I won't vouch for it's accuracy, but
pretty interesting if correct:
"I think most Americans don't want their tax dollars going to this," presidential candidate Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., a co-sponsor of the bill to defund Planned Parenthood, told CNN. "When something is so morally repugnant to so many people, why should tax dollars go to this?"
Just one problem: This isn't about fetal tissue or even abortion at all.
Not a single dollar of federal money pays for elective abortions at Planned Parenthood (or anywhere else). While Planned Parenthood does provide abortion services at some of its clinics (again, never paid for with federal dollars), more than 90 percent of the services the organization renders are things like Pap smears, birth control prescriptions, breast exams, sexual health education, and treatment and testing for sexually transmitted infections, including HIV. Across the United States, 2.7 million patients visit a Planned Parenthood clinic every year. One in five American women has gone to Planned Parenthood for health care (this writer included). Unsurprisingly, a 2012 poll showed that Americans overwhelmingly oppose defunding Planned Parenthood.
Planned Parenthood also serves some of the poorest and most vulnerable women in America. The majority of their federal funding comes in the form of Medicaid reimbursements, and nearly 80 percent of Planned Parenthood patients live on incomes 150 percent below the federal poverty line. About half of Planned Parenthood's patients receive care through funding under Title X, the federal program dedicated to funding family planning — and that, again, does not fund elective abortion services.