64% of the registered Irish Electorate turned out to vote on May 25. 66% of whom voted to repeal the 8th Amendment.
So on the empirical basis of significantly less than half of the 3 million plus electorate voting for repeal,the supporters of " Together4Yes " and corporate MSM everywhere declared a " landslide victory " for the proponents of unrestricted,state-approved extermination of the pre-birth humans.
The British Prime Minister,referred to in one news report as , " a practising christian " (seriously!) immediately congratulated those who'd campaigned for the Repeal of the 8th.Amendment. She was followed in short order by an unruly stampede of PC metropolitan-based virtue-signalling well wishers.Hardly any time had passed when all the major and minor UK parties called,in one way or another,officially or otherwise in the media for Northern Ireland to amend its laws on abortion to bring it in line with that foreign country on its southern border.
As an inveterate campaigner for the protection of the inalienable rights of pre-birth humans, I found that Peter Hitchen's views and assessment of the issue,from the Mail on Sunday of 3 June sum up incisively all that I want to say.
03 June 2018 1:58 AM
" This is pretty much the end of Christian Europe. The old Commandment 'Thou Shalt Do No Murder' has been repealed, by the Irish vote to legalise abortion on demand.
There has always been some leeway about killing – mainly self-defence and Just War. But the great religion that formed European civilisation was always against the destruction of innocent life.
What follows isn't an argument about whether or even when abortion is right or wrong. I'll leave that to you. It is about what abortion is, and how the law works.
Oddly enough, when Britain relaxed its abortion laws 50 years ago, the issue wasn't as clear-cut as it was for Ireland last month. In the 1960s, we knew far less about unborn babies than we do now. There were no ultrasound scans.
The miracles of medicine which nowadays frequently save tiny premature babies were unknown.
It was much easier for supporters of abortion to believe that unborn babies weren't really human – a belief they spread by their use of the chilly Latin word 'foetus'. They don't use Latin to describe anything else in their lives, so why do they use it in this case?
It was also possible to claim, as the legalisers did, that making abortion easier wouldn't turn it into a form of contraception.
Back in the 1960s, they argued it was all about a small number of desperate women forced against their will to have babies through no real choice of their own.
Who believes that now, when Britain has 180,000 abortions a year, many of them involving women who have undergone the procedure more than once before?
There was also a claim that there were many thousands of dangerous back-street abortions. But seek facts on this, and you will run into trouble.
At the time, the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (in the British Medical Journal of April 2, 1966) said of such claims: 'These are without any secure factual foundation of which we are aware.'
They said there were, on average, 50 fatal abortion attempts each year in England and Wales. This was undoubtedly tragic and gruesome, but did it really justify legalising abortion on demand?
Most people don't realise that before 1967 many legal abortions were already taking place in Britain (about 3,000 a year in NHS hospitals, probably many more in private clinics), just much more tightly regulated.
In short, Ireland has no real excuse for rushing to copy this country, which had taken its decision on the basis of several false assumptions, and in some ignorance of the facts about the unborn.
We went too far and still can't work out what to do about it. And Ireland had plenty of reasons to pause, or be a good deal more cautious.
But this was just as much about the overthrow of Ireland's Christian past as it was about abortion.
For good reasons and bad, much of Ireland has turned its back on its own faith. And, like the rest of Europe, it has embraced the new religion of Selfism, whose chief commandment is 'Nobody has any right to tell me what to do with my own body'.
You can see why people might want to punish the Roman Catholic Church, which has certainly allowed and hidden sexual abuse and brutality.
But these things are not unknown in secular liberal organisations, from children's homes and old people's care homes to the BBC and the police.
Abortion has become a rallying point for the Selfist faith, a test of the new post-Christian version of virtue. How else can we explain the mad calls (many of them from 'Conservative' politicians in this country) to force Northern Ireland to follow suit?
These demands make no sense at all. The whole point of Ireland is that it is separate from the UK.
The whole point of devolved government in Stormont is that Northern Ireland makes its own rules on such things.
If Northern Ireland decides to relax its abortion laws, then the fact that Ireland has done so has no bearing on the matter at all.
The truth is that modern abortion campaigners are fervent dogmatists who impose their new ideology everywhere, on any excuse. They know the truth about it. But they don't mind. They want a very different world from the one we grew up in, and now they are going to get it.
And once one vulnerable, voiceless minority has been classified as less than human, who will be next? "
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