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The idea of being paid to advance the sanctity of life is foreign to most online pro-life citizen journalists and commentators.
Not that being financially reimbursed for providing this work is wrong. Paul in I Timothy 5:18 wrote, “For the Scripture says, ‘Do not muzzle the ox while it is treading out the grain,’ and ‘The worker deserves his wages.'”
It’s just that the lack thereof doesn’t keep our writers from performing what they consider a vocation.
But quality online pro-death advocacy would be pretty much nonexistent sans financial reward.
Knowing that behind the advancement of illicit sexual behavior is an industry raking in billions of dollars annually from the sale of contraceptives and abortion makes it too easy to see why online journalistic promotion would be a natural marketing tool.
The Reproductive Health Reality Check blog is but one example of pro-death pay to play, a “campaign,” according to the United Nations Foundation, its financial backer “launched in 2006 to harness the power of new media to offer a reality check on the misconceptions about reproductive health… [a] rebuttal arsenal.”
Recall that media mogul Ted Turner created UNF in 1997 with a $1 billion pledge.
All this brings us to a remarkable August 21 article in RH Reality Check by Elizabeth Westley, Francine Coeytaux, and Elisa Wells, originally published in the journal, Contraception….

Continue reading my column today, “Pro-abort donors abandon promotion of ‘ineffective’ morning-after pill,” at WorldNetDaily.com.

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