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Welcome to the official home and wonderful world of Pulitzer Prize Winning Political Cartoonist Michael P. Ramirez, daily editorial cartoonist for the Las Vegas Review Journal |
Baby girl 05-28-19 Gift e-cards available now for prints and merchandise - CLICK HERE TO ORDER
I'm pro-life. That means protecting the unborn from abortion and also caring for women.
Chelsea Patterson Sobolik, Opinion contributor. Published 5:00 a.m. ET May 22, 2019. USA Today
People who oppose abortion must protect the tiny life inside a woman, and also make sure she has the resources she needs. It's not one or the other. read more
Chelsea Patterson Sobolik, Opinion contributor. Published 5:00 a.m. ET May 22, 2019. USA Today
People who oppose abortion must protect the tiny life inside a woman, and also make sure she has the resources she needs. It's not one or the other. read more
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EXTRA:
Join Dave Sussman of Whiskey Politics as he explores why Donald Trump won the 2016 Presidential election with famed historian Victor Davis Hanson. Dave is one of our favorite television personalities, and we think you'll love his conversation with our friend Victor at his home in the Central Valley of California. |
Roe v. Wade gave women a right to choose abortion. But doctors like me have a choice, too.
Marc Siegel, Opinion columnist Published 5:00 a.m. ET May 19, 2019 | Updated 2:25 p.m. ET May 19, 2019. USA TODAY
As a doctor, I'm not there to carry out the will of either the state or the individual, but to do what I see as in keeping with my medical role.
There came a time in medical school when I first witnessed an abortion, a dilation and curettage, where the cervix was dilated and the tiny fetus sucked out by vacuum. The first time I saw the body parts was the first time I knew I would never perform one of these procedures. I was defining my role as a doctor in terms of relieving suffering and extending life, not ending it.
Dr. Ben Carson, consummate pediatric neurosurgeon and current secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, has come out vehemently against abortion. In an interview in 2015 when he was running for president, he told me, "I've spent many, many a day and many a night operating on premature babies and then seeing them as adults, as productive adults. There is no way that anybody's going to convince me that that's a meaningless mass of cells." read more
Marc Siegel, Opinion columnist Published 5:00 a.m. ET May 19, 2019 | Updated 2:25 p.m. ET May 19, 2019. USA TODAY
As a doctor, I'm not there to carry out the will of either the state or the individual, but to do what I see as in keeping with my medical role.
There came a time in medical school when I first witnessed an abortion, a dilation and curettage, where the cervix was dilated and the tiny fetus sucked out by vacuum. The first time I saw the body parts was the first time I knew I would never perform one of these procedures. I was defining my role as a doctor in terms of relieving suffering and extending life, not ending it.
Dr. Ben Carson, consummate pediatric neurosurgeon and current secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, has come out vehemently against abortion. In an interview in 2015 when he was running for president, he told me, "I've spent many, many a day and many a night operating on premature babies and then seeing them as adults, as productive adults. There is no way that anybody's going to convince me that that's a meaningless mass of cells." read more
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