Planned Parenthood, which rakes in hundreds of millions in the abortion business, actively discourages women from going to crisis pregnancy centers.
With Philadelphia abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell convicted on three counts of first-degree murder in the deaths of three babies and on a count of involuntary manslaughter in the death of a former patient, abortion is back in the national discussion.
The irony does not drip but pours forth like a tsunami when liberals start talking about morality and ethics.
Put me down as happy to see former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford coming back to Washington. He handily defeated Elizabeth Colbert Busch in Tuesday's special election for a House seat he himself once held.
As our reverence for life has diminished, so has our reverence for the institutions that surround and support it.
The trial of Philadelphia abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell, facing the death penalty for the deaths of four infants and one woman in his clinic, is over. America has moved on.
National pro-life leaders were demonstrating outside Kermit Gosnell's abortion center as early as February 2011.
Kirsten Powers has done a national service, by virtue of her now-famous USA Today column, in getting the trial of abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell on the national radar screen.
Carson, through diligence and traditional values, achieved on his own what trillions of dollars of government programs were supposed to deliver.
Dr. Ben Carson stepped into the national spotlight in February, when, speaking at the National Prayer Breakfast to an audience that included President Barack Obama, he openly criticized the president's approach to health care and his overall management of the nation's economy.
Employment set-asides designated for unskilled foreign workers, with wage levels determined by the government, are nothing but a stick in the eye to competing low-wage workers in the American market.
A bipartisan group of senators, known as the Gang of 8, has put together a framework for the immigration reform that supposedly America is waiting for.
The purge of religion and traditional values from our public schools has produced a new generation of Americans with values different from those of their parents and grandparents.
As the nation has focused on the Supreme Court hearings on the constitutionality of same sex marriage, news from the state of Indiana could prove far more important regarding the nations future.
If we are going to save our cities, we need to get back to what built them in the first place: Freedom, enterprise and entrepreneurship.
We are now hearing the usual voices of protest in Detroit in the wake of Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder appointing an outside expert to take over financial management of the near-bankrupt city.
No gun-sale background check could have prevented the Sandy Hook tragedy.
In April 2007, a mentally disturbed student showed up at the campus of his school, Virginia Tech, brandishing two semi-automatic pistols, and murdered 32 students, teachers and school employees and wounded 17 others. Then he took his own life.
The evil geniuses in Washington have devised a way to get even Republican governors to buy into a welfare program they know can only hurt our nation.
New Jersey's Chris Christie has become the eighth Republican governor to agree to expand Medicaid coverage in his state under the provisions of the Affordable Care Act.
When it comes to gun control, Americans of all backgrounds must fight yet another misguided liberal attempt to undermine our personal freedom and sap the vitality of our nation.
My organization, CURE -- the Center for Urban Renewal and Education -- recently sponsored a press conference at the National Press Club in Washington to bring attention to the importance of rigorously defending the right of all Americans, guaranteed under the Second Amendment of our Constitution, to own a gun.
Star Parker and CURE remind us of Frederick Douglass who said, “A man's rights rest in three boxes: the ballot box, the jury box, and the cartridge box."
The Center for Urban Renewal and Education (CURE) will host a group of prominent figures from the African American community at 9:45 A.M. on Friday, February 22nd at the National Press Club to speak out against gun control legislation currently being considered on Capitol Hill.