Ryan T. Anderson & Alexandra DeSanctis National Review Online
Any day now, the Supreme Court could overrule Roe v. Wade, and thus allow us to protect unborn children and their mothers from the harms of abortion. In our forthcoming book, Tearing Us Apart, we argue that among its many harms, abortion poses significant risks to women, including the risk of emotional and psychological damage.
Most pro-choice activists, however, reject the idea that women ever suffer after undergoing an abortion. If abortion supporters acknowledge post-abortion regret at all, they dismiss it as the result of the supposed stigma surrounding abortion, which they claim causes women to feel guilty when they would otherwise be relieved.
Meanwhile, the best studies come to a rather different conclusion.
In an interview with Mark Levin, Stanley Kurtz warns listeners of the implications of the Civics Secures Democracy Act moving through Congress. (Segment begins at 49:05 mark.)
Patrick T. Brown joined Boyd Matheson of Inside Sources to discuss his recent piece on the lessons that today's populist GOP might learn from the collapse of compassionate conservatism.
Tearing Us Apart: How Abortion Harms Everything and Solves Nothing, the new book by EPPC President Ryan T. Anderson and Visiting Fellow Alexandra DeSanctis, exposes the false promises of the abortion movement and explains why it has made everything worse. With the Supreme Court poised to potentially reverse Roe v. Wade in the coming days, join Ryan and Alexandra for a happy hour and discussion of the book hosted by the Catholic Information Center next Wednesday, June 29.
On June 27, the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C., will also host an event for the launch of Ryan and Alexandra's book, cohosted with the National Review Institute. Ryan and Alexandra will discuss the themes of the book with Kathryn Lopez, Senior Fellow at the National Review Institute, and sign copies of their book after the event.