Father of a child born via IVF warns AGAINST it: Technology put ‘in EVIL people’s hands’



Granger Smith’s life was forever changed when one tragic day, his son River was lost in a drowning accident.

Devastated, the country music singer stepped out of the spotlight after 25 years and took on a new pursuit: getting closer to Jesus and joining the ministry. While strengthening his relationship with God was healing, Smith and his wife, Amber, were now lacking their son's bright light in their lives — and wanted another child.

However, Amber had her tubes tied after giving birth to River.

“I look back on that now as if we just had an idea of when our family would start or finish,” Smith tells Allie Beth Stuckey of “Relatable.” “I am against surgical contraception in that way because it put us in a really tough spot.”

That’s when he began to discuss IVF with his wife.

“She really struggled. She said, ‘But how could we reconcile playing God and planting a baby in my belly?’” Smith explains. However, a conversation with his son Lincoln gave him what he believed to be the answer.

“He was just staring out of the window and he just said something out of the blue. He said, ‘Daddy, does God make some of the trees and man makes some of the trees?' And I answered quickly without thinking about it, and I said, ‘No, buddy, God makes all the trees but sometimes man needs to plant the seed.’”

“I remember feeling overwhelmed with that thought, God makes all the babies, sometimes man plants the seed. And I felt a peace in that,” he tells Stuckey.

Smith and his wife began the IVF process — and despite running into ethical problems over what to do with the embryos — Amber became pregnant with their now 3-year-old son, Maverick.

While they love and cherish their son, Smith was horrified at what he saw coming out of the clinic they used after Maverick’s birth, calling it “rotten fruit” — and he tells Stuckey that he wouldn’t do it over because of this.

“What they’re promoting through IVF was so that anybody could have a baby. Not a man and a woman, not a married man and woman. And that wasn’t just that clinic,” Smith says. “There is so much evil surrounding it, evil coming out of it. The ability to put this kind of technology in evil people’s hands is too much to bear.”

Stuckey is in agreement.

“There’s so many Christian parents, who would and do make excellent parents, who do not realize before they go into IVF the ethical quandary that they will be placed in,” she says, adding, “It’s not coming from a place of hatred or condemnation for me. It’s just a place of realization that these are babies made in the image of God.”


Witness at House Oversight Committee hearing says that having an abortion was 'an act of self-love' and 'the best decision I ever made'



During a House Oversight Committee hearing on Wednesday, a witness named Sarah Lopez said that getting an abortion was "the best decision" of her life and "an act of self-love."

Lopez recalled that she had been "working in a restaurant scraping by on $2.15 an hour plus tips" and was "barely" able to pay her $250 monthly rent. She said that upon learning of her pregnancy, she "knew immediately" she "wanted an abortion."

Lopez described abortion as "health care" and said that "abortion was the best decision I ever made. It was an act of self-love."

In response to Lopez's remarks, District Media Group President and Independent Women's Forum senior fellow Beverly Hallberg tweeted, "It's not the we don't love ourselves enough; it’s that we love ourselves too much."

\u201cIt\u2019s not the we don\u2019t love ourselves enough; it\u2019s that we love ourselves too much.\u201d
— Beverly Hallberg (@Beverly Hallberg) 1657743070

"Democrats are so disconnected from working people’s struggles that they actually think this type of abortion advocacy helps them. It does not," tweeted Laura Ingraham, who hosts "The Ingraham Angle" show on the Fox News Channel.

Allie Beth Stuckey, host of BlazeTV's "Relatable," tweeted, "She's correct. She loved herself, her convenience, and her comfort so much that she was willing to kill her child for them. That’s why the Bible says godless people in the end days will be 'lovers of self.'"

"Taking her on her own terms: If 'an act of self love' was your 'best decision ever,' what does that say about you?" tweeted Tim Carney, who is a Washington Examiner columnist and a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

"We'll see if she is saying this in any number of years from now. So many--too many women--go to their death bed in regret about their abortions. Yet the abortion movement, including so-called abortion advocates like Sarah Lopez, ignore the stories of THOSE women," tweeted Rebecca Downs of Townhall.com.

The hearing on Wednesday came as those on the left have been up in arms about a decision issued last month by the Supreme Court that enables states to ban abortions.

"The Constitution does not prohibit the citizens of each State from regulating or prohibiting abortion. Roe and Casey arrogated that authority. We now overrule those decisions and return that authority to the people and their elected representatives," the opinion stated.

The Impact of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs Decision on Abortion Rights and Access Across the U.S. www.youtube.com