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Sunday, October 4, 2009

Ireland Sells Out to EU: Passes Lisbon Treaty which means death for the babies

Last week Ireland voted to ratify the constitution of the European Union also known as the Lisbon Treaty. It was defeated first go-around partly because of its support for abortion. The second vote was secured by misleading the people that Ireland could opt out of certain aspects of the treaty. But pro-life groups in Ireland and legal advisers say it ain't so. Ultimately, Ireland will be bound by the laws of the European Union which permits abortion.

Weep for Ireland and for her children. Passing the EU Lisbon Treaty is a disaster and its bloody consequences will be seen as Planned Parenthood and the abortion clique make further inroads into the Emerald Isle undermining her protections for the unborn. By ratifying the Lisbon Treat, Ireland trades the emerald color of hope for the bloody red of dead babies murdered by abortion.

Lisbon Treaty Supranationalizes the Criminal Law.

"The effect of the Lisbon Treaty will be to change the status of criminal laws giving more centralised powers and adopting a situation entirely new over criminal matters. Legal analysts agree it is an unknown quantity and it is not yet clear what the effects will be. There is, among other changes, a plan to introduce a European Prosecutor."

Lisbon Will Force Abortion into Ireland through EU Charter of Human Rights: Irish Pro-Life Lobby

"Green wrote Tuesday in the Irish Times that despite promises from the government that Ireland has 'iron-clad' opt-outs from certain sections of the Treaty, these 'Irish guarantees' do nothing to change the text of the Treaty itself and a Yes vote on Lisbon in October would lead to the overturning of Ireland's abortion law.

"The Lisbon Treaty, he said, 'will remain unchanged by any assurances obtained by the Government on any issue. Not a word or a comma will be altered. It is exactly the same treaty rejected last June by the Irish people.'

"Under the Treaty the national laws of each member state will be interpreted not through the state's courts, he said, but by the European Court of Justice (ECJ) that is under no legal obligation to consider any other law besides EU law. This means, Greene wrote, that the government's much-touted guarantees 'are not part of any EU treaty (including the Lisbon Treaty), so cannot be considered EU law.'"

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