Defending the Right to Protect Life

Defending the Right to Protect Life
With the U.S. Capitol in the background, pro-life demonstrators march toward the U.S. Supreme Court during the March for Life, in Washington, on Jan. 20, 2023. (Alex Brandon/AP Photo)
Lee Smith
2/9/2023
Updated:
2/15/2023
0:00
Commentary

The Supreme Court’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade was one of the greatest days in our history—for everyone but the Biden administration, according to Shawn Carney, president of the grassroots pro-life organization 40 Days for Life.

The White House is mad, Carney told me in a recent episode of “Over the Target Live.”

“And they’re taking their anger at the Supreme Court out on everyday peaceful Americans. And that’s exactly what happened with Mark Houck, who for no reason had his house raided by the FBI at gunpoint with his seven children there. It was absurd,” Carney said.

Houck is a volunteer with 40 Days for Life who was protesting at a Philadelphia abortion clinic in October 2021 when he allegedly pushed a man who was harassing his 12-year-old son. Nearly a year later, dozens of FBI agents showed up at Houck’s home, reportedly drew their weapons on him, his wife, and their seven children, and charged him with violating the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, or FACE Act. On Jan. 30, a federal court acquitted him.

“Our lawyers absolutely mopped the floor with the FBI and the DOJ in the cross-examination,” Carney said. But the story isn’t ending yet. Carney said that Houck is going to bring legal action against the Justice Department.

“And we’re going to help him in every way we can,” Carney said, “because this is about civil rights. And this is why all Americans, whether you’re pro-abortion or pro-life, all Americans want free speech. I don’t want a pro-abortion activist to have their house raided by the FBI. That’s absurd. It’s part of the public discourse on, frankly, the most controversial topic in our country. And so it’s normal to have public debate. It’s not the job of the DOJ to shut one side down because they don’t like their opinion. It’s bigotry.”

Carney explained that 40 Days for Life has previously enjoyed good relations with federal law enforcement through every administration, even during the first 18 months of the Biden White House. “Then Roe was overturned, and all of a sudden we were like an enemy of the state.”

Nonetheless, he noted: “[There are] a lot of great men and women in the DOJ and in the FBI, we talked to them, and they were rooting for Mark. They think the whole thing is absurd. The DOJ and the FBI have a lot of division internally, trust me.”

Carney founded what’s now the world’s largest grassroots pro-life movement nearly two decades ago. It started with a 40-day vigil outside of a Planned Parenthood in College Station, Texas, in 2004. The organization has grown exponentially since then.

“40 Days for Life has gone to now a thousand cities in 65 different countries,” Carney said. The organization is effective, he said, because “it’s built on what [it has] and the abortion industry doesn’t: a large base of local volunteers.”

The core of the mission is sidewalk outreach, speaking to women as they approach an abortion clinic for the procedure. Usually, a sidewalk counselor, like Houck, is “the first person to actually connect with the woman when she gets out of a car,” Carney said. He explained that the organization trains volunteers “on what to say, what not to say, and often it’s not very profound—usually, ‘Good morning, how are you? I know you don’t want to be here today.’”

The organization’s success is due in part to its temperament. “40 Days for Life is approachable. We’re not crazy, we’re not yelling at people telling them they’re going to burn in hell, we’re there silently. If they want to talk to us, we'll offer free medical alternatives,” Carney said. “If we were judgmental, nobody would join, certainly nobody would come and ask for our help.”

The pro-abortion camp, on the other hand, has become even more destructive. Carney recalled that when he first heard Roe was overturned, he saw a pro-abortion activist assessing the court’s decision on TV. “She said, ‘I knew this day was coming. We were losing the messaging. We were pushing late-term abortion, we were pushing infanticide.’”

Carney credited her for an honest assessment. “I think a lot of that’s happened in the last 25 years, but especially the last 10 years, when you have politicians saying that you can have an abortion on the day of birth, you just lose people at that.”

And that’s why the Biden administration is angry and targeting the pro-life movement—because life is winning, Carney said. The numbers show it. Abortions are down, and the birth rate is up. And according to Carney, that’s the most important reason for the organization’s success—women want to choose life.

As evidence, pro-life activists point to the Texas Heartbeat Bill. Passed in September 2021, it protects unborn children after a heartbeat is able to be detected, in some cases as early as six weeks. Texas birth data show that in a five-month period between March 2022 and July 2022, there were 5,000 more Texas births than during identical periods in previous years.

Carney’s Texas-based organization rightly deserves some credit for the surge in life. “We’ve had a million volunteers participate in 40 Days for Life around the world. And they do so because they know that it’s effective,” he said. “The former Planned Parenthood workers tell us that the no-show rate for an abortion appointment can go as high as 75 percent when we’re out there, peacefully praying, so it is detrimental to the bottom line of abortion facilities. That’s why we’ve closed 132 of them. We’ve closed abortion facilities in San Francisco and Los Angeles and Seattle and Chicago, in London, in New York.”

While the pro-abortion side of the issue typically prefers to describe itself as pro-choice, Carney’s experience shows him that, given the opportunity, resources, and support, the choice women want to make is for life.

“There’s no gratitude surrounding abortion, there’s no enthusiasm,” he said. “[Women] don’t want to be there. No one actually grows up wanting to work in the abortion industry either. The doctor always had something go wrong. It wasn’t his goal in medical school.

“And so we’re really the only ones that want to be there, you know, truly, at that facility, and we’re there to offer hope and healing. ... If you give women freedom, and if you give them a real choice, they'll choose life. And we see that every day.”

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Lee Smith is a veteran journalist whose work appears in Real Clear Investigations, the Federalist, and Tablet. He is the author of “The Permanent Coup” and “The Plot Against the President.”
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