How much of an anti-abortion extremist is the Media Research Center? It gets mad when you accurately describe what anti-abortion “crisis pregnancy centers” do. Matt Philbin whined in an Aug. 23 post:
For the abortion-worshipping left, every live baby is a missed opportunity. For every unterminated pregnancy there’s a woman who can no longer have a big powerful career, carefree autonomy and meaningless casual sex. It’s a feminist nightmare.
So it helps to have tech companies like Yelp on their side. And make no mistake: Yelp has definitely chosen a side. It was an early entrant to the Moloch List, corporations who made a public show of offering to pick up abortion (and “gender affirming”) travel costs for employees who live in less bloodthirsty states.
Now, as reported by Axios, Yelp is putting warnings on listings for crisis pregnancy centers, lest babies slip through the abortion net.
Starting today, Yelp will add a consumer notice to both faith-based and non-faith-based crisis pregnancy centers noting that they “provide limited medical services and may not have licensed medical professionals onsite.”
Sure enough, if you look up such establishments on Yelp, the tag of shame is there.
As Axios explains, “Crisis pregnancy centers do not offer abortion services but promote themselves to people seeking abortions and then typically counsel the patients to go through with their pregnancies.” This, to the delicately attuned moral sensibilities of abortion enthusiasts, is unconscionable.
“Tag of shame”? We thought the MRC was proud of how CPCs deceived women and coerced them into not having an abortion (though it has lied in the past by denying that they do any such thing, despite copious evidence to the contrary). If Philbin is happy with what CPCs do, he should have no problem whatsoever with those services being accurately labeled — after all, he made no effort to dispute the accuracy of that description.
(Oh, and the “Moloch List” is what the MRC maliciously calls its list of companies that will provide resources for employees who choose to have an abortion.)
But because Philbin lives in a hateful alternate reality, telling the truth is a threat to him:
Axios helpfully stressed that “Just noting that crisis pregnancy centers provide limited medical services doesn’t address all the criticisms around such facilities.”
No, because most of the criticisms are window dressing on the pro-abortion gang’s hatred of women in crisis choosing to bring their babies to term. You have to wonder if the libertine left deep down realizes that those women who don’t kill their babies for convenience stand as a silent rebuke to the rest.
Philbin clearly doesn’t believe women should have free will when it comes to the decision to carry a child to term, so he loves that CPCs deceive and coerce women — and he would rather the world not know that inconvenient fact. So much for the notion that anyone at the MRC cares about telling the truth.