Representatives of the pro-life group Students for Life accept the Pro-Life Impact Award from Heroic Media President Brett Atteberry and National Prayer Luncheon for Life Executive Director and spokesperson Karen Garnett at the 2021 National Prayer Luncheon for Life in Grapevine, Texas, April 30, 2021. From left to right: Atteberry, Lauren Castillo, SFLA s Director of Mission Advancement, Jordan Horner, SFLA s Philanthropy Officer, and Garnett. | YouTube/Heroic Media
Three pro-life organizations, including Students for Life of America, were awarded $85,000 in grants at the sixth annual National Prayer Luncheon for Life on Friday, where several prominent pro-life activists gathered to recognize the efforts of those working to end abortion.
At the recent ribbon-cutting ceremony of the Office of Contemporary Art and Culture's (OCAC) Art Collection in the spacious art hall on Ratchadamnoen Avenue, a group of ageing male artists covered in sanitary masks surrounded the director of OCAC, Vimolluck Chuchart, who gave a self-congratulatory speech. She proudly announced that the public will be able to view for the first time the national collection of the Ministry of Culture's contemporary Thai art. Beside these elderlies stood a white giant fibreglass sculpture by Sutee Kunavichyanont in Thai military uniform wearing a helmet with a rifle erect. Sutee's Equality; Thai Soldier (2016) is inspired by the cultural mandates between 1939 and 1942 during the premiere of Phibul Songkhram that aimed to uplift the national spirit and moral code of the nation and instil progressive tendencies and newness into Thai life.
Representatives of the pro-life group Students for Life accept the Pro-Life Impact Award from Heroic Media President Brett Atteberry and National Prayer Luncheon for Life Executive Director and spokesperson Karen Garnett at the 2021 National Prayer Luncheon for Life in Grapevine, Texas, April 30, 2021. From left to right: Atteberry, Lauren Castillo, SFLA s Director of Mission Advancement, Jordan Horner, SFLA s Philanthropy Officer, and Garnett. | YouTube/Heroic Media
Three pro-life organizations, including Students for Life of America, were awarded $85,000 in grants at the sixth annual National Prayer Luncheon for Life on Friday, where several prominent pro-life activists gathered to recognize the efforts of those working to end abortion.
Bring It On: In It to Win It (2007) 8 a.m. E!
Life of Pi (2012) 8:15 a.m. HBO
The Shining (1980) 8:30 a.m. AMC
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Coming to America (1988) 9 a.m. and 10:30 p.m. Paramount
Stand and Deliver (1988) 9:25 a.m. Cinemax
Saint Maud (2019) 9:25 a.m. Epix
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Idlewild (2006) 11:10 a.m. Cinemax
Widows (2018) 11:30 a.m. FXX
My Cousin Vinny (1992) Noon and 7:30 p.m. CMT
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Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005) 1 p.m. Syfy
The Hunger Games (2012) 1:15 p.m. Freeform
Pretty Woman (1990) 1:30 and 7 p.m. Bravo
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The Silence of the Lambs (1991) 2 p.m. Showtime
Beetlejuice (1988) 3 and 10:30 p.m. CMT
White Heat (1949) 3 p.m. TCM
Abortion is critical to the freedom and imagination of Americans, according to the head of Planned Parenthood. But in reality, it’s the reason why millions don’t exist today – their freedom lost along with their lives.
In an interview that went largely unnoticed by the media, Alexis McGill Johnson spoke about the “dire” landscape for “abortion rights” on the podcast Undistracted. In an April 8th episode, the president of the nation’s largest abortion provider attributed new abortion restrictions to “this last gasp of patriarchy.” Among other things, she criticized President Biden for not using the word “abortion,” accused pro-life politicians of white supremacy, and called for an end to “dehumanization.”