Audubon
Society: more population control
Executive Intelligence Review, March 15, 1996, p.
70
The
National Audubon Society has urged its members to mobilize to overturn
Congressional budget cuts in the population control programs of the U.S. State
Department, arguing that wildlife habitat is more important than preserving
human life.
In
its Feb. 22 "Action Alert," the Society howls that opponents of
population control in Congress were able to include restrictions on the U.S.
international family planning program, as pat of the omnibus continuing
resolution passed in January. Funding for population control programs "was
reduced from last year's level of $547 million to $72 million in this fiscal
year."
These
cuts "will have a profound impact on efforts to stabilize population
growth, which is critical to long-term global protection of wildlife
habitat," according to the genocidal ideologues of the Audubon Society. The
“alert” directs its activists to “contact their representative and
senators and urge them to restore funding for international family planning
programs by whatever means possible”