Fianna Fail Confirms Plan to Ban Prolife Prayer

Only weeks after her party colleague Conor Sheehan smeared Catholics praying the Rosary in Limerick, pro abortion politician Ivana Bacik asked a question in the Dail today which addressed her party’s desire to see Catholics and prolife demonstrators banned from their right to free speech in public.

Sheehan had abused his power as an elected representative to spread a now debunked theory which claimed that Catholic men had interrupted a ‘Vigil’ (which was actually an event organised by a pro abortion group, who brought pro abortion signs with them) for a teacher who was murdered. Sheehan and Sinn Fein TD Maurice Quinlivan both claimed on social media that the men had ‘shouted over’ the ‘Vigil’, even though videos have since debunked these bizarre claims. Neither Sheehan nor Quinlivan have yet apologised publicly.

Pro austerity party Labour have lately tried to use anti Catholicism and radical pro abortion politics as a means to squeeze their way back to relevance, having created a homelessness and emigration in the past decade with their psychotic cutbacks as part of the puppet government that carried out the will of the International Monetary Fund in the 2010s. Labour were clever enough to join Fine Gael in using abortion and other social topics to soften the blow of austerity for the Irish people.

In the Dail today, Bacik asked pro abortion Taoiseach Michael Martin if legislation to target the free speech of prolife people will be brought forward.

The pro abortion Martin stated that the government were preparing a bill.

Bacik did not provide a single instance of prolife people mistreating women accessing those ‘services’ designed to ensure the controlled demolition of the unborn child. Instead, she mumbled something about an astro turf pro abortion group’s claims, to which the hapless Taoiseach (who will soon surrender his position to Leo Varadkar) said ‘that is very troubling’.

Ireland has now essentially become a one party state, with the only major differences being between personalities, not policies.

Even those who were elected on prolife promises, such as Fianna Fail’s Jack Chambers, have since been steadfast in their opposition to the prolife cause and to the unborn child.

With the upcoming ‘review’ into Ireland’s abortion legislation set to be a whitewash, Catholics can only learn to pray for an end to this gruesome violence against the unborn.

There will be a series of Prolife Vigils at Saint Saviour’s Dominick Street Dublin, beginning 19th February.