Tim Tebow’s Super Bowl Ad and The Freaks that Oppose it. | Jen Kuznicki

What are they afraid of?

Every “pro-choice” blogger and half-wit out there is throwing a flag at CBS’s decision to run a pro-life ad during the Super Bowl.  They are all afraid it will sway public opinion.

Tim Tebow, a Heisman Trophy-winning American football quarterback for the Florida Gators, was born in 1987 when his mother refused her doctor’s suggestion to have an abortion.  Infuriated that CBS is airing the Focus on the Family ad during the Super Bowl, pro-aborts are really coming out of the woodwork.

Frances Kissling, former president of Catholics for Choice and Kate Michelman, the former president of NARAL Pro-Choice America wrote a thoughtful, informative that encouraged pro-aborts to make an ad to help spread their message:

The camera focuses on one woman after another, posed in the situations of daily life: rushing out the door in the morning for work, flipping through a magazine, washing dishes, teaching a class of sixth-graders, wheeling a baby stroller. Each woman looks calmly into the camera and describes her different and successful choice: having a baby and giving it up for adoption, having an abortion, having a baby and raising it lovingly. Each one being clear that making choices isn’t easy, but that life without tough choices doesn’t exist.

Jason Fagone, contends that Tim Tebow is only playing football so he can eventually evangelize.

Tebow wants to convert people, like his father does in Muslim areas of the Philippines.

Jason also barks,

This Super Bowl commercial represents a new strategy for Tebow Inc.—one that’s more confrontational and also much more in keeping with the family’s ultraconservative roots.

The true extent and character of Tebow’s faith has always flown under the media radar.

What’s that supposed to mean?

said that Tim could have just as easily become a rapist or a pedophile, so what is the big deal?  If the good-looking serial killer Ted Bundy’s mother said, “I wanted to abort him, but somebody talked me out of it,” you know, it doesn’t make any sense.

Whoopi Goldberg thinks that if you can have your baby, have it, but if you can’t, you shouldn’t feel like there is anything wrong with you.

compared the decision by CBS to accept the ad to another ad placed by a gay-dating site, ManCrunch.com:

On Friday, the network rejected a humor-driven commercial from the gay dating site ManCrunch.com, which features two apparently straight men who suddenly begin to make out in the heat of the moment as they celebrate a touchdown on television. The commercial is not pornographic, nor is there nudity. There will be more exposed flesh on the field than there would have been on the screen.

Rowe concluded, “that CBS had already decided where its ethical priorities lay when they accepted the commercial from Focus on the Family last week.”

Mmmkay.

The Feminist Majority, NOW and the Women’s Media Center, sent a letter of protest to CBS:

“by offering one of the most coveted advertising spots of the year to an anti-equality, anti-choice, homophobic organization, CBS is aligning itself with a political stance that will damage its reputation, alienate viewers, and discourage consumers from supporting its shows and advertisers.”

Roger I. Abrams of the ad and describes Focus on the Family as “a devotedly religious group that opposes women’s rights and endangers women’s health.”

Nuts.

What they are all up in arms about will prove to be a very uplifting commercial.

I was listening to the radio last week and the top of the hour news recounted how the abortion doctor killer’s defense was not allowed, by furious objection, to mention the procedure of abortion.  I don’t condone what the killer did, but the visceral reaction shows part of what the angered response to this ad does.

It allows the jury/viewer the other side of the story.

Pro-death, pro-aborts do not want that to be shown, because they are afraid the masses will be fully informed.

And an informed public is dangerous to them.

 

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