What if they [the abortion patients] said “no” when entering the operating room? In this instance I felt compelled to reassure them they didn’t have to go through with it and walked them back to the change room. This was not welcomed by my colleagues at the clinic. I was reminded that this is a business and any slowing in the production line costs money. Constant threats were made that the anesthesiologist had another list at another hospital and any more discussion with the uncertain woman was wasting precious time. Their patronizing remarks that some women will never be 100% sure, and that I should encourage them to go on and get the abortion over quickly, were not comforting: I could no longer participate.
Melinda Tankard Reist Giving Sorrow Words: Women’s Stories of Grief after Abortion (Springfield, IL: Acorn Books, 2007) 170
“At the point where the fetus becomes viable is a reasonable point where the mother should accept responsibility for the pregnancy….[but] I still believe, even after a woman could deliver, this is still a decision that should be made by a woman on her own, based on the circumstances of her own life.”
“Women need control over birth choice, physician says” Wisconsin State Journal March 4, 2001
“If they think they’re going to make me feel badly about what I do … not gonna happen….“I feel like God wants me to do this job.”
Derzis has had many legal problems . Health inspectors found 76 pages of violations at her clinic following the hospitalization of three patients in one day for abortion complications.
“That was probably the most disappointing thing about training residents [to do abortions]. You know, for what? To do nothing? I mean, they obviously would refer [their abortion] patients, and they would take good care of their patients, both pre-and post care. But, you know, it was disappointing to not have them have the guts to stand up and say, “I’m going to do it.”
Dr. Davis Chasey, retired founder and director of an abortion clinic, on how few of the residents he trained in abortion procedures went on to perform abortions
Lori Freedman Willing and Unable: Doctors’ Constraints in Abortion Care (Nashville, Tennessee: Vanderbilt University Press, 2010)
Apparently, many medical students and residents trained to do abortions choose not to do them when they got their medical license and actually set up practice. Elsewhere in the same book, Friedman says that many people boycott OBGYNS who do abortions, so it is become a situation where what a doctor starts doing abortions, he generally ends up doing nothing but abortions. Partners don’t want a doctor who does abortions in their office, hospitals don’t want a doctor who does abortions among their staff, Prolifers picket and mobilize against abortionists, and the abortion procedures themselves are gruesome and emotionally difficult.
“I believe that a soul enters a fetus at first breath just as it leaves at last breath (providing the breath isn’t artificial as from a ventilator machine)”.
Abortion clinic owner Norma Goldberger
Norma Goldberger Abortion Confidential: Secrets of an Abortion Clinic Owner (CreateSpace , November 23, 2014) Kindle Edition
“The established pro-choice position–which essentially is: abortion should be legal, a private matter between a woman and her doctor, with no restriction or regulation beyond what is absolutely necessary to protect the woman’s health–makes 50% of the population extremely uncomfortable and unwilling to associate with us,”
Frances Kissling, a longtime abortion-rights advocate and former president of Catholics for Choice.
“Our neighbor was 83 years old, and had been a widow for about 10 years. She would come over and visit my wife, who was a stay-at-home mom, 2 or 3 times a week. She enjoyed watching our 2 children and interacting with them…
Looking back, I remember a particular story our neighbor shared with my wife. Our neighbor wept inconsolably while telling my wife of her abortion. Long before the Supreme Court’s decision in Roe vs. Wade, she had had an abortion during the Great Depression. She had 2 other children at the time, but just didn’t feel that they could afford to feed another child when times were so hard. At 83 years of age this woman was still torn inside over the baby she never raised.”
JD Sharp Abortion: The True Cost to America (Amazon Kindle, 2013)