From one doctor:
“The fetus isn’t a human body but is more or acts more like a parasite.”
Quoted in William Brennan The Abortion Holocaust: Today’s Final Solution (St. Louis, Missouri, 1983) 149
Share on FacebookThey said it.
From one doctor:
“The fetus isn’t a human body but is more or acts more like a parasite.”
Quoted in William Brennan The Abortion Holocaust: Today’s Final Solution (St. Louis, Missouri, 1983) 149
Share on FacebookFrom a woman who works in an abortion clinic:
“On a busy day, I am always amazed at how smoothly and efficiently the service is running.”
Ardis Hyland Danon “Organizing an Abortion Service” Nursing Outlook 21 (July 1973): 460
Above: Picture of aborted babies, part of a day’s work at a clinic in Canada.
Share on FacebookFrom pro-abortion writer Valerie Tarico:
“Whether or not we are religious, deciding whether to keep or terminate a pregnancy is a process steeped in spiritual values: responsibility, stewardship, love, honesty, compassion, freedom, balance, discernment. But how often do we hear words like these coming from pro-choice advocates?”
Valerie Tarico “Abortion as a Blessing, Grace, or Gift: Changing the Conversation on Reproductive Rights and Moral Values” RH Reality Check April 3, 2014
Below: 8 week old preborn baby- before and after abortion
Is this love and compassion?
Share on FacebookIn 1978, a doctor wrote the following in a respected medical journal:
“There has been no major impact on the number of women dying from abortion in the United States since liberalized abortion was introduced… Legal abortion is now the leading cause of abortion -related maternal deaths in the United States.”
D Cavanagh, Am J Ob Gyn 130(3):375 Feb 1, 1978
Share on FacebookAmerican psychiatrist Zigmond M Lebensohn:
“[Abortion is] the practice of humanitarian medicine at its very best.”
Zigmond M Lebensohn “Abortion, Psychiatry, and the Quality of Life” American Journal of Psychiatry 128 (February 1972): 950
Below: Preborn baby at 9-10 weeks before and after abortion.
Share on Facebook“Fetuses, especially those as old as five or six months, elicit our sympathy…because they look disconcertingly like people; their physical features are recognizably human. But this sympathy is misplaced…. While a fetus of five or six months may, perhaps, possess some flickering of sensation, or some capacity to feel pain, this is equally true and probably even more true of creatures like fish or insects….a proper respect for the right to life requires that it not be respected where it does not exist.”
Mary Ann Warren, Commentary on “Can the Fetus be an Organ Farm?” Hastings Center Report October 1978, p 23-24
is this not life?

Is the child above really equivalent to an insect or fish?

Does this look like an insect?
Share on FacebookIn 1970 a report issued by the National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine:
“It takes about $5,000-$6,000 per year to pay the costs of institutionalized care for retarded individuals. The 50,000 persons now receiving institutional care for Down’s syndrome alone represent an expense of some $250-$300 million per year. “
Their response was:
“prenatal diagnosis in combination with selective abortion.”
“Legalized Abortion and Public Health” Report of a Study by a Committee of the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, May 1975, p 107
Share on Facebook“According to a medical abortionist with experience in employing the D&E method on victims as old as 26 weeks beyond conception, taking one’s time and exercising care ensure that “you’re not going to end up with a live birth.”
From William Brennan The Abortion Holocaust: Today’s Final Solution (St. Louis, Missouri, 1983) 65
Based on information from Liz Jeffries and Rick Edmonds “Abortion: The Dreaded Complication” Philadelphia Inquirer August 2, 1981, p 6

Dr. Lawrence Lawn of Cambridge University’s department of experimental medicine, on research using aborted babies:
“We are simply using something which is destined for the incinerator to benefit mankind.”
Quoted in Dr. and Mrs. JC Willke Handbook on Abortion, rev. ed. (Cincinnatti, Ohio: Hayes Publishing Company, 1975) 131

From an article on how to do first trimester abortions:
“After the procedure, the aspirate should be rinsed through a sieve with cold water and suspended in a wide glass dish to facilitate inspection. The gestational sac should be identified, and after 9 weeks fetal parts may also be seen (limbs, calvarium, and spine). A backlight underneath the dish helps. After 10 weeks gestation, all fetal parts should be identified.”
Richard John Lyus, MBBS, BSc, et al. “First Trimester Procedural Abortion in Family Medicine” Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine September-October 2016, 29 (5)
