Category: England
Three Strikes & Free Speech is Out: British Veteran Third to Be Arrested in UK for Silent Prayer Outside Abortion Facility
Caroline Wharton | August 8, 2023
What does a pro-life leader, priest, and military veteran share in common? In England, all three have been recently arrested for the same “crime” of silently praying in front of an abortion facility. As threats to American free speech — particularly pro-life speech — are often taken too lightly, could this be where the United States is heading, as well?
Pro-Life Priest Charged for Just Doing His Job: Praying
Caroline Wharton | February 22, 2023
GUEST POST: The headlines are once again reporting the arrest of an innocent pro-life individual who was merely practicing their religious liberty and yet somehow ended up on the wrong side of the law for it. Father Sean Gough, a Catholic priest from the diocese of Birmingham, England, faced charges recently for praying within an abortion facility censorship zone —
United Kingdom is Underreporting Danger of Mail-Order Abortion
Samantha Kamman | May 14, 2021
In response to the pandemic outbreak last March, the United Kingdom temporarily approved the Pills by Post program. This program is a way to get chemical abortion drugs dispensed to women by mail, with no need for a pregnancy test, ultrasound, or other assessment. However, personal testimony and data on the outcomes of these abortions show this lack of scrutiny when
What the Heck is “Chestfeeding?”
Brenna Lewis | February 12, 2021
In what is the most recent attack on women and traditional feminism, a collection of British midwives are now being told to basically remove femininity from the childbirth and nursing processes. As reported by National Review, “Midwives working for Britain’s National Health Service at Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals in England are now to follow a “gender-inclusive language policy,”
Midwifery Student Suspended Because She Believes Babies Should be Born
Jessica Nardi | December 16, 2020
A pro-life student at the University of Nottingham in England won a recent settlement after she was suspended from her midwife program for supporting the dignity of life. In her final year of study, Julia Rynkiewicz’s “fitness to practice” was questioned by the program because she served as president of the school’s Students for Life group. Rynkiewicz had to