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A Dawn Patrol entry is featured in The Best Catholic Writing 2007.

"Two thumbs up."
— Terry Teachout (referring to my blond haircolor—not my book)

"She needs some new highlights."
— Wonkette (ditto)

Portrait above by Matthew Alderman of Shrine of the Holy Whapping. Click on the artwork for a larger version.

Logo at right by Valerie of Kyriosity.

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Caricature above by the fab JD King. The book I am holding is Witness, by Whittaker Chambers.

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The exploits of Dawn Eden
 
Monday, January 17, 2005
Martin Luther King's Niece, Silent No More

Newsweek online has an interview with Martin Luther King's niece, Alveda King, that's astonishing. It's not what she's saying that's such a surprise—she's known to be a member of Silent No More, but, rather, that one of the more liberal newsmagazines' Web sites would publish such a pull-no-punches interview with a powerful, articulate, conservative black woman. Good on Newsweek, good on interviewer Karen Fragala, and God bless Alveda King. Some highlights from the story:

What is the most pressing issue facing African-Americans today?

If we were in the 1990s, I would have said that school choice is the most pressing civil-rights issue. We're now in the new millennium, and the battle for life, in my heart, has equal place. By that, I'm speaking of the pro-life movement. I am a member of a group called Silent No More, of mostly women who say they regret their abortion. I'm post-abortive so I know this, when we abort the child, we violate his or her rights, we as the mothers suffer tremendously, and our families suffer. I remember my children saying, "You killed our brother or our sister, how could you do that? Did you want to kill us, too?" My uncle said that "the Negro cannot win if he is willing to sacrifice the lives of his children for personal comfort and safety.” Now if you look at the issue of abortion, that's immediately sacrificing the life of a child for personal comfort and safely.

What about a young, single woman growing up in a poor neighborhood, with few resources? A lot of people would say that it is better for her to have an abortion than to raise a child in poverty and perpetuate the cycle of poverty for another generation.

I had an abortion in my early twenties. I was married, but the father did not want the child. He was very emphatic about that, and somewhat threatening, and I felt under tremendous pressure, and so I made that choice. At the time, we had one son, and [the father] did not want other children. And it was so convenient, because Roe v. Wade had just passed, and my medical insurance paid for it. I would say in retrospect, we have a greater responsibility as a compassionate society to teach our young people, male and female, the responsibility of parenting, what happens when you have sex, and to teach again like we used to: be prepared to raise a child if you have sex. People stopped saying that. And so I do have compassion for the young person who says, “If I have this baby, my life will be ruined.” But I believe the answer is: Think about that before you have the sex. I would say to that young lady, if she's already pregnant, then we go into intervention and look for opportunities to have the child adopted, or to strengthen her with maybe a scholarship to finish school so she doesn't feel deserted or abandoned.

1:40 AM 



 
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