• Riley Hood: Pro-Life Questions

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    Why do the anti-life folks win and our efforts stall out year after year after year?  On our show today we discuss some of the reasons and some ideas for what you can do to make a difference.

    Today we have Riley Johnson Hood.  Riley is the former State Chairman of the Constitution Party of Wisconsin.  He now is the Milwaukee County Chairman and is a frequent contributor to conservative newspapers and to the public debate.

  • Cal Zastrow – Planned Parenthood

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    Honorable people will always decry murder no matter who commits it. But the media hype shows the hypocrisy of the left.

    Those who support abortion make a huge deal about a mentally ill man who shot up Planned Parenthood, but don’t have any comprehension that Planned Parenthood commits acts of violence every day they’re doing abortions.

    So what’s a good citizen to do? On our show today we share some ideas for how you can make a difference.

    I interview pro-Life champion, Cal Zastrow, who explains the right perspective we should have when a tragedy happens.

  • Bill Federer – Women and Islam

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    In today’s episode, we talk with renowned historian, William J. Federer about the real war on women.

    How accurate were Obama’s remarks at the National Prayer Breakfast?

    If you want to hear a broad historical perspective of Islam and world aggression, this is the show for you.

    God seems to like waiting until the odds seem hopeless and then raises up little nobodies with Faith and courage to do big things. This is our time. It’s now our turn. www.americanminute.com

  • Stay The Course!

    We all have different reasons for the hope that is within us.  The world sometimes has bad news, but as long as we can find a few friends who are like-minded, we can help each other.  This is a photo taken of me with my friends Cindy Redburn and Laurie Kish at a meeting we had in Rolla, Missouri a few months ago.
    We all have different reasons for the hope that is within us. The world sometimes has bad news, but as long as we can find a few friends who are like-minded, we can help each other. This is a photo taken of me with my friends Cindy Redburn and Laurie Kish at a meeting we had in Rolla, Missouri a few months ago.

    Anyone who has watched the news recently has seen some sad stories about France, economic woes, the Muslims beheading innocent children and our American way of life being compromised by the racists, the haters and Atheists.

    Yet, there is some good news.

  • Adoption

    She almost looks like a doll.   This is a real grandbaby born in Knob Noster.
    She almost looks like a doll.
    This is a real grandbaby born in Knob Noster.

    Years before abortion was considered legal in all 50 states, many young ladies were pressured into giving their babies away. Whenever a baby cannot be raised by his own mother and father, it is always tragic and should give us pause to reflect on the consequences of living in a fallen world. Yet, sometimes circumstances beyond our control warrant eliciting the help of others.

    In life, there is no such thing as rewinding the tape. The reason many women destroy their babies is because they want to believe they can undo a segment of their lives later in the process. Many times parents who either give their children away or destroy them, feel a sense of loss and sadness for the rest of their lives. My city clerk once told me, “You can take the baby out of the mother’s body, but you can never take the baby out of the mother’s mind.” Those words stuck with me through the years because they are true.

  • Robert Stone – 40 Days of Prayer

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    Robert Stone is the Prayer Coordinator for 40 Days for Life in Springfield Missouri. Rob tells us his story of how he got involved and shares what we can all do to make a difference in our own communities. He is a retired Air Force officer and was a missionary for 10 years in Central Asia. He and his wife, met in Kazakhstan.

    Hear the story of his battle with stage 4 cancer and what he’s doing now to change the culture in Springfield, Missouri.