Just…wow…
Scotland has reportedly enacted new abortion laws that could land religious people in trouble with authorities if they pray in their homes — if the homes are in designated abortion “safe access zones.”
The UK has become infamous in recent months for its crackdown on free speech (except when the “free speech” involves Muslim migrants cheering on terrorism). Scotland’s hate speech laws in particular have drawn criticism from free speech advocates across the political spectrum. A new report says that even Christians and other religious pro-lifers praying inside their own homes or displaying religious symbols could be in trouble if pro-abortion radicals in the area perceive the religious actions as a threat to their baby killing.
Full article, HERE.
I literally have no words…
See what Jesus says in 1 John 15, verses 18 to 25, but in particular, this part of verse 20: “If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also.”
This, and more, is coming.
John 15, not 1 John 15. Need my second coffee.
That is just not right …praying in your own house could get oneself arrested or charged . So much for BREXIT,, sounds like whole hog , hook ,line,and sinker , E.U.,and WEF restrictive nanny state bs.
Is the muslim “call to prayer” over loudspeakers from mosques allowed ?
It’s one of those excesses that comes with that liberal mindset.
Ag- Good point!
Boats- Yep… Of course the ‘call’ is allowed!
LL- Sadly true!
If you’re battling your conscience so much that someone praying is upsetting, you might want to rethink your decision process and not get the abortion you’ll regret in years to come.
One hopes the Scots… Who have history of being cranky….decide to start going all “William Wallace” on the libtards who have seized power.
The world is getting weirder by the day.
Where are The Covenanters when you really need them?
The reasonable Scots moved to North America long ago.
The article is not quite true
The ban only applies to the grounds of the clinic and surrounding PUBLIC Aareas.
The act is here https://www.legislation.gov.uk/asp/2024/10/section/2/enacted