Woman calls her baby a “cluster of cells”

From a woman who had an abortion at nine weeks:

“My cervix will be dilated and the doctor will scrape my uterus and scoop the cluster of cells. I mostly convince myself that there is just tissue lining my uterus.”

Later:

“I am lighter, unburdened, triumphant. I want to know the sex. Another girl? I don’t believe the doctor when she says that the sex cannot be determined so early in the pregnancy.

I catch myself thinking that I would have named the baby for my father and I cry for the first time that day.”

Judy Bolton-Fasman “The AbortionThe Manifest-Station July 14, 2014

The baby she calls “a cluster of cells” and “tissue lining the uterus” at nine weeks looks like this:

9week_side

This is part of what’s left behind after abortion at this stage:

abort9w2

 

Share on Facebook

Woman lied to by abortion clinic, told the truth by pro-lifers

A pro-life author tells the following story:

“In conducting interviews for this book, I was introduced to one young woman from the Southwest whose experience underscored the disinformation that comes from abortion clinics. As a single college student, Annie was shocked to learn that she was pregnant. After telling her boyfriend the news, he urged her to get an abortion.

Annie made the appointment. The clinic personnel told her to call “anytime you want to talk.” Feeling lonely and confused, she confided in her sister. Anne was in for a jolt. Having written a paper on pregnancy, her sister knew something about the development of the unborn and the experience of pain in the fetus. She pointed these things out to Annie, who didn’t know what to believe.

“I had to call the abortion clinic to find out for sure. When I reached them, I told the counselor who I was and asked “Will the baby feel it, and what will it look like?” The counselor said, “It won’t look like anything more than a little ball of cotton, and it won’t be able to feel anything.”

Unconvinced, she went to a crisis pregnancy center, which told her the truth and let her see an ultrasound. She kept her baby.

Curt Young The Least of These: What Everyone Should Know about Abortion (Chicago, Illinois: Moody Press, 1984) 59

In 1984, abortions were almost never done before seven weeks because the suction cannula used to perform abortions at the time often missed babies that were too small, leading to complications or a continuing pregnancy. Usually if a woman was not yet 7 – 8 weeks into her pregnancy, they sent her home to wait. So if the clinic workers were already trying to get her to come in, this woman’s baby must have been at least seven weeks old. A picture of a seven week old baby is below:

7wkbaby

Share on Facebook

Questions from a book on deciding whether to have abortion

The book Marjorie Skowronski “Abortion and Alternatives” is an abortion decision-making book. This is a paraphrase of a list of questions the book says those considering abortion should ask themselves:

“Do I want to have a child now? Ever? What do I think is the ideal age and time for me to have a child? Why?…

Do I feel any pressure from other people to have children? Who? Why do they feel that way?

How much time do I want to spend a child rearing? On a day-to-day basis?…

As far as work goes, am I finished with my schooling and professional training? What are my future school and training plans? What job is my goal?

How do women who do that job raise children at the same time?”

These questions all have to do with a woman’s choice of lifestyle. They are questions she asks herself when weighing whether or not to kill a baby.

Tamara A. Roleff Abortion: Opposing Viewpoints (San Diego, CA: Greenhaven Press, 1997)

shout your abortion
Abortion 10 weeks after conception

 

Share on Facebook

Some women wish to be pregnant, but don’t want to give birth

From a textbook used to train abortion clinic counselors:

“There is a marked distinction between the wish to become pregnant and the wish to bring a live child into the world.”

D. Pines A Woman’s Unconscious Use of her Body (London: VVirago, 1993) 97

Quoted in the textbook:

Joanna Brien, Ida Fairbairn Pregnancy and Abortion Counseling (London: Routledge, 1996) 19

Share on Facebook

Problems with information on abortion’s risks

Pro-lifer Mark Crutcher explains how information about the risks of abortion given to women at abortion clinics are often inaccurate, because all women get the same information regardless of how far along they are or what health problems they already have:

“The problem is that almost every risk factor increases – sometimes dramatically – as the pregnancy progresses. It has also been documented that young girls are considerably more like suffer certain injuries than are adult women and that conditions like obesity or diabetes also increase the risks associated with having an abortion.

However, under the current system, a 12-year-old obese diabetic undergoing a 24 week abortion is given the same informed consent as a thin and healthy 25-year-old who’s having a 10 week abortion – despite the fact that the 12-year-old patient faces a much higher possibility of injury or death.

Studies have also found that injuries are more likely to occur in abortions that are performed by nonphysicians. If the informed consent document a woman is given states that a particular injury occurs only once every X number of all abortions, but they are providing a nonphysician to do her abortion, she has been deceived.”

Mark Crutcher Siege: Pro-Life Field Manual (Denton, Texas: Life Dynamics Inc., 2015) 140

Share on Facebook

Doctors were doing abortions for years before they were legalized

Of a survey taken right after abortion was legalized in North Carolina:

“A large majority of 180 obstetricians surveyed regarding their attitudes toward North Carolina’s permissive abortion act of 1967 acknowledged that the new law had little effect other than “to have simply legalized something that we had been doing for many years.”

Direct quote from: William Brennan The Abortion Holocaust: Today’s Final Solution (St. Louis, Missouri, 1983) 15

Citing the study: William B Walker and J.F. Hulka “Attitudes and Practices of North Carolina Obstetricians: The Impact of the North Carolina Abortion Act of 1967” Southern Medical Journal 64 (April 1971): 441-445

Share on Facebook

Planned Parenthood had 12 adoptions in 7 years

Planned Parenthood of Indiana proclaimed:

“we’re proud to announce that since 2006…PPIN has paved the way for at least 12 successful adoptions.”

The article says:

“Planned Parenthood of Indiana has 28 locations around the state. ..In 2011, Planned Parenthood of Indiana performed 5,250 abortions.

John Sexton “Planned Parenthood Celebrates 12 Adoptions in 7 Years” Breitbart 4 Dec 2012

The quote shows the bias against abortion women faced at Planned Parenthood.

Share on Facebook

In 1933, most abortionists were doctors

A 1933 book by a well-respected surgeon claimed that most illegal abortionists were doctors:

“In 1933 Dr. Abraham J. Rongy, a fellow of the American College of Surgeons, described the physician as “the chief agent of abortion” the one who “flouts the law.”

This is a direct quote from William Brennan The Abortion Holocaust: Today’s Final Solution (St. Louis, Missouri, 1983) 14

The book cited is Abraham J. Rongy Abortion: Legal or Illegal? (New York: Vanguard Press, 1933) 130

Share on Facebook

In 1944 most illegal abortionists were doctors

Pro-Choice activists claim abortion was legalized to protect women, who they say were dying by the thousands due to back alley abortions. In reality, the vast majority of illegal abortions were done by doctors.  The following quote. made at a medical conference in 1944, attests to this:

“Although the performing of abortions has been forbidden to physicians since the time of Hippocrates, nevertheless the abortionist is drawn principally from the ranks of this profession.”

Dr. Harold C. Taylor at an abortion conference

Proceedings of a Conference of the National Committee on Maternal Health, The Abortion Problem (Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1944) viii

Share on Facebook

Planned Parenthood counselor: Only white babies are adopted

In her book for women considering abortion, former Planned Parenthood abortion counselor Anna Runkle says:

“Adoption is far more common among white people than among people of color. Healthy white babies are usually easily adopted, but nonwhite and disabled babies can end up spending months or even years in foster care. For African-American babies especially, adoptive families are not always available.”

Anna Runkle In Good Conscience: A Practical, Emotional, and Spiritual Guide to Deciding Whether to Have an Abortion (San Francisco: Jossey–Bass Publishers, 1998) 131

This is absolutely false. There is a waiting list for disabled infants, and African American babies are routinely adopted. There are over 2 million couples in the US waiting or infants, whether African American or White.

Runkle’s book is biased towards abortion, even though she says:

“This book is pro-choice, which means it supports you no matter what you decide.”

page 5

She warns women away from crisis  pregnancy centers, and discourages teens from having their babies. 

Share on Facebook