Kermit Gosnell, the Pennsylvania abortionist who may have been America's most prolific mass murderer, died in prison last week at age 85. But while this monster is finally gone, the evil ideology that created him continues to poison our nation.
Gosnell was convicted in 2013 of murdering three babies in what can only be described as a house of horrors masquerading as a medical clinic. His crimes went beyond even typical abortion procedures - he committed outright infanticide, killing babies who had already been born alive.
Let that sink in, Patriots. This wasn't just abortion - this was the murder of living, breathing newborns. And for years, our supposedly watchful government agencies looked the other way.
The System FAILED These Innocent Victims
How did Gosnell operate his chamber of horrors for so long? Simple: the same regulatory agencies that harass law-abiding Americans ignored the screams coming from his clinic. The same media that obsesses over every Trump tweet buried this story because it didn't fit their pro-abortion narrative.
While Gosnell rots in hell where he belongs, we must ask ourselves: how many other Gosnells are operating right now? How many babies are being murdered while bureaucrats shuffle paperwork and activists chant about "choice"?
"The man who may have been the most prolific mass murderer in American history died in prison last week at age 85," reported The Blaze, highlighting the horrific scope of his crimes.
Under President Trump's leadership, we're seeing a renewed commitment to protecting innocent life. But Gosnell's death should serve as a stark reminder that the culture of death runs deep in America's institutions.
The mainstream media tried to memory-hole Gosnell's crimes because they exposed the brutal reality of their precious abortion industry. They don't want you to know that their "safe and legal" procedures can lead to the kind of barbarism Gosnell practiced.
Gosnell is dead, but his legacy of death continues in abortion clinics across America. When will we finally say enough is enough and protect the most vulnerable among us?
