Abigail Spanberger Is Ralph Northam In A Wig
It was Ralph Northam’s bizarre January 2019 radio interview on WTOP’s “Ask The Governor” Show - where he tried to sugarcoat infanticide - that alarmed normal people all over the country.
Had it happened before the election, Northam would have lost. As it was, days after that ghastly interview one of Northam’s classmates (presumably) leaked the blackface yearbook photos and Northam’s college nickname: Coon Man.
Overnight, Northam became the face of the Democratic death cult.
Abigail Spanberger may be teetering at the top of a similar precipice. Unfortunately, for her, she’s been exposed during the campaign and not after she’s ensconced in the Governor’s Mansion.
Social media was saturated over the weekend with videos of the Dem candidate for governor extolling euthanasia and declaring her support for legislation that would require religious institutions (read: Catholic hospitals) to provide death-on-demand for patients, regardless of religious beliefs.
She’s Ralph Northam in a blond wig. The difference is, she is not governor.
All Virginians need do is look at Canada, where the right to die quickly became a duty to die, to know this woman is far too radical for Virginia.
The General Assembly is full of far-left legislators who support abortion until birth and death on demand. The only roadblock to ther radical policies has been a conservative governor with a veto pen.
Footnote for the trolls: Canada's approach to euthanasia, known as Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD), has evolved significantly since its initial legalization in 2016. Initially limited to those with reasonably foreseeable death due to a grievous and irremediable medical condition, the law was expanded in 2021 to include individuals whose death is not reasonably foreseeable, such as those with disabilities. Further expansions are under consideration, including those with mental illness as the sole condition. This has made Canada a focal point in the global discussion surrounding euthanasia and its potential implications.