With that said, Warren told the Democrats, “For these people who believe life begins at birth, all right, at conception, it’s an American holocaust. They believe that there’s 40 million people who should be here. And to them that’s an issue.”
During the Beliefnet interview, Warren said he does intend to speak with Obama privately about the issue again as the two are friends. But he doesn’t intend to debate publicly with him on it.
“It’s not something I protest out on the street about. It’s something you deal with individually as rational civil people,” Warren said.
Since the election of Barack Obama, conservative Christians have been increasingly prayerful for – and some more vocally critical of – the Illinois senator, who many believe will be "the most radical pro-abortion president" in U.S. history.
During a gathering for Planned Parenthood, Obama declared that the first thing he would do as president would be to sign the Freedom of Choice Act, which would abolish all restrictions and limitations on women in the United States to have an abortion prior to fetal viability, whether at the state or federal level, or after the point of viability when the life of the mother is endangered.
Obama has also been known for his opposition to the Supreme Court ruling to uphold the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act and his votes against legislative efforts in the Illinois Senate for three consecutive years (2001-2003) to give legal protections to a baby born alive during an attempted abortion procedure.
During Warren’s interview with Beliefnet, the megachurch pastor confessed that he and Obama “totally disagree” with one another on the issue of abortion.








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