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PM_Mama00 06-18-2005 03:11 PM

Abortion Tour?
 
http://thenewsherald.com/stories/061...50619002.shtml

Graphic signs stop traffic

Traveling anti-abortion group aims at emotions for its cause

By Jason Alley, The News-Herald

PUBLISHED: June 19, 2005


Larry Caruso/Photo Editor
About 75 members of the Wisconsin-based anti-abortion group Missionaries to the Preborn stopped in Lincoln Park Thursday for a rally. The group is known for the large, graphic photos it uses of aborted fetuses to get its message across. "When something is so horrifying we can't stand to look at it, perhaps we shouldn't be tolerating it," its four-page brochure says.

Purchase a copy of this photo

LINCOLN PARK — Some honked their horns in support. Others rolled down their windows and spewed obscenities.

But everyone who drove by Dix-Toledo and Southfield early Thursday afternoon got an eyeful from about 75 anti-abortion protesters holding up graphic photos of aborted fetuses.

"The pictures are so people can see exactly what a preborn child looks like after he or she has been in the hands of an abortionist," the Rev. Matt Trewhella said. "A picture is worth a thousand words. People need to know what abortion really looks like."

Trewhella heads up the Wisconsin-based group Missionaries to the Preborn, which has members throughout the United States.

The group was on a nine-day mission, dubbed the American Atrocity Tour, in Michigan last week when it made a 90-minute stop in Lincoln Park. Areas are chosen because of their high-traffic volume, Trewhella said.

Men, women and children of all ages lined the streets, passing out the group's four-page color brochure to anyone who would take it. The flier is just as graphic as the posters, showing pictures of aborted fetuses ranging in development from 2 to 7 months.

Walking into the Rite Aid Pharmacy at the corner of Fort and Dix, Paula Carr of Allen Park stopped for a minute to read some of the signs.

Holding her 20-month-old and walking with her 4- and 7-year-old children, she said the signs were a little graphic for younger children to see.

But she said she supports the cause and was happy to see "the truth being spread."

"It's kind of hard to look at, but it's reality," she said.

Not everyone agreed with the event, however.

Stopped at a red light, some motorists used those few seconds to scream at the protesters. Using many vulgarities, one woman rolled down her car window and asked the group who planned to pay to raise all the children whose mothers were unable to.

Another woman, riding by on her bicycle, cussed out the group, telling the members that "it's all about choice, not about murder."

Group members are used to attracting people who disagree with what they are doing, Trewhella said.

In the 10 years they have been displaying the graphic posters, he said, group members have been pegged by eggs, spit on and shoved. Trewhella, a 44-year-old father of 10, said he was beat up once in Illinois and hospitalized.

The majority of the group's protests are done in Wisconsin, where most of its members live.

Since their crusade began, Trewhella said, abortions in his home state have dropped 46 percent. The number of abortions performed last year was at an all-time low since the state began keeping those statistics in 1974, he said.

"I've got to think we are responsible for that," he said.

So far, Trewhella said, his group has traveled to 31 states and recently decided to concentrate heavily on Michigan because it is one of a handful of states where abortions are on the rise.

Eighteen-year-old Michael Raatz of Wisconsin said he can't remember a time he hasn't been involved with the group. His parents introduced him to it at a young age.

"Abortions are wrong, but not many people are doing anything about it," Raatz said. "By not doing anything to help, I'm just as guilty as the doctors who kill the babies."

Besides the people standing along the roadside, the group also had two small trucks plastered with abortion photos that drove up and down the streets in the neighborhood during the protest.

Police Chief Thomas Karnes said his office received several complaints because of the graphic nature of the posters.

Two police cars were dispatched to the area "to make sure they were behaving in an orderly, safe fashion," Karnes said.

The event was mostly peaceful, he said. Two protesters were ticketed for minor traffic violations, Karnes said.

Contact Staff Writer Jason Alley at jalley@heritage.com or at 1-734-246-0867.

I'm sorry, whether you are pro-choice or pro-life, it is just WRONG to be showing these images to children. If I were walking in to a store with my 4 year old niece, I would have covered her eyes. That's not something children need to see. Or even adults. I'm so glad I didn't drive by this cuz I probably would have been one of the people yelling obscenities. And the neighborhood they speak of that the trucks were driving through have a lot of younger children. I wouldn't want that shit driving down my street.

preciousjeni 06-18-2005 03:46 PM

A display along these lines went up in front of the student center at UGA one semester. It was met with serious opposition as well as serious support. While most of the people walking by were college-aged, there were still children and older adults seeing it as well.

I wasn't on either side really. I appreciated that people were able to see what was really going on - people glorify abortion and try to twist it with words like the person in the article who said it's about choice not murder...that's bull - and I'm against censorship. But, I wouldn't have been in the group putting the photos up.

The article's picture shows a partial-birth abortion. Choice? I think not. That's 100% infanticide.

valkyrie 06-18-2005 05:18 PM

LOL @ them being from Wisconsin. What's in the water up there, kids?

Frankly I could give a rat's ass if someone wants to show me a picture of an aborted fetus. Go ahead -- it's not going to bother me or make me think abortion is wrong, and if I ever wanted to have one, it's not going to change my mind.

PM_Mama00 06-19-2005 01:41 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by preciousjeni
A display along these lines went up in front of the student center at UGA one semester. It was met with serious opposition as well as serious support. While most of the people walking by were college-aged, there were still children and older adults seeing it as well.

I wasn't on either side really. I appreciated that people were able to see what was really going on - people glorify abortion and try to twist it with words like the person in the article who said it's about choice not murder...that's bull - and I'm against censorship. But, I wouldn't have been in the group putting the photos up.

The article's picture shows a partial-birth abortion. Choice? I think not. That's 100% infanticide.


Sorry, I should have stated that I wanted the discussion to go more in the direction of the pictures being shown and children seeing them and stuff. There are tons of threads on abortion and I don't want this to turn into a pro-choice/pro-life argument.

AGDee 06-19-2005 08:26 AM

Re: Abortion Tour?
 
Quote:

Originally posted by PM_Mama00
http://thenewsherald.com/stories/061...50619002.shtml


In the 10 years they have been displaying the graphic posters, he said, group members have been pegged by eggs, spit on and shoved. Trewhella, a 44-year-old father of 10, said he was beat up once in Illinois and hospitalized.

[/color]

Is this guy making enough money doing this to feed his 10 kids? Somehow, that line caught my attention most out of the whole article.

preciousjeni 06-19-2005 10:09 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by PM_Mama00
Sorry, I should have stated that I wanted the discussion to go more in the direction of the pictures being shown and children seeing them and stuff. There are tons of threads on abortion and I don't want this to turn into a pro-choice/pro-life argument.
Like I said - children saw the display at UGA and I wouldn't have been the one to put it up, but I wasn't against it.

jubilance1922 06-19-2005 11:53 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by valkyrie
LOL @ them being from Wisconsin. What's in the water up there, kids?

Frankly I could give a rat's ass if someone wants to show me a picture of an aborted fetus. Go ahead -- it's not going to bother me or make me think abortion is wrong, and if I ever wanted to have one, it's not going to change my mind.

Co-sign.

chideltjen 06-20-2005 09:58 AM

There was a tour of some sort that came to campus this year. It caused a bit of controversy and words were exchanged and so were fists.

If you want your children to take on your beliefs, fine. But bringing them to a rally where people are so passionate either way can be quite dangerous. I would think that seeing mommy and daddy getting beat up, spit on, cursed at, and so forth doesn't do much to their mental status either.

moe.ron 06-20-2005 10:02 AM

How's the lot scene? Any camping before the show?

Heady brah.

GeekyPenguin 06-20-2005 01:16 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by valkyrie
LOL @ them being from Wisconsin. What's in the water up there, kids?

Frankly I could give a rat's ass if someone wants to show me a picture of an aborted fetus. Go ahead -- it's not going to bother me or make me think abortion is wrong, and if I ever wanted to have one, it's not going to change my mind.

I don't miss these fools at all, I hope they go on tour all summer.

And if you live in the Midwest, they could be coming to a town near YOU!!! I can't wait to see the reception they'll get in Madison.

James 06-20-2005 10:29 PM

Re: Abortion Tour?
 
So is sex between really heavy people . . . but hey, we don't try and outlaw it.

Quote:

Originally posted by PM_Mama00
[B

"When something is so horrifying we can't stand to look at it, perhaps we shouldn't be tolerating it," its four-page brochure says.
[/B]

lifesaver 06-21-2005 03:44 AM

These freaks came to UT-San Antonio this spring.

Most students on campus wished they were real, life sized photos of Abortion Protesters instead of the actual protesters. It would have been in better taste and not disruptive to the academic environment (protests, media, etc).

They were also real pushy with their literature.

moe.ron 06-21-2005 03:51 AM

Anyway I can make money of them? Maybe a T-shirt tour?

HelloKitty22 06-21-2005 10:35 AM

I agree that these people should be able to put up their posters because I believe in free speech. If kids see them that sucks, but it's part of the price we pay to have free and open political demonstrations. Sometimes anti-pornography groups show pictures of very graphic porn to bring noteriety to their cause. I don't think that's good for kids either but I don't want to silence these groups, even though I don't agree with them.

Personally, the pictures don't make a difference to me. Abortion is a medical procedure. And pictures of medical procedures are "gross" to most laypeople, particularly if you blow them up and distort them the way many anti-abortion groups do. I think I would probably explain it to my kids that way. It makes my stomach turn when I watch Dr. 90210 and I see him hammering somebody's nose into place. That doesn't mean I think nose jobs should be illegal or that they shouldn't be shown on TV.

lifesaver 06-21-2005 02:44 PM

Re: Re: Abortion Tour?
 
Quote:

Originally posted by James
So is sex between really heavy people . . . but hey, we don't try and outlaw it.
But we should. lol


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