Abortionist sees a “turnoff” of new abortion doctors

“We’ve seen a turnoff of physicians coming into this field.”

Ed Boaz, abortionist

ABC World News Tonight, January 16, 1998

Mark Crutcher “Access: the Key to Pro-Life Victory” Life Dynamics Incorporated,

Few doctors, it seems, want to be abortion providers. This may be partly because of pro-life activities, and also because abortion takes a toll on providers, dismembering babies for a living can be emotionally difficult. 15 years after this quote was made, the situation continues – the shortage of abortionists is even more pronounced today.

8 week old unborn baby – most abortions are done at this time or later
8 week old unborn baby – most abortions are done at this time or later

Because of the shortage of abortion providers, more babies like the one on the left will survive.

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Top salaries of Planned Parenthood clinic directors, according to LifeNews

LifeNews ran an article on January 16, 2012, which revealed the salaries of Planned Parenthood clinic directors throughout the country. According to the article, Planned Parenthood performed approximately 350,000 abortions in 2011.

Here are the top 12 earners and the amount of money they make a year:

1. PP North Texas, Dallas, TX (salary of previous CEO) $324,3812. PP Mar Monte, San Jose, CA (Linda Williams) $315,950

3. PP Illinois, Chicago, IL (salary of previous CEO) $302,014

4. PP Hudson Peconic, Hawthorne, NY (Reina Schiffrin) $296,908

5. PP Northern New England, Williston,VT (Steve Trombley) $292,297

6. PP Orange & San Bernadino, Orange, CA (Joe Dunn) $278,871

7. PP Treasure Coast, West Palm Beach, FL (Lillian Tamayo) $275,238

8. PP MN, SD & ND, St. Paul, MN (Sarah Stoesz) $268,710

9. PP Heartland, Des Moines, IA (Jill June) $265,389

10. PP Southern New England, New Haven, CT (Judy Tabar) $264,766

11. PP Great Northwest, Seattle, WA (Chris Charbonneau) $259,405

12. PP League of MA, Boston, MA (Dianne Luby) $256,474

Steve Aden “Planned Parenthood Made Me Rich: Confessions of Its CEOs” LifeNews 1/16/12

Abortion can be big business and very lucrative. Read more about abortion and money here.

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He delivered my daughter, then aborted my baby

From one woman who had an abortion, on the doctor who performed it:

“He delivered my daughter. I mean, how could he do both things, deliver Liza one year, and kill it [the aborted baby] the next? It was confusing. After that, I didn’t want him to be my doctor anymore. I actually changed to the nurse practitioners at the HMO.”

Rayna Rapp Testing Women, Testing the Fetus: the Social Impact of Amniocentesis in America (New York: Routledge, 1999) 238

Even though abortion was this woman’s choice, she developed negative feelings about the Doctor who performed the operation. She went so far as to switch to seeing nurse practitioners, who may even be seen as less qualified than a person with a medical degree. This shows the aversion that a lot of people have to abortionists; even those who make use of them often resent them. Perhaps this is one reason why so few people want to become abortionists, and there is such a serious shortage of abortion providers.

Other doctors have talked about on how when they become identified as abortionists, patients leave.

Pro-life women should find out if their OBGYNs perform abortions. Boycotting such doctors, and telling them why you’re boycotting them, might have an impact.

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Abortionist says he “terminates” babies

Recently, I wrote an article for Live Action according a former abortion doctor who admits that he was “terminating babies”:

“Nobody wants to perform abortions after 10 weeks because by then you see the features of the baby, hands, feet. It’s really barbaric.

Baby's feet at ten weeks
Baby’s feet at ten weeks

Abortions are very draining, exhausting, and heartrending. There are a lot of tears. Some patients turn on you. They say, “Let’s get out of here,” after the abortion, as if you’re some dirty person. It’s vicious. Then you get these teenyboppers in the office who laugh their way through it. It doesn’t mean a thing to them. That bothers me. Then you’ve got the right to lifers calling you on the phone, coming in the office, preaching, threatening to picket your office.

15 weeks sonogram
15 weeks sonogram

I do them because I take the attitude that women are going to terminate babies and deserve the same kind of treatment as women who carry babies. So I started doing abortions on an altruistic basis. I’ve done a couple thousand, and it turned into a significant financial boon, but I also feel I’ve provided an important service.

The only way I can do an abortion is to consider only the woman as my patient and block out the baby. I’ve delivered enough babies, seen enough divorces, and seen enough abused kids to do abortions with a clear conscience. This may be some kind of mental gymnastics on my part, but I really feel that parenthood is so tough that people shouldn’t back into it.

I don’t feel I’m violating my trust as a doctor by doing abortions, but I don’t want to do them anymore because you can do them to a certain point, and then you get overloaded. I’m at that point.

John Pekkanen M.D.: Doctors Talk about Themselves (New York, New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group, Inc., 1988) 93 – 94

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Abortionist apologizes to her aborted baby

Susan Poppema, abortionist:

“I also had an abortion, a 2nd trimester abortion, having denied a pregnancy for many months. And went through my own grief process, and apologizing. My personal grief work was to apologize to the fetus and say, I’m really sorry this has to happen, but there is no way that you can come out of my uterus.… Every day I feel like I’ve done something good for the world. I’ve done something positive for how the balance of energy is in the world. Every day I feel that way.”

Patricia Launneborg Abortion: a Positive Decision (New York: Bergin & Garvey, 1992) 192

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Gynecologist sees complications after abortions

Pro-life author George Grant interviewed Dr. Horton Dean, a gynecologist with private practice in a neighborhood near Los Angeles. Grant says

“Since 1973 he [Dr. Dean] has seen a marked increase in the number of patients with significant complications – both mental and physical – as a result of legal abortions.”

According to Dean::

“There are a lot more complications out there than anyone seems to care to believe. It is a national health disaster.”

George Grant Grand Illusions: the Legacy of Planned Parenthood (Franklin, Tennessee: Adroit Press, 1988, 1992) 70

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Abortionist: Abortion is a moral decision

Dr. Curtis Boyd, who can be seen admitting that abortion is killing here, said the following:

“ When a woman acts in a responsible way, doing what she believes is in her best interest and the best interest of her family, she’s being moral. This is a moral decision, and I believe in that. Even today they walk in my office and they think that what they’re doing is wrong and that they’re a bad person for doing it. And that’s really sad because what they’re often doing is showing a higher level of moral development than probably most anyone else.”

Lisa GraasLate-Term Abortion Practitioner: “Yes I am Killing” Babies” LifeNews 11/14/11

Is abortion responsible? Does it show a “higher level of moral development” beyond anything else? Look at the photo below, of a nine week abortion, and decide for yourself.

aborted at 9 weeks
aborted at 9 weeks
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Aborting or having a baby with Down Syndrome (T21)

A woman tells her story of an abortion of a down syndrome baby and then her subsequent birth of a disabled child. She shared this on a message board for women who aborted disabled children:

I have lurked here for years, and although my story may not be welcomed with open arms, I feel compelled to share it none-the-less. Like many of you, I received a pre-natal diagnosis that our precious baby had Down syndrome and a heart defect. It was completely unexpected and devastating, obviously. Like many of you, my first concern was for my daughter. What would having a sibling with special needs mean for her future? I didn’t want to burden her with a brother who would never be anything but a drain on our family. We didn’t have the resources of money, time, family support, etc. to be good parents to my daughter and a child with Down syndrome. I didn’t want to bring a child into the world only to suffer. These feelings were substantiated by the medical professionals involved in my care. They universally agreed that terminating was the right decision. So we made the choice, and I had the procedure. My grief was overwhelming.

About one year after the termination, I was again pregnant. I thought that perhaps we could finally move past the pain of losing our baby. The pregnancy was smooth, an amnio proved that the baby was healthy and that there were no chromosomal abnormalities. Everything seemed great. But at 22 weeks I went into labor, and the drs. were only able to stop it for a few weeks. My precious son was born at 25 weeks due to incompetent cervix, and both my OB and the perinatologist agreed that it was a direct result of the termination procedure. There was no other explanation. After months in the NICU, too many complications to recount, various surgeries and painful procedures, my son finally came home. And I was reminded everyday of the fact that my baby’s health issues and delays, his numerous special needs, were a direct result of trying to prevent having a baby with special needs. The irony continues to astound me.

But what I have learned in the 5 years since he was born amazes me more. I have learned that I do have the strength to raise this child. That yes, the drs. appts. and therapies which at the beginning seemed all encompassing, fade into the past as he grows older. I have seen my daughter grow beautifully into a compassionate and loving person. The experience of having a brother with special needs has exposed her to something that I always said I would teach my children. That different isn’t bad…that what makes a person beautiful isn’t what you can see with your eyes. In the NICU, and since then at the children’s hospital, in specialists’ offices, at the early intervention center, in school…I have seen that children with Down syndrome, and other special needs are not burdens to their parents. These families have challenges, sure, but they also have joy. Their lives are more “normal” than not. I have seen the pride on parents faces (and felt it myself) when a goal that comes easily to others is finally mastered. I have heard stories and witnessed myself marriages and families strengthened and enriched. I have seen that kids with Down syndrome, one of whom is now my son’s best friend, are absolutely not suffering. My son’s friend runs and laughs and plays, tells jokes, and is reading. He loves freely and fully. He had the same heart defect as the baby I terminated…and after surgery he was out of the hospital in a week and has never had any other complications.

I am not sharing my thoughts to cause pain to any members of this board. But I have nowhere to go with the guilt and pain I feel for the decision I made. I do not just regret being put in the situation; I deeply, and painfully, regret the choice that I made. And I think that even though the majority of people who post here seem not to struggle with that feeling, I know that I can’t be alone. I wish that I would have actually talked to parents of children with Down syndrome. Because one thing I know for sure—as capable and helpful as my son’s drs. and therapists are, not one of them can really know what it is like to be his parent, and to see the love that he brings to our family. My son’s needs in fact are greater and more complicated than most of the children with Down syndrome that I have encountered, but his life still has value. I never would have imagined myself in this position…and I didn’t think that I, or my marriage, or my daughter, could come out stronger for it. But we have. And now after the time I have spent with these children and their families, I don’t at all consider them fanatics. But advocates for the kids who have brought so much love to their lives. And I can also say unequivocally that these children and adults with Down syndrome “have a life”. As far as what NICU nurses and neonatologists would advise, after practically living in the NICU for over 3 months, I have no doubt what they would, and do say…Down syndrome is nothing compared to what so many families experience. These children can and do have a great quality of life and contribute to their families and communities, and are not considered a burden even by their adult siblings after the parents are gone.

I am not posting this to cause pain to anyone on this board. But I also cannot just sit back and not express my views on this subject. I do not judge anyone here, including myself…I know that we all made the best possible choices with the information we had. But I have lived both sides of this issue. I have terminated for T21 and now am raising a child with special needs. I wish I had known then what I know now.

This testimony may be found here.  It was posted on Thursday, May 17, 2009.

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Woman suffers complications after abortion: baby born alive

Pro-life author George Grant told the following story about a woman named Bethany de Grassi who had a saline abortion and suffered complications. According to her, her baby was born alive.

First she explains why she had the abortion:

“I was living with a guy at the time,” she told me, “and I really thought we were in love. When I got pregnant, I was happy. I thought we’d just settle down, raise a family, and pursue the American dream. But he had other ideas. When I refused to get an abortion he just moved out. Boom. My whole world caved in. I didn’t know what to do. I was scared and confused.”

Grant says:

Bethany waited almost 3 months before she did anything at all. Finally, she went to a Planned Parenthood clinic. “They told me that they didn’t do the procedure I needed there in the clinic, so they referred me to one of their doctors that had a private practice on the side for late-term abortions. They gave me all kinds of literature with charts and tables and footnotes and all, telling me that the technique was perfectly safe.”

Later, when Bethany was filling out the liability release form, she had a change of heart. “The form had a long, long list of possible complications in tiny print and I started to get really nervous. But the nurse came in and sat by me, assuring me that everything was going to be okay. I believed her.”

She shouldn’t have. Clinic personnel are trained to calm their customers. Sometimes with smiles. Sometimes with lies. Anything, just to get the job done.

The baby was born “gasping”:

Bethany’s troubles began with the delivery. “The baby was gasping when it came out,” she recalled. “It was awful. I started screaming. The doctor was cursing. And the nurse didn’t seem to know what to do. It was a nightmare.”

The child expired quickly and the clinic personnel were able, after a few minutes of coaxing and consoling, to calm Bethany down. She went into recovery was released.

Bethany suffered complications:

2 days later, she suffered a series of seizures and lapsed into a coma. At the hospital, her doctors found that she had hypernatremia – salt poisoning. Her parents were notified and along 6 day struggle for her life ensued. Finally, the medical team at the hospital was able to restore Bethany’s electrolyte balance intravenously and she was roused from the coma. “I should’ve paid attention to my conscience,” she now says. “I knew better than to try to come up with some easy fix for my problems. There’s just no such thing.”

George Grant Grand Illusions: the Legacy of Planned Parenthood (Franklin, Tennessee: Adroit Press, 1988, 1992)75 – 76

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Abortion clinic worker to pro-lifer: “I serve God”: you shouldn’t be out here

An abortion clinic worker said the following to a pro-life activist outside an abortion clinic:

“I serve a God that sees everything and know everything and if you was any kind of big Christian you wouldn’t be sit’n your tail out here doing what your doing.”

Carole Novielli “Abortion Clinic Nurse Who Claims She “Serves God” Assaults Pro-Lifer” LifeNews5/30/14

If God “sees everything” and “knows everything” then he knows what goes on in that clinic, every day, hundreds of times a day. Babies like the one below are killed every day in the clinic with their arms and legs ripped off by the suction machine.

9 – 10 weeks
9 – 10 weeks
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