| Feature |
Nazi Germany (1933-1945) |
America (1973-Present) |
| Sanction by the government |
Third Reich, through Adolf Hitler |
U.S. Government, by decree of the U.S. Supreme Court and the
activist or tacit approval of many legislators and presidents |
| Citizen involvement |
Tolerated and accepted by apathetic citizens and churches:
+ A small number of citizens worked in the death camps
+ Most citizens did not want to think about the death camps
|
Tolerated and accepted by apathetic citizens and churches:
+ A small number of citizens work in abortion clinics
+ Most citizens do not want to think about abortion clinics
|
| Victims |
Innocent Jews |
Innocent unborn children |
| Legal charge registered against each person put to death |
None |
None |
| Legal proceedings afforded each person put to death |
None:
+ No representation by an attorney
+ No court appearance
+ No appeal to a higher court
+ All civil rights abolished
|
None:
+ No representation by an attorney
+ No court appearance
+ No appeal to a higher court
+ All civil rights abolished
|
| Killing place |
Nazi concentration camps |
American abortion clinics |
| Method of killing |
Gas suffocation, intoxication, starvation, shooting, etc. |
Chemical poisoning (RU486, salt solutions), tearing apart (suction), etc. |
| Rationale for killing |
Jews unwanted and burdensome, with few persons to speak in their defense |
Unborn children unwanted and burdensome, with few persons to speak in their defense |
| Results |
6,000,000 Jews killed, but no new deaths since 1945 |
Nearly 45-million unborn children killed, with another death every 20 to 24 seconds |
| Date killing stopped |
1945 |
Killing not stopped, and unlikely to stop- 1,300,000 deaths expected this year |
| Repentance |
Germany has repented:
+ Death camps closed, and Jews no longer killed |
America has not repented:
+ Abortion clinics open, and unborn babies continue to be killed |