Preview Mode Links will not work in preview mode

Life Matters


Commissioner Brian Johnston examines, along with various guests and experts, how the dismissal of the legal Right To Life has impacted the nature of the law, the practice of medicine, ethics, the arts, and personal relationships. With constant reminders of how a culture of life invigorates and ennobles the human experience, Johnston and his guests give positive answers and access to numerous available resources.

Sep 29, 2019

In this episode Commissioner Johnston discusses recent events in the news that involved mass shootings. The popular media, in examining the cause and the issue, neglected to point out a common factor between the two gunmen. While one seemed to be on the “right,” and the other on the “left“, in reality both in their writings admitted to being environmentally concerned and deeply troubled over the issue of overpopulation. They both expressed a pressing need to lower the population and saw their acts as doing so. 

While a handful of outlets did make known these express writings of the killers, the popular media by and large ignored these express statements of motivation and instead focused on other topics. 

Troubling in all of this is the fact that the current push in the American educational system imbuing a sense of social justice regarding the environment, global warming, and overpopulation, has created a culture with the not so subtle message: human beings themselves are a problem, and the number of human beings should be reduced. We saw this exact statement asserted by Democrat presidential candidate Bernie Sanders in urging Third World abortions to reduce the population. 

Brian tells his sad experience of having an acquaintance killed by the Unabomber. Again, the popular media avoided any deep analysis of the Unabomber‘s manifesto, but those who did bother to look into it saw that it repeated many of the very common environmental assertions and dire warnings from Al Gore’s books, all of which have been proven wrong. 

Brian, like many other Americans, cares deeply about nature and preserving and protecting the natural resources of our nation, but these sentiments are being twisted by an ideology which sees human beings themselves as mere “creators of carbon dIoxide and enemies of the earth”.

Such an ideology must be exposed and repudiated for the great evil that it can inspire through its malice towards fellow human beings, particularly the most vulnerable.