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That's a fact, says Perkins.  "Indeed, this generation is decidedly more pro-life," he states.  "[S]upport for abortion is dropping."

And Katie Mahoney of the Christian Defense Coalition, one of the many pro-life groups planning a counter-demonstration for Sunday, points out that in addition to anti-war and anti-Bush protesters, the IMF-World Bank protesters already in the nation's capital have also been extended an invitation.  That says volumes about the pro-abortion effort, Mahoney says.

"They say that it's a 'March for Women's Lives' and yet ... they're opening it up to other protests that have absolutely nothing to do with women's lives," she says.  "I think it's just a ploy to try to get a larger crowd."

Like Perkins and Crouse, Mahoney maintains that the abortion movement and the abortion industry are losing support.  "That's why they're having this march," she explains, "because ... among the youth and among the post-Roe v. Wade generation [are] men and women who realize abortion has not done anything good for our generation -- it's actually causing a lot of problems, emotionally and physically, in women."

Organizers had stated that 1,400 groups would take part in the march.  The most participants the march has had in the past has been between 2,000 and 5,000.  The route for Sunday's march was not made public until today (Friday) in an effort to keep pro-lifers away.

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Institute on Religion and Democracy (http://www.ird-renew.org)
Family Research Council (http://www.frc.org)
Concerned Women for America (http://www.cwfa.org)
Christian Defense Coalition (http://www.christiandefensecoalition.net)


© 2004 Agape Press.