Pro-Choice Activist: “Abortion Stops a Beating Heart…”

Pro-Choice activist Anne Fuderi has written a number of articles supporting legalized abortion. However, she says:

“I accept that abortion stops a beating heart and I accept that abortion ends a potential human life, even in the very earliest weeks of pregnancy.”

Anne Fuderi “Abortion: How Late Is Too Late?” Spiked November 28, 2011

Does abortion and only a “potential” life? These medical textbooks and scientists claim that life begins at conception, which means that an actual life and not a potential life is what is ended in an abortion.

A number of abortionists have also admitted that the abortions they perform take human lives.

first trimester sonogram – is this life? Or potential life?

 

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Marriage Counselor Discusses Aftermath of Abortion for Couples

Dr. Forrest C Stevenson, certified marriage counselor of Brighton, Michigan:

“As a marriage counselor, I have too often shared with a couple in this sorrow. They love each other, but as they look at each other, I see the hurt in their eyes. I’ve heard a woman say, “Seven years ago my husband said I could not have this baby. “I’m still in school, I’m going to get my education first.” I did what he said and I had an abortion. I wonder what that baby would’ve been like. Would he have had curly hair like his daddy? Would he have been a happy baby? Would it have been a girl? Would it have been a boy? What could’ve happened?”

Too many times I’ve heard a young man say, “I demanded that my wife get an abortion, but I wish that she had not done what I said.” These people may love each other, but the hurt of the guilt that they share together has grown like a wall between them. It is so serious they can hardly build an adequate life. Their marriage is a nightmare because of shared guilt.”

John R Rice The Murder of the Helpless Unborn… Abortion (Murfreesboro, Tennessee: Sword of the Lord Publishers, 1971) 32

Although this is a very old reference, the emotional aftermath of abortion has not changed that much in the past few decades. You can read about men who regret their partners’ abortions here and women who regret their abortions. 

Abortion still put a tremendous strain on couples’ relationships. One study showed that 80% of all relationships broke up in the aftermath of an abortion.

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Frederica Mathews Green On Abortion And Women

Author Frederica Mathews-Green interviewed many postabortion women for a book she was writing. She says of her research:

“It was striking how frequently women in these groups said, “If I’d only had one other person to stand by me…” They weren’t asking for magical solutions. They were asking for a friend.”

Later in the book, she says that she had expected the women she interviewed to say that they were most concerned about material needs and goals like finishing an education or being able to afford a baby, but:

“Yet when we listened to women describe their situations in depth in the listening groups, a surprising theme emerged. In nearly every case, the abortion was undertaken to fulfill a felt obligation to another person, a parent or boyfriend. Our assumption that abortion decisions were prompted by the sort of practical problems – food, shelter, poverty, clothing – which a pregnancy care center could attempt to solve was not borne out. Instead, the woman felt bound to please or protect some other person, and abortion was the price she felt she had to pay.”

Later, Mathews Green continues:

“When postabortion women talk about the reasons for their decision, they talk most often about the failure of the baby’s father to be supportive, to fill the father’s role. Unexpected pregnancy can raise some breathtaking problems, but a partner’s vigilant love has a way of easing them. Imagine a woman discovering a pregnancy in a difficult situation, but her partner saying to her, “I love you, I love our baby, I’ll do anything I can to make this family work.” On the other hand, imagine a story from one of my listening groups: a married woman with two kids, living in reasonable security, to whom her husband says, “Only ignorant people have more than two kids. I don’t want this baby. You have to have an abortion.” Which child will survive?”

Frederica Mathews-Green. Real Choices: Offering Practical, Life-Affirming Alternatives to Abortion (Sisters, Oregon: Multnomah Books, 1994) 21, 33, 45

 

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Clinic Worker: Women Would Become Depressed If They Didn’t Abort

The author of the pro-choice book Abortion: A Positive Decision quotes a 35-year-old abortion clinic supervisor:

“Women may say, oh, I don’t want to have a baby because I haven’t enough money, or my partner and I haven’t known one another very long. When I feel it’s good just to say, I don’t want a baby at the moment. I think that’s perfectly all right. There’s nothing stronger than that, when you think of what it takes to have a baby… If you’re forcing somebody to have a baby, making a lifetime decision against their will, then problems are going to turn up and they’re not going to be very happy about that. They’re probably going to be extremely depressed.”

Patricia Lunneborg Abortion: A Positive Decision (Westport, Connecticut: Bergin & Garvey, 1992) quoted in Tamara L Roleff. Abortion: Opposing Viewpoints (San Diego, Greenhaven Press, 1997) 104

A woman can always put her baby up for adoption, and you have to ask the question – is a woman becoming depressed a good enough reason to kill a baby? Below is a picture of an aborted baby at nine weeks – 42% of all abortions happen after this point.

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Doctors Refused to Do Amniocentesis Unless Woman Agrees to Abort Imperfect Children

16 weeks – amniocentesis is done around this time, so babies aborted because of fetal anomaly are usually this age or older.

In his book on obstetrics and gynecology, author William Arney reveals the following:

“Some doctors refuse to do amniocentesis unless the woman is willing to commit herself, before the test is done, to an abortion in cases defective fetuses  are found.”

William Arney, Power and the Profession of Obstetrics (Chicago: University of Chicago press, 1982) 183 quoted in Kathy Rudy. Beyond Pro-Life and Pro-Choice: Moral Diversity in the Abortion Debate (Boston, Massachusetts: Beacon Press, 1996) 13 (Rudy is pro-choice)

 

It is clear that many doctors put pressure on women to abort their disabled and imperfect babies. Read more quotes about the abortion of handicapped children here.

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Abortionist On the Reasons Women Have Abortions

Abortionist Dr. Warren Hern, in his textbook on abortion, discusses the reasons why women who come to see him have abortions:

“A study of motivations for abortion has found that the majority are sought for socioeconomic reasons. Women seeking abortion seldom give the real reason for doing so to investigators studying the issue. The impression from clinical practice is that all but a few women seek abortions for reasons that can broadly be defined as socioeconomic, and many cite strictly economic reasons… As a rule, women do not make decisions about pregnancy prevention or treatment on the basis of statistical evaluations and medical advice but rather on the basis of personal attitudes and necessities. At times medical considerations enter the picture, but decisions are usually made on the basis of such factors as desire or lack of desire for parenthood, stability of relationships, educational status, emotional status, or economic status, among others.”

Warren Hern, Abortion Practice (Boulder, Colorado: Alpenglo Graphics, 1990) 10, 39

Quoted in Scott Klusendorf. The Case for Life: Equipping Christians to Engage the Culture. (Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway Books, 2009) 30

In another post on this page, Dr. Warren Hern discusses a woman who had an abortion because she was pregnant with a boy and wanted a girl.

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Women Feels her Abortion “Ruined Her Life”

A woman named Annette who had an abortion says the following:

“Sometimes it’s prejudice behind it. My mom says, “I’m personally opposed, but it’s great for “some people.” My dad grumbles about “babies that got no business being born.” They both think my abortion was a good thing – that abortion liberates you, since you free to continue your life. “Having a baby could ruin your life.” But you know what? Not having my baby has ruined my life.”

Frederica Mathews-Green. Real Choices: Offering Practical, Life-Affirming Alternatives to Abortion (Sisters, Oregon: Multnomah Books, 1994) page 67

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79% Of Pro-Life Pregnancy Center Workers Would Work with Pro-Choicers

The abortion debate is very polarized and often very nasty. Pro-choice activists and insult pro-lifers and call them names, and, sadly, some pro-lifers reciprocate this bad treatment.

Yet in an interview with many pro-life crisis pregnancy center workers (these are people who minister to women who are pregnant and the postabortion women) the majority said that they would be willing to work with pro-choice activists to help women:

“79% said yes to the question “Would you be willing to work with pro-choice activists to alleviate [pregnant women’s] problems, if beliefs about abortion were not raised as an issue?”

Frederica Mathews-Green. Real Choices: Offering Practical, Life-Affirming Alternatives to Abortion (Sisters, Oregon: Multnomah Books, 1994)16

This willingness to work with others on the opposing side is commendable. Perhaps if pro-life and pro-choice activists can put aside their differences, even if only for short time, things for pregnant women could be a lot easier.

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Simone de Beauvoir on abortion

Feminist Simone de Beauvoir on abortion:

“It is often the seducer himself who convinces the woman that she must rid herself of the child. Or he may have already abandoned her… Sometimes she declines to bear the infant not without regret… Men tend to take abortion lightly; they regard it as one of the numerous hazards imposed on women by malignant nature, but fail to realize fully the values involved. The woman who has recourse to abortion is disowning feminine values, her values… Her whole moral universe is being disrupted.”

….

After abortion women “learn to believe no longer in what men say… The one thing they are sure of is this rifled and bleeding womb, these shreds of crimson life, this child that is not there. It is at her first abortion that a woman begins to “know.” For many women the world will never be the same.”

Simone de Beauvoir. The Second Sex. (New York: Bantam books, 1952) from

Frederica Mathews-Green. Real Choices: Offering Practical, Life-Affirming Alternatives to Abortion (Sisters, Oregon: Multnomah Books, 1994) 18, 49

11 week unborn baby (ultrasound)
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Avoiding the Term “Abortion”

Glanville Williams, pro-choice activist in Britain:

“Many doctors attempt to avoid what they consider to be the unsavory connotations of the word “abortion” by speaking instead of the terms of “termination of pregnancy.”

Glanville Williams, the Sanctity of Life and the Criminal Law, the 1956 James S Carpenter Lectures at Columbia Law School (New York: Knopf, 1957) 147

There are the euphemisms used by the pro-choice movement – products of conception, fetal tissue, uterine contents, developing pregnancy – all words to use to describe the unborn baby. If you go to website of an abortion clinic, you will very seldom see the word fetus and definitely won’t see the word baby.

Psychologist Robert Lifton, in his book about Nazi doctors at the camps

“The language used gave Nazi doctors a discourse in which killing is no longer killing; and need not be experienced, or even perceived as killing.”

Robert J Lifton, the Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide (New York: basic books, 1986) 445

James F Bohan. The House of Atreus: Abortion Is a Human Rights Issue (Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishers, 1999) 154

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