Tuesday, May 31, 2011

WWYD on Abortion. Texas Style.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011 


This is an amazing video that makes me want to get up and move to Texas. WWYD, a new show on ABC, puts people in odd and fabricated situations to see what they would do. In this episode they sat a young couple at a restaurant and had the young man push his girlfriend to get an abortion pretty loudly. This is the second time they’ve done this. The first scene took place in New Jersey and let’s just say that some of the folks around the couple seemed almost willing to grab some rusty utensils out of the kitchen to help with the abortion right there.

But this time, WWYD re-enacted the same scene in Texas with very very different results. I just have to ask -which response seems more loving? You’ve gotta’ watch this.

Read more: http://www.ncregister.com/blog/wwyd-on-abortion.-texas-style#ixzz1NzqvhIB9

Planned Parenthood does the DO-SI-DO with GIRL SCOUTS

SOURCE: http://wissup.blogspot.com/2010/03/planned-parenthood-does-do-si-do-with.html

Parents beware.  Planned Parenthood is stepping into your Girl Scout troops now.

UPDATE:  Here is the brochure, "Happy, Healthy and Hot" that was distributed.

The brochure is also saved on my computer under HappyHealthyHotbrochureforGSA.pdf

From the Washington Times:
Sharon Slater, a mother of seven, innocently walked into a panel sponsored by the Girl Scouts USA at the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women a few weeks ago. Almost immediately she was asked to leave. All non-Scout adults were kicked out of the room, which was packed with adolescent girls.
.....
Slater found a stack of brochures produced by Planned Parenthood called "Healthy, Happy and Hot" that among other things explained to the girls, "Some people have sex when they have been drinking or using drugs. That is your choice."
.....
But it gets worse. The sex guide explains, "Many people think sex is just about vaginal or anal intercourse. But there are lots of different ways to have sex and lots of different types of sex. Sex can include kissing, touching, licking, tickling, sucking and cuddling. Some people like to have aggressive sex, while others like to have soft sex and slow sex with their partners.
.....
Besides advice about the prostate, the brochure, subtitled "Rights, Sexuality and Living with HIV," also gives incorrect and even dangerous information about rights and responsibilities.
.....
At the same UN meeting, which ended last Friday, the World Association of Girl Scouts and Girl Guides produced a document saying young women "demand their sexual and reproductive rights including access to comprehensive sexuality education, and sexual and reproductive services including contraception and emergency contraception, in order to avoid unintended pregnancies" and also called for access to "safe abortion."
.....
At a Girl Scout conference in 2004, co-sponsored by Planned Parenthood, the Girl Scouts handed out a brochure to 700 grade-school girls with the title "It's Perfectly Normal," a guide that celebrated masturbation and that featured explicit drawings of couples having sex and a boy putting on a condom. It also listed, no surprise here, the top ten reasons for having an abortion.

Bitter Pill (Abby Johnson)

logo

see also: Timeline History- GSA w/ PPI

I want better for my daughter.  I don’t want my daughter to get sucked into the world of Planned Parenthood…to the world of the “women’s reproductive movement”…the idea that abortion is acceptable.  I want her to know that abortion is evil.  I want her to know with 100% certainty that Planned Parenthood is intrinsically evil…no matter what “good” they are doing.  Not only do I want her to KNOW it, I want her to DEFEND it.  I am raising a pro-life apologist…something I was not.  I do not want to raise a statistic.  I want to raise a strong, independent, young woman who is proud to identify as a feminist and pro-life.

If I want that for my child, should I start teaching her about the benefits of “reproductive choice” while she is still in grade school?  Should I have her go to camps that are partnered with and sponsored by Planned Parenthood?  Should I allow her to spend her allowance money on items and treasures that will go toward Planned Parenthood?  Of course not, right?  That simply wouldn’t make sense.  That would go against everything I just said in my first paragraph, right?  Well, guess what, my friends?  If your beautiful girls are in the Girls Scouts of America (GSA), you are doing just that.  Don’t believe me? 

Just listen.
Nobody loves brochures more than Planned Parenthood.  I mean, they have a brochure for everything!  You can go out and save the world if you will just take a few dozen of their beautifully branded brochures…of course, you can’t find any information on adoption, prenatal care or fetal development…but I digress. 

I will never forget the first time I saw a GSA logo on the back of one of our brochures.  We had just gotten a new shipment of life-changing (blah) brochures in the mail.  I flipped them over and there it was…Girl Scouts of America.  Surely this was a brochure about being sexually abstinent, right?  Or about keeping yourself safe from violence.  Nope.  It was about “how to know you are ready for sex.”  Really?  Girl Scouts?  Do Girl Scouts have sex?  That was my immediate thought.  They are supposed to be selling cookies…not having sex.  Wow.  So this is where that cookie money goes.  I didn’t think much about it at the time.  I was, of course, glad to see the collaboration.  NOW, it makes me sick.

When I left Planned Parenthood, I started to really look into this more carefully.  Did the connection do even deeper?  I couldn’t believe what I found.  I saw a video clip on a morning show of the President of GSA stating that they had a “longstanding relationship with Planned Parenthood.”  Really?  Gosh, why weren’t we talking about it???  Then, I found out that some of us were. 

I started meeting different people who were very passionate about this issue.  Many of them had been leaders.  Some of them had pulled their girls out of GSA.  They had seen, first hand, the corruption inside of GSA.  They had seen the partnership between Planned Parenthood and GSA.  So, I had to ask…why wasn’t this a bigger deal?  It turns out that they were getting a lot of pushback.  But they were only speaking the truth!  Who doesn’t want to hear the truth??  Hmmm.  You know who their biggest opposition is?  Churches!

I would like to say that I am surprised, but honestly, I’m not.  Apathy runs rampant in our churches.  It seems to hurt a little more when the church is complicit with the mission of Planned Parenthood and their mission.  How is it that when a member(s) of a church bring evidence to their clergy that a group their church supports is supporting Planned Parenthood, that clergy member refuses to pull support and actually continues to support the program without hesitation?? 
So, we aren’t pro-life?
So, our church does support Planned Parenthood? 
So, our church does support the abortion agenda? 
So, our church doesn’t believe in teaching our children to respect their bodies and remain abstinent until marriage? 

Because if our churches support Girl Scouts in ANY way, that is EXACTLY what we are saying.

Some may say “well, we have a really great Girl Scout group here and it is run by wonderful Christian women and none of that funny business happens with our girls.”  Okay.  Go here with me for a minute…

There is a Planned Parenthood clinic in Nowhere, Texas.  They don’t perform any sort of abortion services.  They only provide annual exams, testing, birth control, and counseling.  Oh, and the women there are just the sweetest!  In fact, one of them goes to a church you know right down the street.  In fact, she and your friend are in the same Bible study class.  Your friend just says she is fantastic.  And you know, it’s really okay she works at Planned Parenthood because they don’t actually DO the abortions at her location.  They are just helping women at her center.  Actually, the worker there…she doesn’t even really care for abortion.  I mean, really, as long as she isn’t doing abortions and that center doesn’t do abortions, Planned Parenthood is really an asset to the community!  Now that you think about it, ANY Planned Parenthood that doesn’t provide abortions is really okay.  We should just work to shut down the ones that actually DO the abortion procedures.  Yeah, that’s a better idea.

So, that’s what we think, right?  NO, NO, NO!!!  We don’t think that!  We don’t just want some Planned Parenthood centers to close down…we want them ALL to go!  Why?  Because the organization as a whole promotes abortion. 

It’s the same thing with GSA.  GSA, as a whole, promotes Planned Parenthood.

Is it a hard pill to swallow?  Yes.  Does it taste bad as it goes down?  Yep.  No one loves thin mints more than me.  But there are no more cookies in this house.  My daughter will not be a part of GSA.  I will not support any curriculum that supports GSA.

Guys, these are our children!!  Our kids…who are young, and impressionable, and vulnerable.  Why take the chance?  Be courageous.  Take a stand.  Be a leader for your children.  Be a leader in your church.  Stand up for our girls.  Stand up for their true rights…for their true self-worth.  Be a true role model.  Show your children what it means to do the RIGHT thing.

Is it easy to go against the main stream?  Nope.  It is usually not easy to do the right thing.  But doing the right thing is the God thing.  I will pick the God thing over the easy thing any day.

You know what else?  There is an alternative (there are many actually) to GSA.  There is an amazing group called American Heritage Girls.  They are an actual scouting group and they stand up for Christian principles and doing the right thing.  How refreshing!  For more information about getting your young one signed up or starting your own chapter, go to www.ahgonline.org.

I also want you to know that I am not simply giving out my opinion here.  GSA is linked to Planned Parenthood.  There are many groups that are now dedicating their lives to spreading this information. 

One of the best links out there with ONLY facts is www.girlscoutswhynot.com. One of the women that run this site was a GSA leader for many years.  After learning the truth about the GSA/PP connection, she resigned and pulled her daughter out of the group.  She and her family now dedicate their lives to getting the truth out about this terrible link.  Has it been easy?  No.  But she says after she left, it was one of the most “freeing feelings” she has ever felt…just doing the right thing.  They have so much awesome information on their site.  You really need to spend some time checking it all out; reading all of the information they have posted; clicking on all of the links.  You will not be sorry.

If you care about our next generation, then spread this message.  Send out the website, www.girlscoutswhynot.com
We say we want better for our kids and our grandkids…now is your turn to make a difference.

Related posts:
  1. I don’t practice Santaria
  2. “No Easy Decision”…bad decision for PP.
  3. Sex, Lies and Videotape…Uh, Oh!!!
  4. We are Centurions
  5. My empty uterus…

14 Responses (as of May 31, 2011) to “Bitter Pill.”

  1. Bert Farwell says:
    Hear that infant crying in fear and pain? You’ve thrown the baby out with the bath water. You have to teach kids (boys and girls)to be responsible and safe. You can’t assume that they will always make the choice of abstinance. Ten years old isn’t too soon. I’m 76. When I was 12 or 13, I knew a 10 year old girl who was pregnant. I knew many other pregnant girls during my teen years. There were lots of homes and adoption services for pregnant teens back then, but no services that tought them responsibility and helped them with the tools to stay safe if (realistically, for most teens, when) they made unwise choices regarding sex before marriage.
  2. Abby Johnson says:
    I am glad this was brought up. I do NOT believe staying in an organization to “fight from within” is the appropriate response. I have clinic workers contact me weekly who want to leave the abortion industry. Should I tell them to stick it out and just try to save as many babies as they can from within? I mean, surely it’s fine to participate in the sin as long as you trying to fight against it, right? I do not believe that to be true. I believe the best way to fight this is by getting OUT of the organization, starting alternative organizations, spreading the word on every public forum you are a part of, spreading the word to all of your friends and family, get the info out to your local media, and inform your CHURCH!!! There needs to be an exodus from GSA. It needs to start from within the church.
  3. Sheila says:
    I was a leader in GS until last year when all the controversy began with the UN conference. I then looked into this issue, and could not continue in good conscience endorsing the GS organization anymore. Before I left, I tried getting answers from my Service Unit coordinator and even contacted the national office and they towed the party line. The national office said they would be releasing a statement, so I waited to find out what they would say. The statement said more by what it didn’t say than what was printed. There was no mention in the letter that they did not have partnerships with PP or anything that settled my concerns-if anything it made my concerns worse because if they couldn’t answer the questions straight, what did they have to hide?
    Along with a couple of other concerned moms, started and American Heritage Girls troop this year at our church, and were hoping we would get 15 girls to start with. We had 45 girls register, and we have had an amazing year! I feel so blessed to be able to share my love of scouting and my faith with these girls!
    Thank you for mentioning AHG and I hope others will be drawn to look into the difference in these organizations.
  4. Brooke says:
    Wonderful article! I’m so happy that you are working on getting this info out to others. My daughter has been in American Heritage Girls for 2 years now, and I am an assistant for the 4th and 5th grade girls, the Explorers. AHG is now in partnership with BSA, and it is a wonderful thing to have both of our groups on the same page. I encourage everyone, intending to join or not, to check out ahgonline.org. This is a wonderful organization that is 16 years going and currently in 48 states. We need to stand up and protect our children!
  5. For Caryl and other Girl Scouts who want to fight: A timeline history of the Girl Scout-Planned Parenthood connection can be found on the HonestGirlScouts.com website. There is also a game plan for keeping a troop while not being an asset to their pro-abortion agenda in the Just One Box page in “Take Action.” My troop “went retro” last year did not sell more than Just One Box of cookies, we used hand-me-down books, we learned how to sew our uniforms, embroidered our troop number patches and bought our fun patches from an outside source. We had a bake sale and two garage sales and pulled in more money than we ever did selling those expensive GS cookies (by the way, if you love Thin Mints and Samoas, Keebler cookies sell Grasshoppers and a Samoa clone in grocery stores). We cost our Council more than we ever paid in. By being a Girl Scout member and spreading the truth about GSUSA, we are fighting from within. If we really want to make a stand, next cookie season, we should have our Girl Scouts in full uniform boycotting sales. That would make the news, wouldn’t it?
  6. Amanda says:
    So sad that we are allowing PP to target our children through organizations like GSA…they are ruthless in their endeavors to find and create future customers! Is there no shame?
  7. Evelyn says:
    I have my daughter in AHG. And I was so happy to see your mention of them! I lead the Pathfinder (the youngest) group and I love being involved with such a morally straight and God fearing group! My brothers have been involved in BSA for years. They are part of a strong Christian group and have never had the same issue that the GSA seem to have.
    If any of you are looking for a great way to do scouting for your girls, check out the website Abby mentioned!
  8. Caryl says:
    I can understand getting out/severing ties with GS. I understand that there is an alternative to GS. But what about working to get PP out of GS? Are there groups working towards this? Is that concept somehow a lost cause, even with all the recent heat against PP? I am a GS leader and active in my local service unit, going on four years now. The first time I ever heard of this connection was about a year ago (United Nations Commission on the Status of Women and the “Healthy Happy Hot” brocure) The issue sort of went away, and is now arising again…giving me serious pause, causing me to pray for discernment. Cherry Beiber said she pulled her daughter out of GS 26 years ago…has there been a tie between GS and PP for that long? And, finally, are there still brochures being printed and displayed by PP that have the GS logo on them? I’m sorry to be so naive and ask so many questions, but I feel very convicted about this issue, and noone in my service unit, council or community discusses this issue at all.
  9. Abby Johnson says:
    No. Boy Scouts is definitely a safe organization for our kids to join.
  10. Thank you, Abby!!! I pulled my precious little girls out of Girl Scouts 26 years ago…after just two weeks of involvement. Although I was not aware of Planned Parenthood’s involvement at that time, I had reviewed the materials given to us and had a very strong check in my spirit. After attending one meeting in particular, it was clear to me that this was NOT a family friendly organization and I realized right then and there that I needed to pull my girls out. Sadly, there are a multitude of such organizations locally and nationally, but parents are too “otherwise engaged” to notice exactly what is being taught.
    Thank you, again, for this thorough article, which I will certainly be linking to on my blog!
    God Bless your endeavors!
  11. katrina says:
    very interesting… i was just about to sign my 6 yr old daughter up next fall. now, i have to figure out a nice way to break it to her. thanks for the enlightenment on this. just curious — are the boy scouts of america in any way affiliated with PP, too?
  12. Hi Abbey,
    I pulled my daughter from GSA for this very reason. It was sad. I was a Girl Scout until I was 14, I loved it. My oldest daughter was in for 9 years. We did have lovely women running it. But then a funny thing happened. Our local council, in conjunction with Planned Parenthood, planned a spa day for the girls. My daughter was 8. EIGHT! The day was a day a beauty and education on many topics, and the lovely brochure had some sketchy sounding titles to the sessions. I don’t remember what they were exactly, but upon investigation, one of them was about exploring their sexuality. There were others that seemed questionable to me, but I didn’t stick around to find out more. I pulled my daughter out. We’ve never participated in Girl Scout since. It does sadden me, because all the actual SCOUTING was wonderful. Thanks for publicizing this – it needs to be said and heard.
    P.S – I read your book – I couldn’t put it down. None of it surprised me, other than your rapid conversion, but that’s how the Holy Spirit works sometimes. Welcome home!God bless you for the work you are doing.
  13. Stephanie says:
    Thanks for “making it plain”! I’ve known a good bit of what you said for quite some time, but some of it was new to me. NO MORE Girl Scout cookies in MY house! (At least not as long as they continue to partner with PP, which I sadly think will continue for quite some time, unless Christians are bold enough & courageous enough (YES, I said COURAGEOUS) to Stand for What IS Right!
    I should add that this is the second “bitter” decision this week for me. Earlier this week information became public about a company that does business with Pepsi & I was APPALLED! I am a HUGE fan of Mtn. Dew! HOWEVER, I quit Cold Turkey as soon as I found out! (Hey, doing without Mtn. Dew never killed anyone & it will certainly help my weight loss, but that is not the MAIN reasons.)
    Thanks again for sharing the hard truth!
  14. Christy says:
    Thank you Abby! Parents deserve to know the truth … GSUSA is not eager to admit their relationship with Planned Parenthood but it is undeniable. God bless you for shining a light on this darkness!

See also:
http://wissup.blogspot.com/2010_03_01_archive.html   ~~>  Planned Parenthood does the DO-SI-DO with GIRL SCOUTS
http://prolifenotebook.blogspot.com/2011/05/timeline-history-with-planned.html

TIMELINE: A History with Planned Parenthood, United Nations, Radicals & More

Connections Through the Years

source: http://www.honestgirlscouts.com/discover_pp_history.html

This compilation of dates and entries has been garnered from internet links, and website research. If there are errors, omissions, incomplete information, etc., please contact HonestGirlScouts@gmail.com with corrections.

1967

 
  • "Children and Youth in National Planning and Development in Asia" by UNICEF, lists WAGGGS and IPPF as fellow NGOs.

1970

 
  • Betty Friedan, radical feminist activist, co-founder of NOW (National Organization of Women) and NARAL (National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League) joins the National Board of GSUSA and stays until 1982.

1972

 
  • The word "Loyalty" is dropped from the oath under Betty Friedan's guidance on the Girl Scout National Board.

1991

 
  • "Women Two Thousand" by Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs (United Nations). Branch for the Advancement of Women, United Nations. Division for the Advancement of Women, lists WAGGGS and IPPF as fellow NGOs.

1992

 
  • "Who is Who at the Earth Summit, Rio de Janeiro 1992" by Hans J. Keller, lists WAGGGS and IPPF as fellow NGOs.

  • GSUSA decides to put asterisk next to "God" and permits atheists/agnostics to use their own words in "The Girl Scout Promise"

1993

 
  • "Family planning: meeting challenges, promoting choices" by Pramilla Senanayake, Ronald Louis Kleinman, International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), includes the following admission that Girl Scouts deliver up girls as "youth leaders" to participate in Planned Parenthood activities:
"This project began in 1990 with funding provided by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)... It is co-ordinated by the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO), the League of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, the World Assembly of Youth, the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS), the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM) and the World Young Women's Christian Assocation (YWCA).

In Senagal, Xall Yoon was developed during a national five-day workshop in which young people from WAGGGS, WOSM, YMCA, national NGOs and representatives of five government ministries participated...

...During the subsequent four days of this participatory workshop, the youth (leaders) from the NGOs identified their problems and needs in reproductive health and then devised strategies in the form of Xall Yoon to address these...

...Aims and objectives...

--Training youth leaders in communication, sex education, contraception, abortion, sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), pregnancy, sexual relations, childbirth, child care, etc.; "

1994

 
  • A Girl Scout mother in Plymouth, Michigan discovered her local Girl Scout leadership manual gave Junior Girl Scouts (ages 9-12) the option of visiting Planned Parenthood to learn about health issues in a "puberty workshop."

  • (SEE IMAGE BELOW) "Youth Information Bulletin: Issue 85, Volume 3" by Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs (United Nations), United Nations. Division for Social Policy and Development, lists WAGGGS and IPPF as fellow NGOs.

  • "Population et developpement:" by Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Development Centre, lists WAGGGS and IPPF as fellow NGOs.

1995

 
  • The Great Rivers Girl Scout Council in Ohio is caught using explicit sex education curriculum, "Sexuality and You" at a weekend overnight event. When a troop leader disclosed to parents that their girls had been instructed to pass around a lifesize phallus and were exposed to a game where the words "zoophilia," "nymphomania," "sado-masochism" and more were placed on their backs, she was kicked out of Girl Scouts. Twenty-six fellow volunteers resigned in solidarity. One of the twenty-six, Patti Garibay, went on to found American Heritage Girls as a result. [If you want a copy of the "Sexuality and You" curriculum excerpts, contact HonestGirlScouts@gmail.com and verify you are at least 18 years of age.]

  • "The International Law of Youth Rights: Source Documents and Commentary" by William David Angel, lists WAGGGS and IPPF as fellow NGOs.

1997

 
  • "On My Honor: Lesbians Reflect on their Scouting Experience," by Nancy Manahan, estimates 1 of 3 professional Girl Scouts [GSUSA employees] is a lesbian. [Perhaps that would explain the puzzling entry in 2009?]

2000

 
  • Patriots' Trail Girl Scout Council in Massachusetts held a volunteer workshop on sexual orientation, working in tandem with the Gay Lesbian Youth Support project "to educate us about overcoming barriers that may exist in our organization and instilling a culture that is inviting to all girls," according to Mary Jo Kane, spokesman for the council. The Girl Scout council developed a mentoring program "for lesbian women and girls dealing with sexual identity." Says Kane, "I can only imagine the energy and leadership that would be unleashed — in society — if we spent our time and resources encouraging our girls — and everyone — to be visible, authentic, and bring 100 percent of themselves to all their experiences."

  • President Clinton welcomed leaders of homosexual organizations to the White House to debut the Girl-Scout-promoted film, "That's A Family!" The video, produced by Women's Educational Media (WEM) educates public schoolchildren about homosexual families. Girl Scout President, Connie Matsui addressed the crowd to explain her enthusiasm for the film.

  • "Scouting and Peace" by WOSM (World Organisation of Scouting Movement), with which Girl Scouts/WAGGGS is a partner, states that:
"The GDV [Global Development Village] was organised by the World Scout Bureau in co-operation with Scouting's main partners in development, such as United Nations agencies (UNEP, UNICEF, WHO), the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) and the Red Cross."

2001

 
  • Mountain Meadow Girl Scout summer camp in New Jersey was advertised as a "feminist camping experience [for] children of lesbian, gay, transgender … and other progressive families." Children ages nine to fifteen were required to fill out an application asking name, birth date, medications, and "Gender of camper: male/female/other (please explain)."

  • "Young People at the Centre: Participation and Social Change" by Jane Foster, Kumi Naidoo, lists WAGGGS and IPPF as fellow NGOs.

2004

 
  • (SEE IMAGE BELOW dated 2003) "Nobody's Fool," annual explicit sex education co-ed instruction for 5th-8th Graders held at Planned Parenthood of Waco, Texas, is sponsored by the Girl Scout Bluebonnet Council. A graphic, cartoon-illustrated soft-porn book, "It's Perfectly Normal" is given to each child and lists nine good reasons to have an abortion. [If you want a copy of examples of "It's Perfectly Normal," contact HonestGirlScouts@gmail.com and verify you are at least 18 years of age.]

  • Girl Scout Bluebonnet Council bestowed on Planned Parenthood chief executive Pam Smallwood the title of "Woman of the Year."

  • CEO of GSUSA, Kathy Cloninger admits on the NBC Today Show that local Girl Scout councils are allowed to partner with Planned Parenthood. [To our knowledge, she has not retracted that statement.]

  • Following Cloninger's TV admission, Jim Sedlak of STOPP (Stop Planned Parenthood) and the Americal Life League called the 315 Girl Scout councils to ask if they would confirm or deny relationships with Planned Parenthood. Of the ones willing to answer, 26% admitted they did, but the percentage could be higher since most refused to answer.

2007

 
  • Girl Scout Council of Greater Minneapolis sponsors event called "Let's Talk." Youth counselors from Planned Parenthood lead the event.

  • Girl Scout Council of Vermont participates in Annual Chittendon County Parent Expo by Planned Parenthood.

2008

 
  • (SEE IMAGE BELOW) "Choices" by IPPF (International Planned Parenthood), has the following paragraph:
"Youth Organisations are very present and active in supporting and further promoting sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR). Organisations such as the International Federation of Medical Students' Association (IFMSA) or the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS) are running projects and activities across Europe and the world. Volunteers of those organisations, in collaboration with the community in most of the cases, are actually running medical centres, organising seminars, providing information training sessions, peer education or simply supporting members of a community."

2009

 
  • "Good Intentions: The Belief and Values of Teens and Tweens Today" published by the Girl Scout Research Institute, funded by GSUSA. Despite the claim on the website that this survey is a direct follow-up of the 1989 "Girl Scout Survey on the Beliefs and Moral Values of America's Children," there is an unusual emphasis on accepting homosexuals as friends. The original survey mentions only the word "homosexual" once out of 31 questions. The new survey has "gay/lesbian" or "gay or lesbian" 23 times, and is included in half (8 of 16) charts.

2010

 
  • In March, GSUSA found itself caught in a controversy over an event they hosted at the United Nations (UN) Conference on the Status of Women (CSW). The initial story focused on the possible distribution of an IPPF (International Planned Parenthood Federation) brochure entitled "Happy, Healthy and Hot," which not only gave graphic descriptions of how to give and receive sexual pleasure, but advocated that "young people" [ages 10-24] have "sexual rights" that supercede parental notification of receipt of medical exams, contraception, drugs and medical treatment. Most shocking, is the promotion of the idea that those living with HIV/AIDS have a right to sexual gratification that trumps disclosure of their deadly disease to any prospective partner.

  • The result of the above controversy was the discovery that Girl Scouts of USA (GSUSA) sends teenage delegates to events like the United Nations Conference on the Status of Women all the time, exposing them to organizations like IPPF and UN/UNESCO/UNFPA, WHO, and others while at the same time denying GSUSA is connected to WAGGGS (World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts). This website, HonestGirlScouts.com, is the reaction to the diversionary tactics given to concerned parents and supporters across the United States of America.

  • (SEE IMAGE BELOW) Girls Scouts of NYPENN Pathways partners with Planned Parenthood:
REAL LIFE. REAL TALK® PROGRAM MANAGER. • • • •
The Real Life. Real Talk.® campaign has seen considerable growth over the past year. Growth that would not have been possible without the commitment and support of our community partners. From hosting events and facilitating programs to technical support, each of our 38 partners brings something unique to the campaign. Real Life. Real Talk. is proud to count the following organizations, faith communities and companies as community partners:
100 Black Men of Syracuse, Inc.
AIDS Community Resources
ARISE
Bentley & Hoke, LLC
Booker T. Washington Community Center of Auburn
The Children's Consortium
Congregation Beth Sholom - Chevra Shas
CLiC - Community Learning and Information Center
Contact Community Services
Creekside Books & Coffee
Crouse Hospital
Dunbar Center
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Faith Hope Community Center, Inc.
First Baptist Church of Central Square
Girls, Inc. at the YWCA Syracuse
Girl Scouts of NYPENN Pathways
Huntington Family Centers
Hopps Memorial CME Church
Jewish Community Center of Syracuse
Literacy Volunteers of Greater Syracuse
Manlius Pebble Hill School
McMahon/Ryan Child Advocacy Site
Onondaga County Public Library
P.E.A.C.E., Inc.
Planned Parenthood of the Rochester/Syracuse Region
PFLAG Syracuse
Plymouth Congregational Church UCC

2011

 
  • (SEE IMAGE BELOW) Abby Johnson -- former Planned Parenthood director who left her job after seeing and assisting in an abortion for the first time -- states on her Facebook page that Girl Scouts supports Planned Parenthood:
"FACT: Girl Scouts of America supports Planned Parenthood. Support Girl Scouts = Support Abortion."
"GSA pays PP to go and give educational talks and to print educational materials. There is a money exchange...."
  • (SEE IMAGE BELOW) GSUSA Journey books become REQUIRED curricula in order to obtain Junior Bronze, Cadette Silver or Senior/Ambassador Gold Awards (see source below). Recommended role models and sources in Journeys books include socialist media websites, radical feminists, lesbian athletes and writers and lots and lots of political liberals. No attempt at balancing ideologies whatsoever.

 

   

2011:
Abby Johnson's Facebook Page

Abby Johnson's Facebook Page

2011:
GSUSA recommends this source in "MEdia" Journey book [captions added]

wmc website links

2010:
Girl Scouts of NYPENN Pathways partners with Planned Parenthood in "Real Life. Real Talk." campaign.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Little by Little, the Tide is Turning. But We have to Keep Working

By: Msgr. Charles Pope
Most of you probably heard of the Gallup Poll released yesterday that showed that 61% of Americans want all, or most abortions, to be declared illegal. There remains for further study, the oddity that some Americans who take this position still say they are “pro-choice,” but in the end they still want most abortion to be illegal. If you are unaware of this report you can read it here: Gallup Poll
The upshot of the report is: that, despite their labeling of their own abortion views, a majority of Americans clearly not only oppose abortion and believe it to be a morally improper “choice,” but they believe the legal status of abortions should change and all or virtually all abortions should be prohibited [1].
The lesson here,  is that we ought to take heart. Our prophetic stance in the Church and in the wider pro-life community is having good effects. At times the battle seems long and the results seem distant, but little by little, the tide is turning. There will be set backs and troubles, but we have to keep working. Gently the tide is turning.
An old African American Spiritual says, Keep-a-inching along, Jesus will come by and by, Keep-a-inching along, like a poor inch worm, Jesus will come by and by. So the song says, keep working for justice, it implies, don’t give up. And those slaves of old saw slavery end. Many of the same arguments for slavery have been redeployed by abortion supporters, but keep inching along, Jesus will come, by and by, and the truth will out.
When we look back at slavery, most Americans are embarrassed that we ever thought such an abomination was fine and legal. But it took time to turn the tide in that great struggle. And even after slavery, the struggle continued, through years of Jim Crow and many indignities.
We look back on such things with shame now, how could we have been so foolish and have betrayed American principles so badly, as to enslave, and later segregate and exclude, a whole race. Slowly conversion has come upon this land. But it only came because some were willing to be prophets, and to keep insisting on what was just and right.
It will be the same with abortion. One day we will look back with shame on this era, and wonder how we could ever have been so sinfully wrong as to think abortion should be legal, and even funded it with state money. But it will take time and continued work. The poll shows we are on the way. Keep inching along, Jesus will come by an by.
Another example of how the tide can turn on an issue is smoking. The videos at the bottom of this post are hilarious ads from the 1950s entitled: More Doctors Smoke Camels. The ads, at the time they were produced, did not intend to be a comedy, but now they are. The ads show a doctor puffing up a storm and it assures us of the “benefits” of smoking Camel Cigarettes.
Looking back at ads like this we think, How could we have ever been so stupid? But of course it has taken us time and effort for us to come to our senses. The anti-smoking campaign was long, and at times, loud. I remember more than a few times being annoyed at the “anti-smoking Nazis.” Though I never smoked myself, I became especially alarmed when the government started telling restaurant and bar owners what to do. But in the end, and all discussions about Government intrusion aside, smoking has really been kicked to the curb in our culture. Some still smoke, but everyone today sees it for what it is, poisonous and, frankly, stupid. Those, who are sadly addicted, puff away, but most of the rest of us look to them with a kind of sadness.
This sea change came as the result of a sustained effort, often on an unwilling public. It was multi-pronged as well, using the media effectively, and even the legislative process.
For those of us in pro-life work there are important precedents to be seen in the fight against slavery, the Civil Rights Movement, and even in the anti-smoking campaign. Consistent, persistent and organized action brings eventual results. This is often a battle for inches, but inches become yards, and yards, miles. Keep a inching alone like a poor old inch worm, Jesus will come by and by.

Mother of Aerosmith front man Steven Tyler’s aborted child speaks out about her abortion and finding forgiveness in Christ.

Lifesitenews.com Just published this amazing story. Kevin Burke is a colleague and Rachel’s Vineyard is a partner ministry with Stand True.

The Light of the World: the Steven Tyler and Julia Holcomb story

The iconic black & white photo of Julia Holcomb & Steve Tyler.
Introductory note: On May 4, 2011 National Review Online published my article entitled “Post Abortion Trauma – Jesus What Have I Done” on Aerosmith front man and American Idol judge Steven Tyler’s abortion experience.  Shortly after this I was contacted by Julia Holcomb.  Julia is the mother of Steven’s Tyler’s aborted son referenced in my article.
Julia and her husband Joseph expressed a desire to entrust to me a more detailed account of Julia’s relationship with Steven Tyler, her abortion and post-abortion life journey.  Julia has read for many years Steven’s Tyler’s recollection and reconstruction of events from the years of their relationship and more recently shared in his autobiography, Does the Noise in My Head Bother You? She would like the opportunity after all these years to present her version of the events.
But ultimately the reason Julia shares her story at this time is because of the inspiration, healing and faith that are reflected in her personal journey.  Julia believes that my NRO article and the high visibility of Steven Tyler at this time provide a providential opportunity to present her story.
– Kevin Burke, LSW
Julia’s Story
My maiden name is Julia Holcomb and I am writing in response to Kevin Burke’s article Post Abortion Trauma from the National Review.  I found the article he wrote about Steven Tyler remarkably compassionate while outlining the trauma of abortion. My name was mentioned in this article, as it has been in several other articles that have been written lately, and in several books. I decided it was time to tell my story honestly, to the best of my memory, hoping to bring closure and peace to this period of my life.
In November of 1973, shortly after my 16th birthday, I met Steven Tyler at a concert in Portland, Oregon. To understand what leads a 16-year-old girl to find herself backstage at an Aerosmith Rock Concert, and in a three- year live-in relationship with Steven Tyler, you need some essential background information.
Family Trauma
My biological father abandoned my mother while we were toddlers.  He was a charming rogue of a gambler who came and went in our lives, leaving a wake of debt and infidelity.  My mother had been encouraged to get an abortion (illegally) by more than one family member when she found out she was expecting me, (the middle child).  Thankfully she gave birth to me and later to my younger brother, and was a loving mother. When Daddy’s gambling debts caused her small teaching salary to be garnished, she filed for a divorce.  Even after the first divorce she had been a good mother, taking us to church, reading us the Bible in the morning before school, singing to us at night, and praying with us for our wandering father.  She was gentle and supportive and I always knew I could go to her for help.  When mother remarried my first stepfather, (who was an alcoholic) things became difficult.
A devastating trauma struck our family in the summer of 1971 when I was 13 years old. My younger brother was killed in a car accident on our way home from a camping trip with our grandparents. He was 10 years old. My grandfather was also killed, my grandmother lost a leg, and my sister and I were injured.  The car accident and family trauma triggered a chain of events that led to my mother and first stepfather to divorce.
My stepfather was committed to a mental hospital briefly, and mother had an emotional breakdown. My sister and I went to live with my aunt and uncle for some months.
When we returned home to my mother after the divorce, things were not the same. My mother seemed wounded and disillusioned with life.  Without the stability of the family, or the church, we all struggled to recover from my brother’s death. She was still working as a teacher but she was living with my second stepfather, though they were not married yet.  He is a man I have grown to love and respect over time, yet in the 1970’s, when he was living with my mother, he was a different person than he is today and we disliked each other.
My sister and I were left on our own most of the time.  Previously, I had been raised going to church, but after the accident we just never went back. My sister and I became angry and rebellious. My sister left home when she was about 16, and backpacked around the country with her boyfriend. There I was at age 15, my sister gone, and feeling like I was in the way. There was a sense of being an obstacle to my mothers’ relationship with this new man.
My friendships changed from the kids we knew at church to the kids who hung out at the local Teen Center. Some of them took drugs and drank.
Meeting Steven Tyler
A few months before I met Steven, while I was still 15, I became friends with a girl who had access to backstage parties at concerts.  She was 24 years old, and although our acquaintance was brief, she was a pivotal change in the course of my life, and ours was one of the most dangerous friendships I ever formed.
She quickly taught me to dress in revealing clothes to get noticed and use sex as a hook to try to catch a rock star. I still remember dressing to go to the Aerosmith concert, intending to get backstage with her. I had listened to the song Dream On and seen Steven’s photo on the album cover. I went to the concert hoping to meet Steven and after the concert we met for the first time. At that time, I thought he was the best thing in my life. My sad, vulnerable story, as well as my youth and personal attractiveness captured his interest.
My mother signed over guardianship of me to Steven after I had moved to Boston. I remember my surprise when Steven told me she had signed the papers and trying to take this in mentally. A sense of vulnerability came over me, knowing that I was his ward, but we were not married. He had not expressed his intentions of a long-term relationship with me. He had mentioned that he wanted guardianship papers so I could travel across state lines when he was on tour. I had told him my mother would not sign me over to him. I asked him how he had got her to do it. He said, “I told her I needed them for you to enroll in school.” I felt abandoned by my mother as well as my father and stepfather. Steven was really my only hope at that point.
I became lost in a rock and roll culture.  In Steven’s world it was sex, drugs, and rock and roll, but it seemed no less chaotic than the world I left behind.  I didn’t know it yet, but I would barely make it out alive.
The Pregnancy
When we first lived together I took the birth control pill.  It is not true that my pregnancy with Steven was unplanned, as has been written.  After some months together, Steven spoke to me of his desire to have a child. He had grown up in the New Hampshire countryside and at times he behaved like a down-to-earth farm boy.  He wanted a family and he asked me if I was willing to have a child with him.  I was touched by his sincerity and said yes. I wanted children, and began to believe he must truly love me since he had made himself my guardian and was asking to have children with me. He threw my birth control pills off the balcony of the hotel where we were staying, into the street far below.
Within a year I became pregnant.  I had never been pregnant before, contrary to what Steven has written.  At first Steven and I were both happy about the baby. I remember telling him, “I’m pregnant” and from his reaction I believed he was truly excited.  He asked me to marry him a few months later and I said, “yes.”  He took me to New Hampshire to tell his parents about the baby and the marriage. He asked his grandmother if he could give me her wedding ring.  His parents were conflicted about the idea of Steven and I marrying.  His mother was supportive of everything Steven wanted and I remember truly loving her.  She was such a kindhearted lady, with a wonderful sense of humor.  His father had grave reservations because of my youth and immaturity.
His grandmother declined to give us the ring.  She loved Steven but expressed concerns that if we divorced, the ring would leave the family.  Things went quickly downhill from there for the two of us.  When we left that night, Steven and I had a heated argument: I felt he should buy me a ring at a jeweler and we should get married anyway.  He did not.
Looking back, I do not fault him for a change of heart after his parents expressed concerns.  Marriage is a serious step that should not be jumped into, even when a baby is on the way.  Still, I was in a bad position.  I thought I loved him, I wanted to marry him, and he had asked me to marry him; now the wedding was off and I was very angry with him for not standing by me. It seemed like a cowardly change of heart after he had asked me to have a baby with him and purposefully set out to get me pregnant.  For the first time I realized that I should not have been foolish enough to conceive a child outside of marriage with a man who might not be interested in a life-long relationship.  His guardianship of me complicated things further. I was subordinate to him as in a parent relationship and felt I had little control over my life. I had trusted him and now was the moment of truth.
The Fire
It was the fall of 1975. We returned to our apartment in Boston, and within a few weeks he was touring with his band. I was alone and pregnant in the apartment with no money, no education, no prenatal care, no driver’s license and little food.
Steven would call me every day to check in with me and I asked him for money to get groceries.  He promised to send Ray Tabano over the next day to take me shopping.  Ray was a childhood friend of Steven’s and had been a guitar player in the original band. I remember waiting by the window for Ray to arrive.  He came to the apartment and I let him in through the front door.
The next thing I remember was waking up in a cloud of dense smoke fighting for air to breathe.  Ray was gone.  I fell to the floor from the couch in the front room.  The couch was not burning and I had no burns on my body, but thick black smoke was consuming the room.  The smoke was less dense on the floor, but still, I could barely see.
I was frightened but calm enough to think about a series of commercials that Bill Cosby had done called, Learn Not To Burn. One message had been, if you’re in a smoke-filled room, get down on the floor because the air is clearer on the floor.  I knew I only had minutes to get out of that apartment. I crawled to the front door, which was next to the couch I had been laying on. The apartment had at least three locks on the front door.  There was a keyed lock on the handle, a dead bolt and a security bar that angled from the door down to the floor. Steven insisted on keeping these locked at all times because he usually kept drugs in the house and he had suffered a break-in at our previous apartment on Beacon Street. All of the locks were secured and I could not budge the security bar. I was choking and knew I needed to head for the back stairway that led down to the kitchen and an outside exit.
When I got to the stairs, smoke and heat and flames were pouring up the stairway.  The railings were scorching hot at the top.  I burned one of my hands grabbing the railing before I realized it was impossible to climb down those stairs through that fire. There was no way out.
Bill Cosby was there in my mind again.  He had said in one of those commercials, if you’re trapped in a fire, a good place to seek shelter is an empty fireplace.  I crawled to the fireplace in our bedroom and lay down inside it.  It was empty and clean and the flue was open.  Black smoke filled the air and was boiling up the chimney, but there was a small pocket of air on the floor where I was laying.  As I began to fall unconscious, I knew I was about to die.  I was frightened and I felt so alone.  I believed I deserved to go to hell because of my many sins and I did not feel prepared to die.
Above the fireplace hung a picture of the child Jesus called The Light of the World, by Charles Chambers.  The picture had hung in my Grandmothers’ classroom where she taught first grade.  I had been one of her students when I was 5 years old.  I used to look up at that picture every day in school when Grandma would open the class in prayer.  One year the schools decided to take down all pictures of Jesus and forbid prayer in the classroom, so my Grandmother took the picture home. It hung in her living room for years, and at her death I was given the picture as a memory of her.
When I told my mother that I was pregnant, she sent the picture to me and I hung it over the fireplace in Steven’s apartment.  Now, I was lying beneath it, close to death. I thought of my grandmother, remembering one of the Bible verses she taught me and prayed:
“Into your hands I commend my spirit, thou hast redeemed me Oh Lord God of truth.”
I was thinking of Jesus’ final words on the cross as a means of pleading for mercy.  I did not expect to live and yet I felt great peace as I closed my eyes.
The Nightmare Deepens
I woke up in the hospital. There was an IV in my arm and a doctor was speaking to me slowly, like one speaks to a child.  He asked, “Do you know your name?”  “My name is Julia Holcomb,” I answered.  He asked more questions and he was relieved to see that in spite of severe smoke inhalation I had not suffered brain damage.  The baby I was carrying also survived the fire.
Steven was there in my hospital room.  He said he was happy to see me alive and appeared very shaken.  Steven told me they had been taking my blood oxygen count from an artery in my wrist.  The last time the nurse had taken it, she had shed tears because she thought I would not make it, and said sadly “She’s so young.”  Steven told me the doctor did not expect me to live, and thought that if I lived there would be brain damage from the lack of oxygen.  He gave me a teddy bear and I clung to it.  He told me I had received many cards and flowers from people wishing me well.  I was too weary to talk and I drifted off again.
In the hospital a doctor came into my room and said that my lungs were remarkably clear of smoke damage.  He said Steven had spoken to him about the possibility of my having an abortion, since I was so young and recovering from smoke inhalation.  I was surprised and I asked him if the baby was OK.  He smiled and reassured me that the heartbeat sounded good and the baby seemed fine.  I told him I would not have an abortion.  I wanted my baby. The doctor was kind and supportive of my decision. He did not pressure me in any way. He asked me if I had taken drugs while I was pregnant.  I said, “Yes, sometimes.” (I did on occasion use cocaine but not to the degree that Steven was abusing.) The doctor told me that drugs were bad for me, and bad for the baby. He said I must not take any more while I was pregnant. I was so ashamed because I knew he was right.  I said, “OK” and intended to stop.
The Abortion
The doctor left the room and Steven came in.  He told me that I needed to have an abortion because of the smoke damage to my lungs and the oxygen deprivation I had suffered.  I said “No,” I wanted the baby.  I was five-months pregnant.  I could not believe he was even asking me to have an abortion at this stage.  He spent over an hour pressing me to go ahead and have the abortion.  He said that I was too young to have a baby and it would have brain damage because I had been in the fire and taken drugs.  I became very quiet and repeated the answer “No” more than once.  I said I should not be asked to make that decision while still in the hospital. He said I had to have the abortion now.  He said I was too far along to wait because it would be illegal for me to get an abortion in another week.
He sat beside my hospital bed, but we did not look at each other. I said no again. Finally he gave up and said, “OK, you can go home to your mother’s and have the baby there.”  I was worn out and began to feel hopeless.  My mother and stepfather would not be happy to have me return home pregnant.  I believed they would also want me to have an abortion.  I began to feel like life was caving in on me.  I had no health insurance or money and did not believe Steven intended to help provide for our baby or me.  He had not been providing medical care for me up to that time.  I believed he was abandoning me as my father and my mother had.  I began to cry and agreed to have the abortion. Steven was relieved and happy.  He reassured me that he cared for me and that after the abortion everything would be fine.
I was moved to another part of the hospital and a different doctor performed the abortion. It was a horrible nightmare I will never forget.  I was traumatized by the experience.  My baby had one defender in life; me, and I caved in to pressure because of fear of rejection and the unknown future.  I wish I could go back and be given that chance again, to say no to the abortion one last time.  I wish with all my heart I could have watched that baby live his life and grow to be a man.
The doctor did not explain what the procedure would be like. Steven watched when the doctor punctured my uterus with a large needle. Then I was taken to a room to wait for the contractions.  Steven sat beside me in the hospital until it was over.  When the nurse would leave the room he was snorting cocaine on the table beside my bed.  He even offered some to me once, but I just turned away, sick inside. Steven, high on cocaine, was emotionally detached, witnessing the procedure but cut off from the normal reaction and feelings of horror you would expect.  At the time I was shocked and hurt by his behavior.
But I know now that on an unconscious level, he must have been traumatized witnessing the death of his first-born son in such a horrific and direct way. Steven watched the baby come out and he told me later, when we were in New Hampshire, that it had been born alive and allowed to die.  (I was not allowed to see the baby when it was delivered.) Steven told me later that it had been a boy and that he now felt terrible guilt and a sense of dread over what he had done.  I did not know that such a thing could be legal.  I could not imagine a world where a tiny baby could be born alive and tossed aside as worthless without ever seeing his mother’s face.
Nothing was ever the same between us after that day, though I did not return home for over a year.  I became very quiet and withdrawn after the abortion.  I was grieving the loss of my baby and I could never look at Steven again without remembering what he had done to our son and me. I had just lived through a horrific fire that nearly claimed my life, but the abortion made me feel like part of me died with my baby.  I felt cheated and betrayed, and angry with myself for agreeing to something that I knew was wrong.  I felt deep anger and almost hatred for the doctor who performed the abortion.
Everyone around me seemed to be moving on with life, but I was carrying a wound that would not go away.  Steven was already involved with other women at that time. The fact that he was my guardian complicated things for him because he was legally responsible for me.  I was young, had dropped out of high school, and did not understand my legal rights at the time.  I felt completely powerless.
I left Steven in February 1977 and returned to live with my mother and stepfather. Steven called a few times after I returned home and then I never heard from him again.
Rising Out of the Ashes
The road to recovery was a slow process. When I returned home to my mother I was a broken spirit. I could not sleep at night without nightmares of the abortion and the fire. The world seemed like a dark place.  My mother and stepfather now had a handsome little boy.  He was a joy and I could not help but be happy when I was with him. My love for my half brother opened my heart toward my stepfather and I began to see that he was trying to be a good husband and father.
Mother had found that she missed the church and they were attending a United Methodist church in our area.  I began attending with them and I remember a turning point for me was a week-long church retreat in the summer at the Oregon coast.  There were young adults my own age, sing-alongs, campfires, Bible studies, prayer meetings, and I left there with a renewed sense of hope that God existed; He loved me in spite of my sins, and I could find forgiveness and a measure of real happiness within a family of my own if I began to rebuild my life.
Soon I was baptized. Mother helped me to get my GED, and I got my first job working as a receptionist.  I began to attend youth activities, and the church became a lifeline that pulled me out of the fog of grief, sorrow, and guilt after my years with Steven. I found forgiveness in Jesus. I forgave myself, I forgave my mother and stepfather, and I prayed for the grace to forgive Steven.
I gained the confidence to move out and enroll in college. I rented a room of my own from an elderly widow who lived near the campus.  That is when I met Joseph, who is now my husband.
My husband is my true hero. He has been a loving husband, a generous father, and hard-working provider for our family. My husband loves me and has forgiven me from his heart and has not let my past define his understanding of who I am as a person. If I had kept my baby I believe Joseph and I would still be married today, and our lives would be richer because of his presence in our family. God has been generous in giving us the joy of children and grandchildren who are a constant reminder of God’s presence in our life.  I am amazed at the way God has protected me over the years.
Today I am a pro-life Roman Catholic, the mother of seven children, and this year my husband and I will celebrate our 30th wedding anniversary.  Joseph and I have six children of our own, and I give thanks for each of them, as they are truly a gift from God.  We are also legal guardians to a beautiful little girl whose young mother made the choice for life in a difficult pregnancy, and then entrusted her to our care.
Joseph and I joined the Catholic Church, as adults through the RCIA process in 1992.  The Catholic Church’s teaching on respect for life, as well as the sacrament of confession, has brought me an even deeper level of healing and peace.  We have been active in ministries within the church that support the family, marriage and respect for life.
Setting the Record Straight
To set the record straight: I was never pregnant before I met Steven Tyler, nor did I ever have a previous abortion and Steven knows this to be true.  I do not believe I started the fire that burned his apartment, but I am thankful to God for the brave firemen who pulled me out of that burning building.  I never asked him for any money after I returned home.  I came to him with nothing and I left him with nothing, except regrets.  Although I presented myself to him in a highly sexualized way, we did not have sex in public places as he wrote in his new book.  His continued gross exaggeration of our relationship is puzzling to me. He has talked of me as a sex object without any human dignity.  I have made a point over these long years never to speak of him, yet he has repeatedly humiliated me in print with distortions of our time together. I do not understand why he has done this. It has been very painful.
Love Survives
In spite of everything, I do not hate Steven Tyler, nor am I personally bitter.  I pray for his sincere conversion of heart and hope he can find God’s grace. I know that I am also responsible for what happened that day. Someone may say that my abortion was justified because of my age, the drugs, and the fire. I do not believe anything can justify taking my baby’s life. The action is wrong. I pray that our nation will change its laws so that the lives of innocent unborn babies are protected.
I pray that all those who have had abortions, or have participated in any way in an abortion procedure, may find in my story, not judgment or condemnation, but a renewed hope in God’s steadfast love, forgiveness and peace.
Our nation’s young girls, especially those like me, who have experienced trauma and abuse, and are vulnerable to exploitation should not be used as sexual playthings, scarred by abortions to free their male partners from financial responsibility, and then like their unborn children, tossed aside as an unwanted object.
Marriage and the family are the building blocks of all virtuous societies.  I learned this lesson in a trial by fire that taught me to trust God’s plan no matter what occurs.  I pray that our nation may also find its way back to God by respecting the life of unborn children and strengthening the sanctity of marriage.
* * *
After I was out of the hospital and recovered from the fire, Steven Tyler brought me my picture of Jesus, The Light of the World, and gave it to me.  He said it was the only thing that had survived the fire.  It was covered with black soot, and the paper backing was singed, but I cleaned it and it is now hanging in the entry of my home.

I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.  (John 8, 12)

Sincerely,
Julia Holcomb
Kevin Burke, LSW, is a Pastoral Associate of Priests for Life and co-founder of Rachel’s Vineyard - a post abortion healing ministry of Priests For Life offering Weekend Retreats across the U.S. and around the world for post abortive mothers and fathers, siblings and grandparents suffering after abortion loss.  Kevin is author of Redeeming a Father’s Heart and can be reached at rachel@rachelsvineyard.org