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Submit your thoughts on LIFE MATTERS.
We invite you to respond to the questions below or add your comments. Selected submissions will be posted on our Talkback page, so check back regularly and join the discussion.
- Filmmaker Kyle Boyd admits that creating a documentary about a family member added pressure to get the story right. What do you think might be the advantages and disadvantages of a filming a subject with whom you are personally close?
- Throughout history, people have taken chances to help those in need—even when these acts go against the law. In 1965, when Dr. Boyd was approached by a group of religious leaders to help poor women get counseling and safe but illegal abortions, he agreed to help. “I've gone about living my life and serving others,” says Boyd. How do you feel about taking illegal actions when one’s convictions go against the law?
- According to Curtis Boyd, many people now think of the Sixties as “the time of the hippies… they think of that hippie period as drugs and sex.” But for Boyd, the Sixties were a time for social change. What are your impressions of the Sixties? Has LIFE MATTERS affected your ideas about the decade, and if so, how?
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