "If the pro-life case is so strong, why aren't we winning?"

Busting the abortion myths
MARGARET SOMERVILLE
It's an oft-repeated truism in ethics: "Good facts are essential for good ethics."

No truce on abortion
FATHER FRANK PAVONE
The good padre who runs Priests for Life explains why abortion cannot be off the table in next months elections.

Hard truths about abortion
BARBARA KAY
A new study will leave pro-choicers nervous: The more pregnancies that are terminated, the higher the woman's cancer risk becomes.

Obama's Abortion Extremism
ROBERT P. GEORGE
Barack Obama is the most extreme pro-abortion candidate ever to seek the office of President of the United States. He is the most extreme pro-abortion member of the United States Senate. Indeed, he is the most extreme pro-abortion legislator ever to serve in either house of the United States Congress.

Abortion: A Failure to Communicate
PAUL SWOPE
Recent research on the psychology of pro-choice women offers insight into why the pro-life movement has not been as effective as it might have been in persuading women to choose life.

On Abortion: A Lincolnian Position
GEORGE MCKENNA
Principled yet pragmatic, Lincoln's stand on slavery offers a basis for a new politics of civility that is at once anti-abortion and pro-choice.

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