News

France Punishes Pro-Life Websites for False Advertising

Meanwhile, US states split on disclosures by Christian pregnancy centers.

Christianity Today November 18, 2016
carol.anne / Shutterstock

The French government introduced plans this fall to create a “digital trading hindrance” to pregnancy websites that don’t clearly identify their pro-life view.

“Being hostile to abortion is an opinion protected by the civil liberties in France,” said Laurence Rossignol, minister for families, children, and women’s rights. “But creating websites that appear official but actually give biased information designed to deter, to blame, or to assign trauma is not acceptable.”

Pro-life websites can continue to exist, but they should not be able to “deliberately deceiv[e] users by posing as official or neutral sites,” the French government stated.

One site the government is targeting is the popular ivg.net, which says that abortion “involves risks that can appear quickly or over time.” The site, which is named similarly to the government’s official site, also includes testimonies from women who regret their abortions, information on social services for mothers, and a hotline to call to talk to someone who will “help you see all the possible solutions.”

“The site provides help for women who suffer from an abortion, who finally find a place here to express their pain—ideologically denied in our country,” spokesperson Marie Philippe told EWTN, a major Catholic broadcaster. Calling the legislation a “media ideology assault,” Philippe said that the site doesn’t “force women to choose one way or another, but simply allows them to make a free and informed decision.”

The battle over whether pro-life groups are deceiving women is also being fought in the United States.

A California law upheld in October requires pregnancy centers to notify clients of the existence of publicly-funded services like contraception and abortion. Unlicensed centers must also notify clients that their staff is unlicensed.

Meanwhile, in Boston, a federal court ruled that Baltimore’s requirement that pregnancy centers post disclaimers that they don’t make referrals for abortion or birth control is unconstitutional.

“There is no evidence that women were coming to the center under false pretenses and suffering harmful health consequences because of it,” the court found. “Thus, the city has not satisfied the ‘demanding standard’ of showing that the ordinance actually promotes a compelling interest in solving a specific problem.”

In Illinois, four pregnancy centers and a doctor have filed a lawsuit against the state, arguing against a new law that would require pregnancy centers—and medical facilities and doctors that object to abortion—to provide referrals to abortion providers for women who ask for them.

“Medical professionals and pregnancy care centers shouldn’t be forced to speak a message completely at odds with their mission and ethics,” stated Kevin Theriot, an attorney with Alliance Defending Freedom, which is working on the case. “The centers … empower women who are or think they may be pregnant to give birth in circumstances where they may want to but don’t feel they have the necessary resources or social support. All [the law] accomplishes is to eliminate this choice for the women who need it most.”

Care Net, one of the country’s largest network of pregnancy centers, noted in a recent report that it is careful to make clear to potential clients that it does not provide abortions or abortion referrals.

“Critics of pregnancy centers claim that this is not enough,” the report stated. “They claim that in order to meet some arbitrary standard of ‘non-deception’ (a standard that only those critics themselves have created), pregnancy centers should have large, publicly visible signs on their buildings stating that they do not perform or refer for abortions.”

Care Net, which provided more than $56 million worth of social services last year, objected: “When you visit an ophthalmologist’s website, do you expect them to post disclaimers listing all of the types of medical services they do not provide?”

Those who accuse the pregnancy center network should check with the clients, Care Net stated. “If pregnancy centers were being deceptive, clients of pregnancy centers themselves would be reporting such deception in significant numbers. However, this has never happened. In fact, the opposite has occurred.”

Nearly all of Care Net’s clients that completed an exit survey over the past three years were satisfied: 98.7 percent in 2013, 97 percent in 2014, and 97.7 percent in 2015.

In addition to covering the long-running legal fight over how pro-life pregnancy centers advertise, CT recently noted how such centers were losing on search engines but winning in court.

CT also reported how 1,000 women who aborted feel about the local church.

Our Latest

The Myth of Tech Utopianism

What a book on feminism helped me realize about our digital age.

Review

Don’t Erase Augustine’s Africanness

A new book recovers the significance of the church father’s geographic and cultural roots.

News

The Hymns Still Rise in Rwanda, but They Do So Quietly Now

Why one-size-fits-all regulations are sending churches underground.

What I Learned Living Among Leprosy

My 16 years at a rural hospital in India showed me what healing and restoration in Christian community look like.

The Russell Moore Show

Jonathan Haidt’s Newest Thoughts on Technology, Anxiety, and the War for Our Attention

As the digital world shifts at breakneck speed, Haidt offers new analysis on what he’s witnessing on the front lines.

The Bulletin

An Alleged Drug Boat Strike, the Annunciation Catholic School Shooting, and the Rise of Violence in America

The Bulletin discusses the attack on an alleged Venezuelan drug boat and the recent school shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church in the context of politics of violence.

The AI Bible: ‘We Call It Edutainment’

Max Bard of Pray.com details an audience-driven approach to AI-generated videos of the Bible, styled like a video game and heavy on thrills.

Review

A Woman’s Mental Work Is Never Done

Sociologist Allison Daminger’s new book on the cognitive labor of family life is insightful but incomplete.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube