4 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 3 February 2022
⏱️ 63 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hey guys, welcome to the show today. Thank you so much for tuning in. |
0:02.8 | More of our exciting DC interviews, just such a blessing to sit down with so many pro |
0:08.3 | life leaders who are contending so faithfully in the season, entering Muriel Bowser's Washington, |
0:15.0 | DC, where she's very intent on making sure Black people can't go to dinner. No, it's actually |
0:21.1 | true. I mean, Black people are the biggest racial class that are unvaccinated. So ironically, |
0:24.6 | Democrats are keeping Black people at a restaurant. That's tough for repeating history. |
0:28.4 | But we're here with phenomenal pro life leaders and got to sit down with some wonderful |
0:32.4 | individuals to talk about life, this political moment that we're in, the cultural climate that |
0:36.7 | we're in, and the importance to stand for life to make your voice heard. And it's been a gift. |
0:41.6 | We had the March for Life today because I'm not sure when we'll release this and 150,000, |
0:47.0 | maybe more people marching for life. Strangely no pro abortion people there. So we're going to try |
0:53.0 | to find some of them tomorrow and force them to defend their bigotry. But this is an exciting |
0:57.0 | episode I wanted to share with you with Melissa Odin and Jen Millbourne of the Abortion Survivors |
1:02.5 | Network. Obviously, we've had Melissa on the show multiple times, but Jen Millbourne is also a speaker |
1:07.3 | for the Abortion Survivors Network. And obviously an abortion survivor. And I've shared with you |
1:13.2 | before on this show the reason why I care so much, particularly about abortion survivors, |
1:18.6 | I want their voices to be platformed like crazy is because they're the walking contradiction to |
1:22.9 | the culture of death. They question the entire premises of progressivism, which is that if reproductive |
1:28.4 | health care is this great thing, then that would mean that failure to procure the reproductive health |
1:33.2 | care that mom was trying to procure would be tragic and sad because that means she wasn't able to |
1:37.3 | adequately procure the health care that she was trying to access. Well, failure to procure said |
1:42.4 | reproductive health care has a name. It's a person. It's a human being that's born and has |
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