By ERIK SCHELZIG-NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Legislation introduced in Tennessee would require death certificates for aborted fetuses, which likely would create public records identifying women who have abortions.
Rep. Stacey Campfield, a Republican, said his bill would provide a way to track how many abortions are performed. He predicted it would pass in the Republican-controlled Senate but would have a hard time making it through the Democratic House. "All these people who say they are pro-life _ at least we would see how many lives are being ended out there by abortions," said Campfield. The number of abortions reported to the state Office of Vital Records is already publicly available. The office collects records _ but not death certificates _ on abortions and the deaths of fetuses after 22 weeks gestation or weighing about 1 pound. The identities of the women who have abortions are not included in those records, but death certificates include identifying information such as Social Security numbers. Campfield's bill, introduced Monday, would give abortion providers 10 days following an "induced termination of a pregnancy" to file a death certificate. House Judiciary Chairman Rob Briley, a Democrat, called Campfield's proposal "the most preposterous bill I've seen" in ... more »
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Saturday, February 17
by
Jodie A.
on Sat 17 Feb 2007 06:01 PM EST
by
Jodie A.
on Sat 17 Feb 2007 05:55 PM EST
Several years of epic events have witnessed a growing number of the world's population wondering if something prophetic is transpiring.First came 9/11 and the beginning of the war on terror. Then a tsunami in Asia killed approximately 250,000 people. Hurricanes Katrina, Wilma, and an earthquake In South Asia followed, which claimed tens of thousands more lives. 2006 witnessed leaders of countries referencing terms like "Apocalypse" and "Armageddon" to describe the uneasy times. 2007 has started out with record snowfalls in parts of the US, the national weather service is predicting even more blizzards, and experts warn that a deadly avian flu virus could pass over to the human population at any time in a full-blown pandemic, potentially bringing global markets to their knees.It's enough to make anybody wonder what in the world is going on.For many folk, these are the signs of the End Times.Over at RaptureReady.com, a popular website that serves as a kind of Dow Jones Industrial Average of end time activity, the "Rapture Index" is hovering at 160, a rating meant to indicate when loyal Christians will disappear from earth just before the beginning of the Great Tribulation. The website keeps tally of a wide variety of ... more »
by
Jodie A.
on Sat 17 Feb 2007 05:39 PM EST
Democrat leaders in Congress vow they'll move to block President Bush from invading Iran, but Pentagon officials say that won't be necessary, because they have no active plans for a ground attack. In fact, officials tell WND they have war-gamed a full-blown invasion and ruled it out because of the difficult terrain in Iran, a mountainous fortress compared to Iraq. "It's a non-starter," said one official. He explains Iran is ringed virtually 360 degrees by towering mountains, and even if they were passable by artillery units, unstable salt flats and high desert wastelands stand between those mountains and Tehran, the capital. "The Great Salt Desert outside Tehran is hundreds of miles of dry lakebeds that ooze a black sticky mud that's a lot like quicksand," he said. "It won't support tanks and artillery." It was in the Great Salt Desert, known locally as the Dasht-e Kavir, that the 1980 military mission to rescue American hostages in Tehran was aborted. Dust storms blinded pilots and caused a U.S. helicopter to crash into a C-130 transport plane, killing eight crew members.
by
Publisher
on Fri 16 Feb 2007 11:08 PM CST
by Rabbi Shraga Simmons
Shabbat is an anywhere-in-the-world, expense-free holy-time vacation. A Jewish riddle: Some mitzvot we perform through the act of eating (e.g. matzah on Passover), while other mitzvahs we perform by thinking (e.g. Torah study). Some mitzvahs we perform by speaking (e.g. the Shema), while others we perform by hearing (e.g. the Shofar on Rosh Hashana). But there are certain mitzvot we perform by immersing ourselves totally -- i.e. where our body is completely surrounded by the mitzvah. Try to guess what they are before reading on... FOUR IMMERSIONS There are four mitzvahs that involve total bodily immersion: 1) Sukkah - on the holiday of Sukkot, the mitzvah is to be completely enveloped by dwelling in a Sukkah. 2) Mikveh - at appropriate times, we completely immerse ourselves in the purifying waters of the Mikveh. 3) Land of Israel - it is a mitzvah to be physically located in the Land of Israel. These three are similar in that they are all immersions in a particular place. The fourth answer? Shabbos. When Shabbos comes, we immerse in a new dimension, a dimension of time. In this way, Shabbos is qualitatively different. Rather than a holy "place" that we ... more »
by
Publisher
on Fri 16 Feb 2007 11:05 PM CST
by Natan Sharansky
Anti-Semitism has leapfrogged from isolated attacks against Jews to incitement to genocide -- the actual elimination of the Jewish state. Just over three years ago, at the first-ever global forum on anti-Semitism organized by the State of Israel, the essential task was to define the beast -- the new anti-Semitism. Since then, as the fourth such global gathering meets this week, efforts to incorporate the "three-D" distinction between legitimate criticism of Israel and the new anti-Semitism -- demonization, double standards and delegitimization -- have become part of international documents and discourse. These and other accomplishments, as important as they are, have been dwarfed by the quantum leap anti-Semitism itself has taken. It has leapfrogged from isolated attacks against Jews to incitement to genocide -- the actual elimination of the Jewish state. This shift has come in the form of a pincer movement. On one side, we have the Iranian regime, which is denying the Holocaust and calling for Israel to be "wiped off the map," while racing to develop the physical means of doing so. On the other side, we have what is, in effect, international silence in response, coupled with growing willingness to discuss Israel's existence ... more »
by
Publisher
on Fri 16 Feb 2007 11:03 PM CST
By MATT GUTMAN
RAMALLAH, West Bank, Feb. 16, 2007 — - Ramallah's rich and politically connected have their anxiety focused on Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's upcoming visit. One of the people bustling about town was Abdel Jawad Saleh, a former Palestinian minister. "The Palestinians are like a drowning man," he said, "hanging on by a thread. And that thread is Condoleezza Rice." Many hope that the summit might keep the Mideast from sinking into further violence. Yet they are glumly certain that Rice's summit with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas is destined to fail. All the parties need to notch a success when Rice arrives Monday for a series of meetings she has said will create a "political horizon" for the Palestinians. Washington needs to avert attention from the bleeding in Iraq and staunch Iran's growing regional influence. Olmert is swamped by charges of corruption, and worse yet, ineptitude. And the Palestinians, whose economy is crippled by sanctions against the Hamas government, hope negotiations can lift the military siege around their cities and turn on the spigot of foreign donations. Despite Washington's best efforts, Palestinians acknowledge it's not going to happen anytime soon. Some ... more »
by
Publisher
on Fri 16 Feb 2007 11:00 PM CST
The two smiles said it all. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas looked
as if his smile had been painfully stapled onto his face, while his
rival, Hamas leader and Prime Minister Ismael Haniyeh, beamed with
satisfaction. Haniyeh had reason to be cheerful. Everything is going
Hamas's way — even though it was Haniyeh who had to resign.
Abbas accepted Haniyeh's resignation on Thursday evening in Gaza, but then had to formally request that the Hamas chief form a new "national unity" government. And that was only after Abbas had caved in on several key demands by the Islamic militant group. First, Abbas agreed to recognize all decisions made by the 11-month old Hamas government, including the formation of a 3,000-man, pro-Haniyeh security force that roams Gaza's dangerous streets. The commander of this force will be a Hamas man. This enables Hamas to keep its edge in the Gaza strip over Abbas's armed Fatah militias. Since December, fighting between the rival militias has cost over 90 Palestinian lives. Secondly, Hamas will have veto power over Abbas's choice of deputy premier. That is a blow not only to Abbas but also to the Israelis and the Americans. The president had wanted to place ... more » |
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