The Squad Has a Meltdown Over Pro-Terrorism Encampments Getting Dismantled
New Polling Shows the Left's Climate Change Hysteria Losing Steam
Joe Biden Just Lost Another Battle With His Teleprompter
Biden's Use of TikTok Cited to Support Company's Lawsuit Against the Government
The 2024 Pulitzer Prizes Show the Focus Is Less on Journalism and More...
Police Officer Stuck in BLM Nightmare
Prosecutor Leading Stormy Daniels Questioning In Trump Trial Is a Major Biden Donor
Trump Finds Brilliant Way to Sidestep Judge Merchan's Unconstitutional Gag Order
Lloyd Austin Confirms Delay in Aid to Israel: 'We’ve Paused One Shipment of...
Here’s Why This Democrat Rep Thinks NPR Is 'Necessary’ for Americans
Department of Education's Move Forces Jewish Groups to Pull Out of Meeting
Sickening: 'Newcomer' Illegal Immigrant Arrested in Florida for Heinous Crime
The IRA Is Punishing Small Businesses and Putting Cancer Patients at Risk
House Dems Are Asking for Executive Action on the Border, but KJP of...
Boeing Cargo Plane Forced to Make Emergency Landing After Gear Fails
Tipsheet

After Georgetown Wouldn't Budge on Letting Cecile Richards Speak, Pro-Lifers Schedule a Speech of Their Own

The president of Planned Parenthood, Cecile Richards, is scheduled to address Georgetown University on April 20. She was invited to speak by the Lecture Fund, a student-run organization on campus. Perhaps unsurprisingly, her invitation to speak at a Catholic university drew controversy, and the Archdiocese of Washington issued a statement lamenting that the student group was not adhering to Catholic morality on a Catholic campus.

Advertisement

Rather than stamp their feet and try to get Richards' speech canceled, Georgetown Right to Life, a pro-life student group, is hosting a lecture of their own to counter Richards: former Planned Parenthood employee-turned-pro-life-advocate Abby Johnson. Johnson worked at Planned Parenthood (and was even named "Employee of the Year" at her clinic in 2008) until resigning in 2009 and devoting her life to ending abortion. Johnson runs "And Then There Were None," a ministry for former abortion workers like herself.

Georgetown Right to Life's president feels as though Johnson's story will help to shed light on the truth behind Planned Parenthood's mission and will offer a positive message of love.

“Abby Johnson has personal experience at Planned Parenthood, and will reveal what the organization is really all about. It is important students learn about Planned Parenthood’s careless disregard for human life, and why Planned Parenthood is bad for women and children,” said Michael Khan, president of Georgetown Right to Life, an affiliate of the national pro-life youth organization Students for Life of America, and the group hosting Abby Johnson. “Amidst media bias and abortion defenders, Abby provides clarity to this debate and will offer a positive, life-affirming message of hope and love that defends the most defenseless.”

Advertisement

Kudos to the students of Georgetown Right to Life for respectfully taking matters in to their own hands when faced with a situation they didn't like.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement