The Super Bowl Ad that Freaked Out NARAL

Any commercial that horrifies NARAL intrigues me. Well, Doritos did it.

Now, I can't imagine watching this commercial and being offended because it humanizes the unborn. Can you imagine being that crazy? But I guess if your entire living is based on the dehumanization of the unborn, you might understand? So here's the commercial which horrified NARAL:

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NARAL responded quickly with gasps and accusations of Doritos being "sexist" and "humanizing fetuses."

#NotBuyingIt - that @Doritos ad using #antichoice tactic of humanizing fetuses & sexist tropes of dads as clueless & moms as uptight. #SB50

— NARAL (@NARAL) February 8, 2016

The great Lila Rose responded:

Newsflash to @NARAL: human fetuses are human. Everyone sees it. That's why you're so upset. Your empire is crumbling https://t.co/lJ3CxQpKjh

— Lila Rose (@LilaGraceRose) February 8, 2016

It gets even crazier though. CNN's Carol Costello chimes in because she was obviously worried people didn't know how biased she actually was.

So about the #SuperBowl commercials...the @Doritos ultrasound one was disturbing. What the hell happened to the fetus?

— Carol Costello (@CarolCNN) February 8, 2016

Then someone responded with some common sense:

@CarolCNN @Doritos... Uhmmm.... It was born?

— franco limentani (@francolimentani) February 8, 2016

Costello again hilariously shows her warped view of life because...well...CNN:

@francolimentani @Doritos as a tiny unformed baby?

— Carol Costello (@CarolCNN) February 8, 2016

A tiny, unformed baby? Uhm. Did she see the ultrasound? Can you imagine being offended by the image of a child in ultrasound? Nuts.

An image of the Sacred Heart in the Church of the Jesu in Rome

Consecration to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Next week, the Bishops of the United States will meet in Orlando and consecrate America to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. This week on Register Radio we are joined by Bishop Kevin Rhoades to explain the importance of the consecration and how we can all take part and then Register senior writer Zelda Caldwell tells us about the remarkable phenomenon of diocesan priests living in community.