Activist Reveals Game Plan: Kansas Proves Red State Weakness On Abortion

From our vantage . . . And even if it contradicts our beliefs . . .

There's a "conservative" steak in the pro-choice pitch . . . Generally, people don't like governments telling them what to do. Also, pro-life branding is off-putting to most voters and often runs off the rails into bullying women and (ironically) display very little compassion in what ultimately a crusade to save the lives of babies. 

Of course . . . There are many contradictions in the abortion debate and NONE of them have any respect for life or the rights of women. 

Still . . . 

Politics is about POWER and not morality. 

Accordingly . . . Here's a passage worth considering . . .

Red states aren’t a lost cause when it comes to progressive ideas. “We don’t need everybody to think that abortion is a moral imperative,” she said. “We need people to think that it shouldn’t be banned. Clearly, when given the opportunity, voters, including voters who are more conservative, will protect the legal right to abortion.”

Read more via www.TonysKansasCity.com link . . .

She Beat Abortion Foes in Kansas. Then She Did It Again in Kentucky.

If there's anyone to single out for helping support abortion rights on Election Day, it is Rachel Sweet, the Protect Kentucky Access campaign manager who defeated an anti-abortion amendment. Just days after beating a similar ballot measure in Kansas this summer, the first test of its kind post- Roe, Sweet packed up her things and traveled 500 miles to the Bluegrass State in hopes of replicating that success.

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