Saturday, October 14, 2023

Pregnancy Clinics

Eva Women's Clinic

Eva Women's Clinic is a dedicated resource for individuals seeking answers and choices when it comes to pregnancy. They offer a range of essential services, all free and confidential, including ultrasound, pregnancy testing, STD/STI testing and treatment, and access to on-site medical professionals. Whether you suspect you might be pregnant or simply need accurate information about your options, Eva Women's Clinic is here to support you. Request an appointment today to access their compassionate care and expertise.

Pearson Place

Pearson Place Pregnancy Resource Center, with a legacy dating back to 1967, serves as a compassionate refuge for those confronted with potential unplanned pregnancies. Their ethos revolves around inclusivity, offering free pregnancy tests to both men and women within a non-judgmental atmosphere. The organization is unwavering in its commitment to empower individuals, fostering self-control, self-sufficiency, and providing unwavering support throughout their journey.

Pearson Place places a high premium on integrity, ensuring that they never profit from the choices of their clients. Instead, they focus on imparting accurate information, equipping individuals with knowledge and understanding to make informed decisions. Notably, Pearson Place refrains from referrals or performing abortion services. All services rendered are both free and held in strict confidentiality.

At the heart of Pearson Place Pregnancy Resource Center lies a deeply rooted mission—centered on Christ's teachings—aimed at encouraging life-affirming and healthy choices among those they serve.

Thursday, December 22, 2022

List of Pages Linking to Westerner Products' website.

List of Pages Linking to Westerner Products' website: https://westernerproducts.com/

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

97% of the pregant women were given abortions at Planned Parenthood

This is a quote from the Wall Street Journal article from today's paper: "Planned Parenthood's own numbers show that more than 97% of pregnant women it treated were given abortions—against fewer than 3% who received nonabortion services suc...h as adoption or prenatal care."

Note, it says of 'pregnant women' (not people)! They obviously service boys/men and non-pregnant girls/women as well.

But as for the number of pregnant women that are helped, according to the WSJ article, 97% of the pregant women were given abortions!

Perhaps you should contact the WSJ and ask them for a retraction if you can't believe this terrible number could be true. I admit I didn't know Planned Parenthood was this terrible. This is just absolutely horrid.


Here is the article:

The senior senator from New York was on to something when he complained about ideology getting in the way of spending cuts. Just not in the way he would have us believe.

Appearing on MSNBC on Friday before the budget deal... was finally cut, Sen. Charles Schumer launched a pre-emptive blame strike. "We are on the one-yard line," he complained, "but Republicans in the House are making a goal-line stand on women's health, which has nothing—nothing—to do with the budget." The reference was to a GOP bid to strip Planned Parenthood, America's largest abortion provider, of hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars.

Mr. Schumer was not alone. Sen. Patty Murray (D., Wash.) advanced a similar argument. "[W]hat they are saying to us today," she declared, "is that if you want to keep the federal government open, you have to throw women under the bus." Ditto for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, who kept insisting that the only thing between a shutdown and a deal was GOP social ideology.

Whoa there! Might there be another way to read this?

In the end, President Barack Obama was the one who refused to blink on Planned Parenthood. Another way of saying it is this: The president was willing to shut down the entire federal government rather than see Planned Parenthood's federal funding cut.

According to press accounts leaked by Democratic aides, House Speaker John Boehner argued for the funding cut late into the evening. The president answered, "Nope, zero." He then said, "John, this is it." Mr. Boehner accepted the budget deal without that cut.

A Republican aide confirmed more or less the same account to me. He said it was "chilling" to see how inflexible Mr. Obama was. You might call it ideological.

Certainly there's a political logic here. To begin with, many of the women's groups that supported him are still smarting over the executive order (banning federal dollars for abortions) he issued to secure passage of his health-care bill. That's still a sore spot, even though—as his former chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, recently told the Chicago Tribune editorial board—that language is not in the law. The presumption ­being, of course, that eventually the order will be overridden.

The hard line on Planned Parenthood funding also makes sense if the president was calculating that Mr. Boehner would get the blame for a shutdown no matter what. That's a reasonable assumption, judging from the way the press has swallowed the White House line on who the extremists here are. Never mind that this is the same president who, as an Illinois state senator, famously opposed limiting even partial-birth abortion.

For his part, Mr. Boehner now finds himself criticized for accepting too little in spending cuts and giving up the ship on defunding Planned Parenthood to get a budget deal. Leaving aside his victory in restoring the previous status quo prohibiting taxpayer funding for abortions in the District of Columbia, Mr. Boehner came away with two strong accomplishments.

First, in just three months as speaker, he has managed to change the national debate from "stimulus" and "investment" to "how much spending do we need to cut"—which is why Mr. Obama will be pressing the reset button in a planned speech on spending tomorrow. Second, on Planned Parenthood funding, he has secured something that those concerned about restoring these contentious issues to the people should appreciate: an agreement that the Senate will vote on a separate measure to defund Planned Parenthood.

Surely it tells you something about who the real extremists are that an up or down vote is deemed a concession. In an appearance at a rally before the deal, Mr. Schumer vowed that any bill taking taxpayer dollars from Planned Parenthood would "never, never, never" pass the Senate. In the normal way of doing things, it wouldn't even have come up for a vote.

Most Americans, it is probably safe to say, have no idea that we are talking about an organization that performed 332,278 abortions in 2009—one abortion every 95 seconds. Planned Parenthood counters that no federal dollars go to abortion, but Americans are not stupid. They know money is fungible.

As for serving pregnant women, that would be worth some congressional attention too. Planned Parenthood's own numbers show that more than 97% of pregnant women it treated were given abortions—against fewer than 3% who received nonabortion services such as adoption or prenatal care.

Thanks to Mr. Boehner, we'll at least have a democratic debate on this subject instead of a backroom fait accompli. And thanks to the way this deal was struck, we have a reminder that it was the Democratic president and not the Republican speaker who stood on ideology when he decided that it was worth shutting down the entire federal government to protect Planned Parenthood's taxpayer dollars.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704529204576256793257834126.html

Friday, January 7, 2011

Webhosting: Why Price Shouldn’t Be The Deciding Factor

There are several variables to consider when deciding who to use to host a website.  If price is the only consideration, you may not know what problems to expect.

Who lives in your websites's neighborhoodMany companies will host pornographic and/or offensive websites. Hosting a website with a company that hosts pornographic websites would damage your reputation when this information is discovered. Other problems that occur include:
  • Mail server IP blacklisting because of spam
  • Server resources over-utilized because of pornographic traffic
  • Restoration of obscene content being added to your site by mistake
  • People correlating your company or organization with an webhost that serves offensive material.
Here is a list of webhosts that we strongly encourage to avoid or move your services from:
Hosting your website with a local webhost in Tucson that has integrity will allow you to avoid these problems.

The national directory of Christian businesses, the Christian Business Directory put a great deal of thought into who to use for their webhosting needs. They chose iRapture.com because they wanted the best Christian webhost.

Mainstream Webhosts Can Lead to Big-Time ProblemsfishiRapture.com is a Christian webhost based in Tucson, Arizona. iRapture.com provides webhosting services to hundreds of companies and organizations with integrity throughout the United States and England.

Here are a few Christian organizations in Tucson that use iRapture.com for their webhosting:

The Crisis Pregnancy Centers of Tucson
The Gospel Rescue Mission of Tucson
New Testament Baptist Church

iRapture.com also provides webhosting to Christian schools, Christian churches and many businesses with Christian owners.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Free Character and Word Counting Tool

When working on marketing projects and websites, I occasionally need to know the exact number of characters or words used. 

For example, a marketing piece may need to be 'up to 250 words' or a website's title tag should be 78-80 characters.  I couldn't find a good resource that did exactly what I wanted, so the iRapture.com development team built wordcount.us, a free character and word counting tool, to satisfy this need.

Check it out and try it. It is a free tool, so I hope you will use it and enjoy it.

Do you have a homepage where you keep all of your 'handy links that you visit regularly'?  I do and I set it as my homepage so I can have it handy everytime I use a web browser.  If you would like help making a personalized page like this, perhaps even at a custom domain, just let me know and I could help you set this up.   Then you could link to wordcount.us and other handy websites from that personalized page of links that you like and use..

Sincerely,

Jacob Barr, Website Designer at iRapture.com