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Clarendon can still become 'a city on a hill'

Clarendon can still become 'a city on a hill'


Clarendon can still become 'a city on a hill'

A small Texas town has surprisingly said no to protecting preborn babies, but a pro-lifer doesn't think the fight is over.

Clarendon, Texas was considering a proposal to become a sanctuary city for the unborn and to ban the use of its streets and highways for abortion trafficking, but the city council rejected it.

Mark Lee Dickson of Sanctuary Cities for the Unborn reports that one council member successfully spread false information.

Dickson, Mark Lee (Sanctuary Cities for the Unborn) Dickson

"The council member reached out to … and got talking points from the pro-abortion ACLU," he details. "Someone was there in leadership that just didn't represent the majority of the beliefs of the conservative city of Clarendon."

The council member, Eulaine McIntosh, is married to a pro-abortion pastor whose view on the issue is shared by few.

"One pastor in the community told me we're called to be a city on a hill, a light of this world, not a mouthpiece for the ACLU," Dickson relays. "So obviously, this is far from over. This is a situation where people are going to continue to fight for this, because this is an issue worth fighting for."

He suggests one good way to pivot is for the city to elect a new city council members who better represent the people who live there.