Paul O'Rear -- Wednesday, November 12, 2008, 7:45 AM (No Comments)
Categories: America, Patriotism, Politics
Tags: Armstrong Williams, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Boy Scouts of America, Civil Rights, Congress, Conservatism, Dallas Texas, Declaration of Independence, Democrat, Fifteenth Amendment, Founding Fathers, God, Great Britain, Health Care, Heaven, Independence Hall, Iraq, J. C. Watts, Jeremiah Wright, Mark Davis, Martin Luther King Jr., National Anthem, Old Glory, Pennsylvania State House, Philadelphia, Racial Prejudice, Republican, Second Continental Congress, Supreme Court, United States of America, Voting Rights Act of 1965, WBAP, White House
One week ago, the United States of America elected its 44th President, Barack Obama. He will be the first African-American in the history of our country to serve in that capacity. Election Day 2008 was truly a historic day in many ways … some good, some bad. Here are my thoughts.
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Paul O'Rear -- Sunday, August 31, 2008, 1:00 PM (No Comments)
Categories: Abortion, Sanctity of Life
Tags: Abortion, Bill Clinton, Bioethics, Cloning, End of Life Issues, Euthanasia, Genetics, George W. Bush, Medical Decision-Making, Physician Assisted Suicide, Right to Life, Roe vs. Wade, Ronald Reagan, Stem Cell Research
[PART 1 OF 6]
In 1984, President Ronald Reagan established National Sanctity of Human Life Day to commemorate the millions of innocent lives lost through the legalization of abortion in this country.
Since that first declaration nearly 25 years ago, National Sanctity of Human Life Day has been recognized every year by proclamation of the sitting President of the United States (except for the years that Bill Clinton served as President), on the third Sunday of January. That date was chosen because it is the Sunday that falls closest to the anniversary of the Roe vs. Wade decision of January 22, 1973.
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