I watched Oklahoma State Senator Dusty Deevers’ recorded address yesterday and felt the hardness of his tone—raw, unstinting, unwilling to glide over the usual conciliatory rhetoric. Here was a pastor-legislator pointing directly at the deceitful heart of the American “pro-life” movement.
The location was Oklahoma, the bill in question SB 456, titled the Abolition of Abortion Act. Deevers described it plainly. From the moment of fertilization, the pre-born are persons, abortion is homicide. He frames this not as a policy tweak, but as a moral obligation he will not abandon.
In contrast, of course, stands Kristan Hawkins, one of the figureheads of the mainstream pro-life movement and leader of Students for Life of America—an organization once front-line in the fight against abortion. Students for Life is described by Deevers as a machine of incrementalism, a movement that celebrates laws which leave open the easiest paths for chemically-induced terminations and then dubs them “victories.”
The problem with the mainstream pro-life movement is that it demands a continuance of “regulated abortion” to justify its existence and, subsequently, a paycheck for those involved. It’s a scam and a scandal of the highest degree.
Join Us and Get These Perks:
✅ No Ads in Articles
✅ Access to Comments and Discussions
✅ Community Chats
✅ Full Article and Podcast Archive
✅ The Joy of Supporting Our Work 😉
Deevers names the moment, “You already know where I stand… I am one of the most anti-abortion legislators in the country.” Then he turns to his peers: “I refused to settle when your bill wouldn’t save a single unborn life and wouldn’t acknowledge their lives as equal to yours and mine.”
He digs further. The 2022 law hailed as Oklahoma’s “abortion-free” triumph still counts 3,000 abortions annually in the state. Deevers holds the post up as evidence. What was marketed as triumph was, in his words, a facade.
This intersection—of pastor, politician, and conscience—rings with urgency. Deevers doesn’t speak of strategy or compromise. He speaks of justice, straight-up and unembellished. He stands apart from a movement that polishes its optics, fund-raises its “wins,” and avoids full confrontation.
In his speech, the lines blur between pulpit and chamber, gospel and statute. He issues no bland assurance. He declares conflict. He names betrayal. He calls for resolute pursuit of protection, not PR.
Whether you sign his bill or still object, his voice demands we reckon with something larger…the logic of our movement, the architecture of our laws, and the definition of victory.
We are not merely witnessing policy-debate. We are watching moral architecture shift. The question isn’t just which laws pass—but which intellects, which hearts, which convictions lead them.
And that, above all, is worth listening to.






Make a 








