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  1. Randall Allen Terry (born April 25, 1959) [1] is an American politician and activist. Terry founded the anti-abortion organization Operation Rescue. Beginning in 1987, the group became particularly prominent for blockading the entrances to abortion clinics; Terry led the group until 1991.

  2. Randall Terry. Operation Rescue. FREE. This was my first major book. Operation Rescue is about God’s command to His people to love their neighbor as themselves, and their duty to rescue the innocent from death. It's also about the conflict between man’s laws and God’s laws, and what the Bible says we should do when God and man conflict.

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  4. Randall Terry is an American activist and founder of the anti-abortion organization Operation Rescue. Randall Allan Terry is the Founder of the anti-abortion group Operation Rescue. Mr. Terry led the largest civil disobedience movement in American history from 1987 to 1994. LEARN MORE. THE RANDALL TERRY PODCAST.

  5. Apr 30, 2024 · Operation Rescue founder Randall Terry protests in front of the Supreme Court in Washington on July 9, 2018. AP Photo/Cliff Owen. Terry clarified in a video he posted to X, formerly Twitter, earlier this month that he’s seeking the nomination not because he believes he will win, but so that he “can run television ads that show aborted babies.”

  6. Operation Rescue was founded by Randall Terry in 1986. The slogan of Operation Rescue was "If You Believe Abortion is Murder , Act like it's Murder." [2] Randall Terry stepped down as director of Operation Rescue in early 1990, appointing Keith Tucci as his successor to lead the national organization, then called Operation Rescue National (ORN).

  7. About Randall Terry. Randall Allan Terry is the Founder of the anti-abortion group Operation Rescue. Mr. Terry led the largest civil disobedience in American history from 1987 to 1994. He has been arrested 49 times, and spent more than one year in various federal, state, and local prisons.

  8. Randall Terry left the Operation Rescue in 1994. His website claims that, during his tenure (1987–1994), the group's civil disobedience and rescues resulted in 70,000 arrests, more than ten times the number of arrests during the civil rights protests of 1958–1968.

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