A Voice For Truth -

Search

Home
Infographics
Videos
White Paper
Position Statement
COVID-19
Resources
About
Contact
A Voice For Truth -
  • Home
  • Infographics
  • Videos
  • White Paper
  • Position Statement
  • COVID-19
  • Resources
  • About
  • Contact
Christianity, Vaccines and abortion

Now that I know, what can I do? 10 attainable action steps.

June 15, 2023 by Admin No Comments

What Can I Do?

People sometimes contact me feeling overwhelmed or grieved about what they’re learning. They want to do something, but don’t know what to do or where to begin.

Here are some ideas to get you started; pick one (or more) action steps that resonate with you and then run with it!

Action Steps

1. Talk to Your Family and Friends

Share what you’re learning and offer resources if they’re interested in knowing more.

2. Contribute to Scientific Research

Financially support scientific research exploring ethical vaccines, treatments and products as well as research studying the dangers of using aborted fetal material in vaccines and other biologics. Funding for this type of independent research is important but difficult to obtain, which is why we have so little research that’s not potentially biased due to pharmaceutical funding. While large donations are certainly helpful, smaller donations from many people make an big impact! A great organization to consider contributing your money is Sound Choice Pharmaceutical. *Note: I am not affiliated with Sound Choice in any way and get nothing for recommending them. It’s an organization I believe is reputable and doing important work.

3. Communicate Directly to Pharmaceutical Manufacturers

Call or write pharmaceutical manufacturers, asking them for ethical vaccines and to stop using abortion-derived fetal cell lines in the manufacturing, production, and testing of their vaccines.

4. Educate Your Legislators

Call, email, and meet in person with your local, state and federal legislators.

5. Connect With State Medical Freedom Groups

Work with them to pass (or keep) religious exemptions to vaccines in your state.

6. Share Your Concerns With Your Doctor

Ask for alternative vaccines that do not use abortion-derived cell lines. Even though they might tell you there are no alternatives (this is the case in the US and some other countries), it raises awareness with medical practices who purchase from pharmaceutical companies.

7. Talk to Your Pastors, Religious Leaders, and Ministry Leaders

Raise their awareness of this aspect of the abortion industry. Prepare packets of information to give them. Our printable infographics, White Paper, and Vaccine Position Statement are a good place to start, as well as information from other reputable and informative websites listed on our resource page.

8. Meet With Like-Minded People

Share ideas, resources, and encouragement. Work together to reach and educate faith groups in your community.

9. Collaborate With Other Leaders

Religious leaders, religious/ministry organizations and church bodies have the unique opportunity to make public statements (as individuals and as corporate entities), which raise awareness and help make this a public issue. Collaborate with other leaders/churches/religious organizations by releasing unified statements, making a greater impact on congregants, constituents, political leaders, and pharmaceutical companies. Our Vaccine Position Statement might be a good starting point for crafting your own statement.

10. Pray

Pray for your family, friends, religious leaders, political leaders, pharmaceutical companies, and all those involved in procuring and using the fetal tissue for science.

Tips for Successful Conversations

Here are some things I’ve learned over the years (many times the hard way) that have contributed to less stressful and more positive conversations. I still remind myself about these things often.

  • Start slow. Present the information at a high level first, then go deeper with details if they show interest and ask questions.
  • Remember, you may feel led to share the information, but the Holy Spirit takes it from there. It’s not our place to force someone to believe or care about what we’re sharing.
  • Some people need a lot of time, reading and processing as they consider the information you bring them (sometimes weeks, months, or even years). Allow them to process at their own pace, but let them know you’re available if they have questions or want to discuss it further.
  • It’s okay not to have all the answers. That takes a lot of pressure off. Simply direct them to resources and websites you trust. They can read more and reach out to you or to those organizations with questions.
  • People may have a wide range of reactions… anything from denial, disbelief, shock, anger, deep grief and sadness, thinking you’re naive or crazy, calling you names, or even feeling personal shame over their own past abortion (that you might not know about).
  • This is a sensitive topic, so approach your discussions with humility and compassion.
  • Pray before the conversations and ask the Holy Spirit for discernment when sharing with others.

Please feel free to reach out if you have questions, need resources, or even if you have a successful conversation you want to share!

PRINT ARTICLE

Christianity, Vaccines and abortion

Newborn abortion survivor legislation at risk even as thousands celebrate March for Life

January 22, 2023 by Admin No Comments

Today we celebrate National Sanctity of Human Life Day, and the weeks leading up to it have been significant.

March for Life 2023

Thousands of pro-life Americans from across the country participated in the 50th Annual March for Life on Friday in Washington, DC. There’s a lot to celebrate this year with the overturning of Roe v. Wade last June and the response of 14 states passing laws either limiting or banning abortions.

Sadly, other states have responded equally strong in favor of death, some allowing abortions up to birth. The state of Colorado went so far as to promote an advertising campaign inviting women to travel from out of state to Colorado for abortions.

As a result of the Roe victory, our work is just beginning. It is now incumbent upon each state to pass abortion laws. Advocates for life are needed to make a difference in our own states, as well as at the Federal level.

Pro-life Legislation

Last week, the U.S. House approved H.R. 26, a bill requiring doctors to provide medical care to infants born alive after an attempted abortion. This is not the first time we’ve tried to pass a bill protecting infants surviving abortion. Four years ago, Congress tried to pass a similar bill, but it was voted down and failed to protect our children.

The 2023 Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act, which must pass the Senate next, states that an infant born alive after a failed abortion is, “a legal person for all purposes under the laws of the United States, and entitled to all the protections of such laws.” The bill goes on to say that any efforts made to kill an infant born alive should be considered “intentionally killing or attempting to kill a human being.”

That this bill is even necessary is mind-boggling. The fact that it requires legal clarification that killing a live infant is indeed “intentionally killing” a human being is heart-breaking.

Intentional killing and trafficking of newborn body parts

Why was the “intentional killing” of newborn abortion survivors addressed in last week’s legislation?

US Federal laws do not protect babies born alive during abortion procedures. Instead, the law allows abortion providers to leave newborns to die after failed abortions. Some abortion clinics go even further and are involved in intentionally harvesting organs from babies who are born alive.

Again, this is unfathomable. Yet, evidence of the intentional harvesting of the organs of newborn abortion survivors has been exposed time and again… even by Congress during the 2016 congressional hearings. More recent evidence came to light through the Sandra Merritt legal case.

Still, it continues.

Harvesting newborns’ organs seems like a barbaric practice found only in history books describing far less civilized societies.

What would prompt such evil in our country?
And, how are these organs being used anyway?

Follow the money

Following the money leads us to the medical industry.

One primary use of newborn’s organs/body parts is the research and development of vaccines, pharmaceuticals and medical disease research. It’s even relied upon to make fetal cell lines that are used to produce some vaccines, pharmaceutical drugs, and even consumer items like cosmetics, food flavor enhancers, and more.

As it turns out, the demand and financial incentives to continue this practice are entrenched in our medical system. Supplying babies’ organs to researchers is an industry in itself, and passing this bill would mean ending an entire industry.

Maybe we’ve been asking the wrong question

The reason many of us scratch our heads and strain to understand how anyone could vote against giving medical care to a newborn (no matter the circumstances of birth) is because we’re asking the wrong question. Instead of asking, “How could anyone withhold life-saving care to a newborn,” we should be asking, “What incentivizes legislators and industries to turn a blind eye to infanticide?”

On one side of the fight (largely driven by religious beliefs or morality), it’s about saving a child; but on the other side, it’s about saving a lucrative industry that undergirds the multi-billion dollar medical industry. Again, let’s follow the money… there are those with religious convictions fighting to save preborn/newborn babies’ lives, or those profiting from the medical and pharmaceutical industries, not to mention the abortion industry itself. It is quite clear where the financial incentive lies.

Consequently, Congress has introduced bills in the past and they have failed… and H.R. 26 may be on the verge of failing too.

If we are to successfully fight for life, we must bring to light these underlying motives for voting against lifesaving legislation, and share this truth with our lawmakers.

How can you help?

Know. Share. Live.

KNOW the truth. Understand the underlying impetus for our country’s failure to pass pro-life legislation

SHARE the truth. Share this underlying reason with others (lawmakers, friends, and family)

LIVE in light of the truth. Make choices with the whole picture in mind (for example, on a personal level, making mindful medical decisions based on your knowledge of products that use ingredients you find morally offensive)


And most importantly, PRAY.

Action Steps

H.R. 26 passed the House and goes to the Senate next, where pro-life lawmakers are not the majority.

Therefore, it’s important that you contact your U.S. senators today. Urge them to protect innocent newborns who survive abortions by supporting the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act. We need to pass the bill this time!

Also, consider contacting all members of the Senate Judiciary Committee (those names listed in red below), asking them to bring this bill up for consideration.

The list of senators below is alphabetized by state. Click on your senator’s name to go to his/her email form. If you prefer to communicate by phone, call the US Capitol switchboard at 202.224.3121 and request to speak to your senator.

2023 U.S. Senators

If you experience trouble with any links, you can look up all senators here.

Alabama

Richard Shelby (R)

Tommy Tuberville (R)

Alaska

Lisa Murkowski (R)

Dan Sullivan (R)

Arizona
Mark Kelly (D)

Kyrsten Sinema (D)

Arkansas

John Boozman (R)

Tom Cotton (R)

California

Dianne Feinstein (D)

Alex Padilla (D)

Colorado

Michael Bennet (D)

John Hickenlooper (D)

Connecticut

Richard Blumenthal (D)

Chris Murphy (D)

Delaware

Tom Carper (D)

Chris Coons (D)

Florida

Marco Rubio (R)

Rick Scott (R)

Georgia

Jon Ossoff (D)

Raphael Warnock (D)

Hawaii
Mazie Hirono (D)

Brian Schatz (D)

Idaho
Mike Crapo (R)
Jim Risch (R)

Illinois

Tammy Duckworth (D)

Dick Durbin (D)

Indiana

Mike Braun (R)

Todd Young (R)

Iowa

Joni Ernst (R)

Chuck Grassley (R)

Kansas

Roger Marshall (R)

Jerry Moran (R)

Kentucky

Mitch McConnell (R)

Rand Paul (R)

Louisiana

Bill Cassidy (R)

John Kennedy (R)

Maine

Susan Collins (R)

Angus King (I)

Maryland

Ben Cardin (D)

Chris Van Hollen (D)

Massachusetts

Ed Markey (D)

Elizabeth Warren (D)

Michigan

Gary Peters (D)

Debbie Stabenow (D)

Minnesota

Amy Klobuchar (D)

Tina Smith (D)

Mississippi

Cindy Hyde-Smith (R)

Roger Wicker (R)

Missouri

Roy Blunt (R)

Josh Hawley (R)

Montana

Steve Daines (R)

Jon Tester (D)

Nebraska

Deb Fischer (R)

Ben Sasse (R)

Nevada

Catherine Cortez Masto (D)

Jacky Rosen (D)

New Hampshire

Maggie Hassan (D)

Jeanne Shaheen (D)

New Jersey

Cory Booker (D)

Bob Menendez (D)

New Mexico

Martin Heinrich (D)

Ben Luján (D)

New York

Chuck Schumer (D)

Kirsten Gillibrand (D)

North Carolina

Richard Burr (R)

Thom Tillis (R)

North Dakota

Kevin Cramer (R)

John Hoeven (R)

Ohio

Sherrod Brown (D)

Rob Portman (R)

Oklahoma

Jim Inhofe (R)

James Lankford (R)

Oregon

Jeff Merkley (D)

Ron Wyden (D)

Pennsylvania

Bob Casey (D)

Pat Toomey (R)

Rhode Island

Jack Reed (D)

Sheldon Whitehouse (D)

South Carolina

Lindsey Graham (R)

Tim Scott (R)

South Dakota

Mike Rounds (R)

John Thune (R)

Tennessee

Marsha Blackburn (R)

Bill Hagerty (R)

Texas

John Cornyn (R)

Ted Cruz (R)

Utah

Mike Lee (R)

Mitt Romney (R)

Vermont

Patrick Leahy (D)

Bernie Sanders (I)

Virginia

Tim Kaine (D)

Mark Warner (D)

Washington

Maria Cantwell (D)

Patty Murray (D)

West Virginia

Shelley Moore Capito (R)

Joe Manchin (D)

Wisconsin

Tammy Baldwin (D)

Ron Johnson (R)

Wyoming

John Barrasso (R)

Cynthia Lummis (R)

Christianity, COVID-19 Vaccine, Vaccines and abortion

Why the blackout on fetal tissue research among pro-lifers?

February 9, 2022 by Admin No Comments

The pro-life movement is arguably stronger than ever in the US. We’ve been energized by recent court decisions and hopes of overturning Roe v. Wade.  But, are we prepared to see how deep the evil really goes? Note: The following article originally appeared in Crisis Magazine on January 31, 2022, and is reprinted with permission.


The recent Roe v. Wade anniversary featured pro-life gatherings from the March for Life in Washington, D.C., to San Francisco’s West Coast Walk for Life, to a host of smaller events. Thousands braved frigid temperatures and cumbersome restrictions to stand for life. However, amidst the prayers and speeches to commemorate the 49th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, one group was quietly excluded.

A neglected subset of the abortion holocaust, the victims of fetal tissue research make us so very uncomfortable that, in the name of showing a unified face to the world, the pro-life movement focused instead on the big picture, the easily understandable messages: “Abortion Kills Babies” and “Love them both.”

Among ourselves, we need to ask why—on the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, no less—we were so reluctant to talk about the abortions that have purchased our vaccines? Why, in a year when millions will receive abortion-derived vaccines, did we not remember the victims of fetal tissue harvesting, mourn them, and call for ethical alternatives? This should have been their moment. What a tragic waste of an opportunity.

In their memory, I offer here a tutorial on fetal-tissue research and its connection to the vaccine industry.

Over the past year, the basic facts of COVID-19 vaccines and fetal cell lines have become familiar to most of us. Two elective abortions, decades ago, are responsible for cell lines used to develop or test today’s COVID-19 vaccines. These cell lines are “immortal.” Hence, “no more abortions” will be required. Many explanations hasten to remind us “this is not new technology.”

The basic formula is designed to reassure our consciences: two elective abortions, decades ago. Immortal cell lines. No more abortions. And, finally, it is not new technology, so why the outrage? To understand the true cost of our COVID-19 vaccines, we must unpack this explanation phrase by phrase.

“Only two abortions.” It is true that all COVID-19 vaccines available today use cell lines derived from two abortions. Cell lines, unlike primary cell cultures, can be grown and further multiplied indefinitely once established. HEK 293, used in the development of the Pfizer, Moderna, and AstraZeneca vaccines, was derived from the kidneys of a baby girl of three-months’ gestation aborted in the Netherlands in 1972. PER.C6, used in the development of the Johnson and Johnson vaccine, was derived from the retinas of a baby aborted at 18-weeks’ gestation in 1985.

Yet to say that today’s COVID-19 vaccines are derived from only two abortions is to vastly oversimplify. These abortions were not isolated events. The truth is, the pharmaceutical industry, and the vaccine industry in particular, have benefited from abortion since the 1930s. Long before Roe v. Wade, eugenics laws mandated sterilization for women deemed unfit to reproduce. Abortions were frequently done in tandem with sterilizations. Without running afoul of the law, facilities such as New York’s Bellevue Hospital for “insane and feebleminded women” provided aborted babies for researchers like polio vaccine pioneer Dr. Albert Sabin. Medical literature makes no secret of this.

The creation of a successful human fetal cell line is not a neat science: it may require dozens of abortions. In the late 1960s, scientists Leonard Hayflick and Stanley Plotkin documented 32 abortions in attempts to create the successful WI-38 cell line used for the rubella vaccine. Significantly, Plotkin also documented 27 abortions in his effort to isolate the rubella virus. The resulting virus strain was named from the series: “RA 27/3” indicates “rubella abortus, twenty-seventh fetus, third tissue extract.” These lives were cheap; another 40 babies were then dissected to obtain further virus samples. Thus, at least 99 elective abortions were reported in the research and production of the rubella vaccine.

Similarly, we may assume that the two infants who gave their lives for HEK 293 and PER.C6 were the “successful” ones. They represent the vaccine industry’s longstanding, unscrupulous reliance on the abortion industry.

“Elective abortions.” We are reminded that the abortions in question were elective: a subtle appeal to altruism. While we can’t undo the tragic decision to abort a baby, thankfully we can allow something good to come of the tragedy, the argument goes.

Again, part of this statement is true, but the reality is more nuanced. In the world of fetal tissue research, researchers and abortionists work together to obtain viable tissue. According to biologist and former vaccine researcher Pamela Acker, quoted in Catholic World Report, the process “has to be done in a methodical kind of way in order to obtain the kind of tissue—live tissue—that will be successful for this kind of research.” Spontaneous abortions—miscarriages—are generally not a good source of fetal tissue because the baby frequently dies at an undetermined time before delivery.

Today, prostaglandin abortion is the method of choice when fetal organs are to be harvested. In a prostaglandin abortion, drugs cause uterine contractions and induce labor. The goal is to deliver an intact baby. Feticides like digoxin are not used because they could contaminate fetal tissue. Therefore, the baby is likely delivered alive.

To be clear: when fetal tissue is harvested for transplant or cell culture, the abortion and the harvesting process cannot be said to be different processes. The abortion must be arranged in such a way as to provide the desired organs intact. The baby is, in all likelihood, born alive and—in chilling words one sees over and over in scientific literature on the subject—“dissected immediately.”

“Decades ago.” The implied corollary is “we don’t do that anymore.” The oft-repeated phrase emphasizes remoteness: remote in terms of moral cooperation; remote in years; remote in the assumption, voiced by one bioethicist last year, that “these evils are in the past.”

Certainly, the 1960s and early 70s were a kind of moral Wild West when it came to fetal tissue research. Scientists and journalists were surprisingly frank, even matter of fact. Horror stories began to surface, documented by Suzanne Rini in her 1988 book Beyond Abortion: A Chronicle of Fetal Experimentation: research on live aborted babies in Sweden; still moving babies packed on ice in Pittsburgh to be shipped to the lab; dissection of a live baby for experimentation at Yale.

The public outcry led to Congressional hearings in the United States and a temporary moratorium on fetal tissue research for transplantation. Other areas of fetal tissue research were not impacted, however. And it would be naive to think that after Roe v. Wade the scientific establishment suddenly felt pangs of conscience about its work with aborted babies; on the contrary, it simply became more discreet about its methods, which continue to this day.

While federal restrictions wax and wane depending on who occupies the White House, there is ample evidence that barbaric practices remain the norm, not the exception, when it comes to fetal tissue research. That includes continued development of human fetal cell lines, despite the common misconception that immortalized cell lines, like a fountain of youth, negate the need for new cell lines.

“Immortal” cell lines: no new abortions needed? Can we separate the past creation of HEK 293 and PER.C6 from the atrocities still occurring in the name of fetal tissue research? This seems to be a legitimate question: given the “immortality” of the cell lines used for COVID-19 vaccines, does benefiting from these vaccines feed a demand for further abortions?

As a side note, many vaccines are derived from human fetal cell lines that are not immortal. Common vaccines for polio, chickenpox, and other diseases are derived from the WI-38 and MRC-5 cell lines, neither of which are immortal, although they can admittedly produce an almost unlimited number of cells from a single source.

The so-called immortal cell lines are “particularly successful,” says Acker. They have mutated or been modified to have a much longer lifespan. Nonetheless, scientists acknowledge the term “immortal” is misleading. While immortalized cells may live for a large number of cell cultures, “they won’t live forever.” Acker adds, “They will eventually die and you will no longer be able to subculture them. And at that point you will need another cell line.” In addition, both types of cell lines can “accumulate mutations after replicating in vitro over time.”

Thus the continued need for human fetal cell lines, both finite and immortalized. The current catalogue includes cell lines created from the 1960s through 2015, when Chinese scientists created a new human fetal cell line, Walvax-2, because of concerns about the aging MRC-5 cell line. Their goal was to use the new human diploid cell line in the mass production of vaccines. Walvax-2 involved nine abortions.

Ultimately, a baby girl of three months’ gestation supplied the successful cells.

The abortion industry and its allies confidently anticipate greater demand for fetal tissue: “Scientists are confident that fetal tissue is key to more preventive medicine, new vaccines and identifying treatments for today’s most devastating conditions; research continues, and its course is impacted by global health threats.” That statement, which seems prophetic in light of today’s pandemic, is from the 2016 amici curiae brief in the National Abortion Federation’s suit against David Daleiden’s Center for Medical Progress. Every dose of abortion-derived vaccine validates its claim.

Not new technology. What about the reminder “This is not new technology”? Fetal cell lines have been around for many years, used to develop and test many products, pharmaceutical and otherwise. Why are they controversial now? If we reject abortion-tainted vaccines, must we reject a host of other products? Some make this argument disingenuously, listing medications discovered long before fetal cell lines existed. However, a myriad of products do have some connection to fetal cell lines, particularly the ubiquitous HEK 293. It is virtually impossible to identify and boycott them all.

Yet today’s situation is unique. One type of product, with a clear connection to fetal tissue research, is being urged on an entire population. Ultimately, the vaccine industry, like any other, is about making money. Why are we neglecting this opportunity, in the 2005 words of the Pontifical Council for Life, to “make life difficult for the pharmaceutical industries which act unscrupulously and unethically”?

One more thing must be said concerning vaccines and human fetal cell lines. There is strong evidence that infants used for fetal cell lines are not dead at the time of organ harvesting. This is based both on circumstantial evidence—years of documentation in the industry’s own words—and on the principle that living tissue must come from living organs.

The late, eminent Spanish physician and bioethicist Dr. Gonzalo Herranz summed it up in Vivisection or Science, by Italian scientist Pietro Croce: “[T]o obtain embryo cells for culture, a programmed abortion must be adopted, choosing the age of the embryo and dissecting it while still alive in order to remove tissues to be placed in culture media.”

When I began to investigate this shocking claim last year, I was surprised to find that people had been writing about it for years. When the question of abortion-tainted COVID-19 vaccines arose, it was as if there had been a collective memory wipe, and the debate was begun afresh. What had happened? I believe the answer is found in the dehumanizing language of the pro-abortion movement. Sadly, we have grown accustomed to hearing the term “viable”—able to sustain life outside the womb—used interchangeably with “alive.”

Bioethicist Paul Ramsey, whose book The Ethics of Fetal Research detailed gruesome experiments that came to light in the early 70s, commented that for scientists, “Prospective viability was the only characteristic of humanness or sign of life to be respected in the unborn.”

Language shapes our thinking. From Roe v. Wade through Planned Parenthood v. Casey to Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the line of viability has muddied our thinking on abortion. That is why we hesitate to believe stories of aborted infants dissected alive. To pro-lifers, killing a baby outside the womb is infanticide. Killing a baby by removal of its organs is vivisection. We forget we are not speaking the same language as our opponents. If a pre-viable baby is “pre-alive,” whether it is killed in the womb or killed by harvesting its organs is inconsequential.

Repeat something often enough, with enough confidence, and people will begin to doubt their own intelligence in the matter. Nowhere is this more obvious than fetal-tissue research.

Research on live, non-viable fetuses continues to obtain tissue for transplant or research. If restrictions are burdensome, it may take place without federal funding, by going overseas, or by obscuring the critical few minutes between delivery of the baby and the time the tissue is sent to the lab. In the words of author Suzanne Rini, “Researchers…who receive tissues from hysterotomy and from second trimester abortions by methods notorious for producing live babies, too glibly state that their tissues come from ‘dead fetuses.’ There is an intermediate stage about which few will talk.”

Information on fetal tissue research is often cloaked in language that means little to the average reader. For instance, a 2011 report in the journal Liver Transplantation describes “in situ vascular perfusion of human FLs [fetal livers] at 18 weeks of gestation and later.” It describes the “tissue dissociation” and subsequent liver removal in detail. Translation: after abortion, liver tissue was removed from 15 living babies. This research made it into the textbooks: page 283 of Hepatocyte Transplantation, to be precise, which describes the procedure more accurately as a “five-step in vivo perfusion method by umbilical vein cannulation to isolate liver cells from fetuses at the late second trimester.” Note the phrase in vivo (“in the living”).

While the procedure described above was done in the name of transplantation, not cell culture, the rationale is identical: obtaining the freshest tissue possible.

Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, during oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, sparked outrage when she compared the unborn to brain-dead patients. Her artless statement was actually a moment of truth. Like the brain-dead, aborted babies make excellent organ donors. A pre-viable infant organ donor may be outside the womb, breathing, heart beating, but for all intents and purposes, he or she is dead.

Downplaying the brutal facts of fetal tissue harvesting supports the dehumanizing of the aborted child. It buys into the abortion timeline that defines a baby as a non-person as soon as its mother decides to kill that baby.

The Catholic Church made headlines last year with its repeated assurance that Catholics could accept abortion-tainted vaccines. Little attention was given to protesting abortion-tainted vaccines or demanding ethical alternatives—perhaps a tacit admission that letters mean little, while money talks. Now the subject of these vaccines is so charged that it cannot or will not be mentioned at pro-life events. This gives the lie to those who think we can simultaneously accept tainted vaccines and protest their use.

We walked for life January 22nd in cities across the United States. Here in Los Angeles, OneLife LA organizers asked me, politely, to leave my “no abortion-tainted vaccines” signs at home. Shining a light on the most horrific corners of a horrific industry would have to wait. Clearly, it is a stumbling block.

By Monica Seeley

COVID-19 Vaccine, Vaccines and abortion

COVID-19 Resources and Information

March 31, 2021 by Admin No Comments

VFT has new COVID-19 content and resources to share with you! In fact, there’s an entire page dedicated to COVID-19. Here’s some of what you’ll find:

  • Important facts about COVID-19 shots. Since no two people are created alike, informed consent is a critical component in making the best healthcare decisions for you and your family.
  • Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson’s clinical trials are still in progress. Get the clinical trial timelines for each phase in relation to when each vaccine was authorized for mass use.
  • Credible resources with information that will help you research and better understand COVID-19 vaccines.
  • Information about abortion-tainted COVID-19 vaccines

We will continue to add resources and information to this page, so please check back often.

Languages

  • English
    • Deutsch (German)
    • Nederlands (Dutch)

Wondering about vaccines & abortion? Watch these.

https://avoicefortruth.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Abortion-vaccines-video.mp4

“It’s Ok” from Choice42.com

Popular Articles

COVID-19 Vaccines using aborted fetal cell lines

COVID-19 Vaccines using aborted fetal cell lines

April 23, 2020
Abortion, the human fetal cell industry and vaccines

Abortion, the human fetal cell industry and vaccines

October 31, 2019
COVID-19 Vaccines prompt requests to lift fetal tissue research ban

COVID-19 Vaccines prompt requests to lift fetal tissue research ban

April 30, 2020
     SIGN the Vaccine
     Position Statement

Let’s Connect!



Recent Articles

Now that I know, what can I do? 10 attainable action steps.

Now that I know, what can I do? 10 attainable action steps.

June 15, 2023
Newborn abortion survivor legislation at risk even as thousands celebrate March for Life

Newborn abortion survivor legislation at risk even as thousands celebrate March for Life

January 22, 2023
Why the blackout on fetal tissue research among pro-lifers?

Why the blackout on fetal tissue research among pro-lifers?

February 9, 2022
2021 Update: COVID-19 vaccines using aborted fetal cell lines

2021 Update: COVID-19 vaccines using aborted fetal cell lines

November 14, 2021
Help with requesting religious exemptions from vaccinations

Help with requesting religious exemptions from vaccinations

August 24, 2021
Taxpayers to fund human fetal tissue research from abortion… again

Taxpayers to fund human fetal tissue research from abortion… again

April 18, 2021
COVID-19 Resources and Information

COVID-19 Resources and Information

March 31, 2021
Rushed vaccines that harmed and failed Americans? We’ve been here before.

Rushed vaccines that harmed and failed Americans? We’ve been here before.

February 25, 2021
The beauty and burden of the knowledge of evil

The beauty and burden of the knowledge of evil

September 19, 2020
COVID-19 Vaccines prompt requests to lift fetal tissue research ban

COVID-19 Vaccines prompt requests to lift fetal tissue research ban

April 30, 2020

Categories

  • Christianity
  • COVID-19 Vaccine
  • Vaccines and abortion

Tags

abortion Abortion-derived fetal cell lines adverse events adverse reactions Bible catholic Christian christians conscience protections conscientious objections coronavirus COVID-19 COVID-19 vaccines COVID-19 vaccines and christianity death DNA employer vaccine mandates evil fetal cell lines Fetal DNA fetal tissue fetal tissue research health human trafficking legislation March for life pro-life religion religious exemption safety satan science scientific research vaccine debate vaccine exemption vaccine mandates vaccines vaccine safety

Archives

  • June 2023
  • January 2023
  • February 2022
  • November 2021
  • August 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • September 2020
  • April 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • October 2019
  • January 2019
© 2019 - 2025 A Voice For Truth • All Rights Reserved
  • English
  • Deutsch
  • Nederlands