VOL. 26, No. 6, February 10, 2023
View this email in your browser [link removed] Period Pills Come to U.S.
Dear Colleague,
You have never heard of period pills, but they are on their way to the United States. They are used for "menstrual regulation" and are used to get around bans on abortion. They are used in Bangladesh and other countries. Rebecca Oas, Ph.D. reports [[link removed]].
In the backrooms of the United Nations, powerful countries lie to smaller states and say "non-binding resolutions do not have any legal effect, so go ahead and join the abortion and LGBT consensus." Stefano Gennarini J.D. explains [[link removed]] how this is a lie and how harmful so-called non-binding resolutions really are.
Help our work at [[link removed]].
Spread the word. Be daring. Keep the faith.
Austin Ruse
President
Subscribe to Friday Fax [[link removed]] Abortion-Inducing “Period Pills” Come to the U.S.
by Rebecca Oas, Ph.D.
WASHINGTON, D.C., February 10 (C-Fam) Since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a federal right to abortion, activists have been looking for ways to ensure abortion remains available, even if illegal in some states. One strategy—“missed period pills”—is unfamiliar to many in the U.S. but is widely used in Bangladesh as the result of a legal loophole. Read more >> [[link removed]]
ANALYSIS: How UN Resolutions Matter
By Stefano Gennarini, J.D.
NEW YORK, February 10 (C-Fam) It is often said that UN resolutions are not binding on sovereign states and therefore they are unimportant. U.S. diplomats at the United Nations know this not to be true. Read more >> [[link removed]]
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