While most Republican politicians talk a big game about being pro-life, Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman is proving he's willing to walk the walk by taking direct action against the abortion pill pipeline flooding America's states.
Since the Supreme Court's historic Dobbs decision returned the power to protect unborn children back to the states where it belongs, too many GOP officials have suddenly developed a case of cold feet. They were happy to campaign on pro-life values, but when it comes time to actually do the hard work of protecting innocent life, they're nowhere to be found.
Not Russell Coleman. The Kentucky Attorney General represents a shining exception to the rule of weak-kneed Republicans who fold under pressure from the abortion lobby and their allies in the mainstream media.
The Real Fight Has Just Begun
Here's what the establishment doesn't want you to understand: winning Dobbs was just the beginning, not the end. The abortion industry immediately pivoted to flooding pro-life states with dangerous abortion pills through the mail, effectively circumventing state laws designed to protect women and children.
While other attorneys general sit on their hands, Coleman recognizes that Big Pharma's abortion pill pipeline represents a direct assault on state sovereignty and the protection of innocent life. This isn't just about abortion – it's about whether states have any real power to govern themselves, or if federal bureaucrats and pharmaceutical giants can override the will of the people.
"When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the power to protect the unborn was finally — and rightfully — returned to the states," according to the report.
The question every American should be asking is simple: if Republican officials won't fight for the most innocent among us when they have the legal authority to do so, what exactly will they fight for?
Patriots in Kentucky can be proud that they have an Attorney General willing to take on the powerful interests trying to undermine their state's pro-life laws. Meanwhile, voters in other states need to start asking their own Republican officials why they're not following Coleman's lead.
The abortion industry is counting on GOP cowardice to win this fight. Will they be proven right, or will more Republicans find the backbone to stand with heroes like Russell Coleman?
