<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div>Kedves Öcsém-Uram!<br></div>Sajnos nem tudok franciául.<br></div>Leveled olvasásakor - a használhatatlan nyers fordításra gondolok- szomorkodtam el magamon, magunkon.Így utólag kívánunk egyik őseid földjéről Boldog András napok utániakat.(NAPOKAT, heteket, hónapokat, éveket.....)<br></div>Bátyádék.<br></div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">2016-12-11 7:53 GMT+01:00 KEA <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:kea@turul.banki.hu" target="_blank">kea@turul.banki.hu</a>></span>:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">A francia szenátus szerdán elfogadott egy törvényjavaslatot, ami alapján<br>
bűncselekmény életpárti információkat közzétenni az interneten.<br>
<br>
* * *<br>
<br>
French Senate Passes Pro-Life Website Ban<br>
Bill could be used to restrict churches from teaching about abortion<br>
<br>
Washington Free Beacon, 2016.12.07. -- Bill McMorris<br>
<a href="http://freebeacon.com/issues/french-senate-passes-pro-life-website-ban/" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">http://freebeacon.com/issues/<wbr>french-senate-passes-pro-life-<wbr>website-ban/</a><br>
<br>
<br>
The French Senate adopted a bill that will make it a crime to post<br>
pro-life information on the internet on Wednesday.<br>
<br>
The Senate voted 173-126 to approve legislation that will make it a<br>
crime for any website to publish material at odds with the nation’s<br>
abortion regime. The legislation, which passed the French National<br>
Assembly on Dec. 1, will prosecute pro-life activists for “exercising,<br>
by any mean, moral and psychological pressures, threats or any act of<br>
intimidation against people seeking information on a voluntarily<br>
termination of pregnancy.”<br>
<br>
Sen. Francoise Laborde, a member of France’s Radical Party of the Left,<br>
said during debate that pro-life websites constituted “horrors and lies”<br>
and should be prevented from operating. The bill targets those who<br>
operate pro-life websites or provide information about abortion<br>
alternatives. Violators will face up to two years in prison and $30,000<br>
in fines.<br>
<br>
The Senate approved an amendment that appears to soften the ban by<br>
removing “in a dissuasive aim” from the text of the Assembly bill. On<br>
paper, that amendment will punish “misinformation,” while allowing<br>
pro-life activists to attempt to persuade women against abortion.<br>
<br>
Grégor Puppinck said the Senate bill “is better writing, but not better<br>
substance.” It will do little to protect the free speech rights of<br>
pro-life activists because the amended language continues to bar “moral<br>
and psychological pressure,” a vague term that leaves pro-lifers<br>
vulnerable to accusations from pro-abortion activists.<br>
<br>
“Publishing the Christian teaching that abortion is a crime could be<br>
seen as putting pressure on people,” he said. “The simple sharing of<br>
information that might upset moral conscience could be sufficient to<br>
constitute a crime.”<br>
<br>
Puppinck is the director of the European Centre for Law and Justice. He<br>
said that the wording of the law could extend from explicitly pro-life<br>
activist groups and websites and eventually include entire religions.<br>
The Catechism of the Catholic Church, the guiding document for France’s<br>
largest religion, calls abortion a “moral evil,” adding that “this<br>
teaching has not changed and remains unchangeable.” Since the Catholic<br>
clergy in France cannot change the teaching, they would have to remain<br>
silent on the subject or face penalties for communicating its position<br>
that abortion is “gravely contrary to the moral law.”<br>
<br>
“This law may prohibit the church from publishing its position on<br>
abortion. If you teach that it is a sin then teaching itself would be<br>
sufficient for prosecution,” he said.<br>
<br>
The Senate and National Assembly will now enter a process to reconcile<br>
the original and amended bills. The National Assembly will have the<br>
final decision on which bill to advance to Socialist President François<br>
Hollande—a vote that is expected to occur in the coming weeks.<br>
<br>
Pro-life activists intend to take the matter to France and the European<br>
Union’s highest courts if necessary. A coalition of 60 lawmakers who<br>
voted against the bill can ask France’s Constitutional Council to rule<br>
on the matter before Hollande, whose party championed the bill, can sign<br>
it. If that effort is not successful, Puppinck says that the European<br>
Centre for Law and Justice will take the case to the European Court of<br>
Human Rights.<br>
<br>
He said that the court should follow in the footsteps of the United<br>
States Supreme Court, which unanimously struck down a law that prevented<br>
pro-lifers demonstrating outside of abortion clinic sidewalks in 2014.<br>
<br>
“It’s a real limitation on free speech aimed at mainstreaming abortion,”<br>
Puppinck said. “We expect that this court, like the U.S. Supreme Court,<br>
will support freedom of speech and recognize that abortion is a public<br>
issue that has to be debated freely.”<br>
<br>
Dr. Joseph Meaney, director of international coordination for the<br>
pro-life Human Life International, has been working in France over the<br>
course of the debate. He said that the Assembly and the Senate are<br>
attempting to limit the information that women debating abortion<br>
receive. The criminal penalties associated with espousing pro-life<br>
views, he said, were some of the most extreme actions taken by the<br>
abortion lobby.<br>
<br>
“The main concern expressed was that women seeking abortion not be<br>
confronted with any pro-life information,” he said. “They are willing to<br>
make it a crime to have a pro-life website that seeks to help women not<br>
to abort.”<br>
<span class="HOEnZb"><font color="#888888"><br>
--<br>
<br>
Üdvrivalgással:<br>
KEA.<br>
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