CITIZEN: Rape victims deserve a compassionate culture that provides assistance & values human dignity.

Michael Johnson, our Sr. Policy Advisor, calls on us to have the hard conversations and help rape victims... it begins with two simple truths.

Gov. Andy Beshear’s campaign ad featuring a young lady, named Hadley, explaining to the camera that she was raped and impregnated by her stepfather at the age of twelve garnered widespread attention, sparked conversation across the Commonwealth, and no doubt had an impact in the election.

As a protective father of a young daughter, I too was filled with anger towards the man who carried out such an egregious attack against Hadley’s basic human dignity and those who carry out similar acts of injustice against others.

In my mind, there is nothing more egregiously evil or unjust than rape. It’s a direct attack on a fellow human being, created in the Image of God, that undercuts their most basic God-given rights.

Hadley and others suffering similar horrific acts deserve a thoughtful, compassionate, and honest response. That’s why I’m calling on the Kentucky General Assembly to increase the punishment for rape to better reflect the crime’s seriousness. Let’s also do everything we can to increase enforcement of our rape laws and resolve Kentucky’s backlog in processing rape kits.

My years serving on a Citizen Foster Care Review Board have also shown me the importance of identifying the early warning signs of abusive parents and removing children before they suffer the egregious evil of rape or incest. We must identify ways we can do better.

We can and should also come alongside rape victims, especially those who are impregnated, with significant care and assistance. That’s why the General Assembly should create a fund to assist victims of rape with trauma counseling, medical care, and the costs that go with pregnancy, birth, and raising a child.

Unless we, ourselves, have been the victims of a rape resulting in pregnancy, none of us can understand what Hadley or others are going through. But any conversation about additional solutions and options, including exceptions to Kentucky’s abortion laws must begin with the acknowledgment of two foundational truths.

First, the preborn child is a living human being. I’ve rejoiced at ultrasound images of my preborn children moving around in the womb and heard their heartbeats, I’ve grieved the death of a preborn child, and I just welcomed my newest child into my arms a couple months ago. What I’ve witnessed firsthand has confirmed the scientific fact that the preborn child is a living human being.

Second, every human has inherent dignity, along with equal and inalienable rights. As a Christian and former appointee to one of Kentucky’s local Human Rights Commissions, I cannot condone discrimination in any form. No human, born or preborn, should be treated as lesser or have their rights violated because of their DNA or circumstances outside of their control, including his or her conception.

This issue is difficult, it is complicated, and it is hard to talk about. But an abortion retraumatizes the rape victim by once again egregiously violating the image of God, creating an additional innocent victim in the preborn child, and further devaluing culture’s understanding of human dignity. We can and must do better. Let’s have the hard conversations, make necessary reforms, and come alongside Hadley and other rape victims with significant emotional, mental, and physical care, along with financial support. Protecting the life and dignity of both the mom and the preborn child is the only way society can truly help.

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