Tough Times for Worse Than Murder, Inc.
- Donald R. McClarey
Donald R. McClarey
Cradle Catholic. Active in the pro-life movement since 1973. Father of three, one in Heaven, and happily married for 43 years. Small town lawyer and amateur historian. Former president of the board of directors of the local crisis pregnancy center for a decade.
I thought the House determined taxation and the use of money. Taxes belong to the taxpayer even as the tax money is used by the government. It is our money. Stop murdering taxpayers in the womb. The unborn are our Posterity (See the Preamble to our Constitution.
Abortion will never go away. The midwives were doing it. Burying babies the back yard. I am sorry to have to say this but when my mom got my sister, the midwife sent and asked: “Do you want it?” “It” she called us. When mom got me the same question was asked. Mom kept us both.
The midwife was the wealthiest individual in the county.
The First Amendment of our Constitution lists “peaceable assembly’ as our Constitutional civil right.
Roe v. Wade never bore the burden of proof that the newly begotten individual sovereign person created by “their Creator” was not gifted with sovereign personhood by “their Creator”.
Let the unborn sovereign persons in the womb “peaceably assemble”, as “peaceable assembly” is their Constitutional, sovereign civil right.
Slaughtering the unborn in the womb still peaceably assembling is uncivilized and unconstitutional.
Douay-Rheims
Genesis 3
15 I will put enmities between thee and the woman, and thy seed and her seed: she shall crush thy head, and thou shalt lie in wait for her heel.
Keep at those sidewalk Rosary battles in front of Planned Parenthood. You help make up Our Lady’s heel in this struggle for Life.
A Defund Planned Parenthood protest is coming up soon. Let’s keep the pressure on it’s head.
Immaculata Victory is coming.
Today. Defund Planned Parenthood day is today across the country. 10 am, in all time zones. Stop by one of the death camps if you can. Mom will be pleased.
One thing I’d be pleased to see is for governments at all levels to cut off the flow of grant money to the philanthropic sector bar for episodic disaster relief; to limit government subsidized services to medical care, long-term care, schooling, legal services (on the margins), and shipping-and-transportation (on the margins); and to have a bias in favor of vouchers and insurance programs over public agency provision in the realm of subsidized services. Posit executive compensation for philanthropic agencies might be limited by law to the results of a formula which had mean-employee-compensation-per-worker in a given jurisdiction as one of its arguments and the mean number of employees through the year (FTE) as another. Posit philanthropic corporations (with some exceptions) might be due re-imbursement from the state treasury for their local property tax payments. Posit employees would be subject to payroll and income tax with-holiding on a par with other employer. Posit they’d be liable for VAT taxes bar those for sales of discarded, donated, and salvaged property (which would not apply to anyone else either). Posit they’d have a qualified obligation to maintain workmen’s compensation insurance. It would be interesting to see how the philanthropic sector would change were it entirely dependent on sales, donation, and endowment income and its tax preferences limited to local property taxes.