August 6, 2021 @ 8:30 AM

“My body, my choice,” has long been the mantra of Democrats in their defense of the "American Holocaust"abortion on demand. We've heard over and over again the constant refrain, "Abortion is a private and personal matter between a woman and her physician." Therefore, we are repeatedly told, the government has no right to interfere in a woman's right to choose whether or not to have an abortion.

 

However, when it comes to the coronavirus vaccine, no one defends the right of individuals to choose for themselves whether or not to get the vaccine. Apparently, "my body, my choice," applies only to a woman's right to choose whether or not to get an abortion, not to your right to choose whether or not to get the vaccine. The vaccine, unlike an abortion, is not a private and personal choice between you and your physician, but something the government has every right to interfere in, even to the point of mandating vaccines and denying you a choice.

 

Now, I know the cover being used for such unconstitutional coercion of the unvaccinated; namely, that they are risking the lives of others by refusing to roll up their sleeve for the vaccine. Yet, it appears to elude the attention of the American people that abortion not only puts another's life at risk, but definitely takes the life of another. Whereas the coronavirus has reportedly claimed over 300,000 American lives, abortion has claimed over 60 million.

 

When it comes to the growing chorus of those calling for the unconstitutional coercion of the unvaccinated to be vaccinated, there are some surprising voices joining the chorus. For instance, Mitch McConnell, the Republican minority leader in the Senate, has publicly criticized the unvaccinated for not only preventing herd immunity, but also for preventing an end to pandemic restrictions. Conservative darling Ben Shapiro has gone so far as to argue for mandated vaccines, on the basis that the unvaccinated are violating his child's right to life. And even Franklin Graham has chimed in, encouraging reluctant evangelicals to get vaccinated, by assuring them that it is what Jesus would do.

 

I don't know about you, but there is something most disconcerting to me when politicians on both sides of the political aisle are vehemently villainizing the unvaccinated. I don't know about you, but there is something most disconcerting to me about a conservative, like Ben Shapiro, arguing for mandated vaccines on the basis of a child's right to life, especially in a country that has denied the right to life to 60 million unborn children over the last 48 years. And I don't know about you, but there is something most disconcerting to me about a respected evangelical leader, like Franklin Graham, telling evangelicals that Jesus wants them to get a vaccine that has been developed with stem cells from fetal tissue from aborted babies.