Saturday, 28 January 2012

Abort67 Martyrs Andy Stephenson and Kathryn Sloane versus Sussex Police in Freedom of Speech Case




The Great British Abortion Holocaust began in 1968 following the passage of the Abortion Act 1967 into British statute law on 27th October 1967. According to the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children (SPUC), a staggering 9,000,000 innocent children will have been slaughtered in the Great British Abortion Holocaust by the 50th anniversary of the Abortion Act 1967 later this decade. Abort67 is a small pro-life group [Abort67 Facebook] which was set up to campaign for the right to life in the Brighton & Hove area. Abort67 is a group of Evangelical Christians inspired by the example of Dietrich Bonhoeffer - the man behind the famous quotation "We are not to simply bandage the wounds of victims beneath the wheels of injustice, we are to drive a spoke into the wheel itself." Abort67 volunteers regularly bear peaceful witness to the appalling carnage and injustice of the Great British Abortion Holocaust in their home town of Brighton with graphic public displays of murder victims outside the BPAS Wistons Baby Murder Centre. Since Abort67 volunteers began their campaign, several babies have been saved from murder inside Wistons as a direct result of the volunteers' work. Abort67 campaigners Andy Stephenson and Kathryn Sloane (pictured above) have been arrested several times by Sussex Police and on Monday 30th January 2012 Stephenson and Sloane will plead Not Guilty to public order offences at Brighton Magistrates' Court [Edward Street, BN2 0LG]. Sussex Police and the Crown Prosecution Service will contend that it is a public order offence simply to display a visual image of an aborted foetus in public; Stephenson and Sloane will contend that their behaviour in displaying visual images of murder victims does not constitute a criminal offence and, moreover, that the erroneous assertion that such behaviour is an offence is a serious assault upon and attempted suppression of their rights to freedom of speech, assembly and protest. It is clear that Sussex Police and the CPS are happy to support the legalised mass murder of Brighton's most vulnerable people, and happy also to attempt to suppress the free speech of a handful of Christians who are simply seeking to raise public awareness of pro-life issues by means of peaceful displays of their subject matter. According to Sussex Police and the CPS, it is perfectly legal to murder people under the auspices of the Abortion Act 1967 but it is not legal to bear public witness to the Great British Abortion Holocaust. Whilst it is legal to slaughter unborn people, Sussex Police and the CPS would have us believe that it is not legal to protest about pro-life issues in public: Legal to do it, but not legal to show it?

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