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Planned Parenthood President Upset Bush
Protects Doctors From Forced Abortions
by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
December 19, 2008
Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) --
The president of Planned Parenthood is upset that the Bush administration
has given final approval to regulations that help doctors and medical
centers pressured to do abortions or refer for them. Cecile Richards
appears to admit in an email to financial backers that she wouldn’t hire
pro-life staff at her centers.
Richards claimed stopping forced abortions is “limiting the rights of
patients to receive complete and accurate reproductive health information
when they visit a federally funded health care provider.”
“The rule is clearly a parting gift from Bush to the anti-choice fringe
that supported him all these years,” she added.
Richards claims the rule makes it so “anti-choice medical staff can
withhold information about abortion, birth control, and sex education from
their patients” even though the rule has nothing to do with birth control
and despite the fact that birth control portions of the proposal were
removed in August.
Richards is also upset that facilities that receive federal funding --
including her Planned Parenthood abortion business -- “will have to
certify that they will not refuse to hire nurses and other providers who
object to abortion.”
Though Planned Parenthood supposedly maintains a “pro-choice” position on
abortion, Richards makes clear her unwillingness to hire pro-life doctors,
nurses and medical staff.
“Frankly, I'm livid,” Richards tells supporters in a more candid email
confession. “I believe that tricking women when they are most vulnerable
is wrong — and the federal government shouldn't pay people to do it.”
Richards says Planned Parenthood will be working hard to overturn the Bush
rule, but that it will take more than an executive order from incoming
president Barack Obama to do it. She suggests Congressional legislation
will be needed to reverse the conscience protections the Bush
administration believe were necessary
.“Even with a new president and administration coming in soon, this won't
be easy to fix. It's going to take more than a simple signature to reverse
it. We're starting our work today,” Richards concludes.
http://www.lifenews.com/nat4674.html
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