Scientist who discovered DNA: women should abort gay babies

James Watson was a scientist who helped discover the structure of DNA. Author Michael Sandel states:

“Watson had stirred controversy by saying that, if a gene for homosexuality were discovered, a pregnant woman who did not want a homosexual child should be free to abort a fetus that carried it… His remark provoked an uproar.”

Michael Sandel The Case against Perfection (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press, 2007) 71

The pro-choice author of the book Choosing down Syndrome comments:

“Watson might point out that people with pro-choice convictions cannot object on the basis that gay people are harmed by such choices since selective abortion would not (obviously or directly) affect gay people already born. Nonetheless, bias against gay people persists, and we can infer that decisions to abort fetuses “diagnosed” as homosexual would be motivated, in many cases, by homophobia.”

Chris Kaposy Choosing down Syndrome: Ethics and New Prenatal Testing Technology (Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press, 2018) 30

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Worldwide, 90% of down syndrome pregnancies are aborted

Termination rates of around 90% after prenatal diagnosis of Down syndrome are documented in a systemic review of International studies.

C Mansfield et al “Termination Rates after Prenatal Diagnosis of Down Syndrome, Spina Bifida, Anencephaly, and Turner and Klinefelter Syndromes: A Systematic Literature Review” Prenatal Diagnosis, 19 (1999) 808 – 813

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Mother admits pushing teenage daughter into abortion

Sally, who is the mother of a 15 year old girl having an abortion, said the following to an interviewer in an abortion clinic:

“I think [her daughter] Debi’s decision was kind of swayed that way, to have an abortion. I’m pro-choice, and I think we all swayed her, but I believe it’s for her own good. It was made out like it was her decision, but I know we pushed. She feels okay now, but she hasn’t expressed too much about it.”

Carole Dornblaser and Uta Landy, PhD The Abortion Guide: A Handbook for Women and Men (Rockville Center, New York: Playboy Paperbacks 1982) 93 – 94

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Abortion counseling manual instructs clinic worker to call abortion “loving”

In a book intended to teach abortion clinic workers how to counsel women, it gives the following as a sample conversation between a woman considering abortion and her counselor at the clinic:

Counselor: …having an abortion does not mean that you have bad feelings toward the baby. Deciding when it is the right time to bring a baby into the world is a caring, loving decision.

Patient: [crying] Thank you for saying that

Counselor: I hear in what you’re saying a lot of care and compassion toward this baby, your kids, and yourself. That says something about you as a person.”

ALISSA PERRUCCI, PHD “Decision assessment and counseling in abortion care” MPH WOMEN’S OPTIONS CENTER SAN FRANCISCO GENERAL HOSPITAL FIAPAC OCTOBER 3, 2014

Here is a picture of an aborted child. Did this baby’s mother do this to him out of love?

week 10
week 10
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Feminist: nothing Supreme Court has done was as important as Roe v. Wade

Pro-choice activist Sylvia Law, referring to Roe V Wade:

“… Nothing the Supreme Court has ever done has been more concretely important for women.”

Sylvia a Law “Rethinking Sex and the Constitution” University of Pennsylvania Law Review 132.5 (1984) 973 – 975

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Women used the word “baby” after their abortions

A pro-choice woman wrote the following after having an abortion:

“I’ll never forget being with three women, or six women actually. When three of them woke up, they had a general anesthesia, three of them said such things as, “Where’s my baby? Is my baby dead? Will I ever have any other babies?”… I don’t think we should minimize… [that] abortion does produce some concern on the part of women and we need to recognize it and say it “Yes, abortion kills a living human fetus.”… And I think you have to call it for what it is and there’s a sense of loss.”

Quoted by Kristin Luker, Interview 118, Archived at the Murray Research Center, Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Massachusetts, p 21

Eileen L McDonagh Breaking Abortion Deadlock: from Choice to Consent (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996) 186

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Post-Abortion woman wishes someone had stopped her

Pro-life author Richard Exley told the following story:

“Some time ago I was speaking to a right to life rally. When I had finished, a young woman came to the front of the auditorium and asked to speak to the audience. Noting her obvious distress, I hesitated before giving her the microphone.

Tearfully she confessed that eight years earlier she had aborted her baby… The father had wanted nothing more to do with the young woman or her unborn child. In shame and desperation she has scheduled a legal and inexpensive abortion.…

Trembling, she told us that on the way to the abortion clinic she had “prayed” that someone would stop her.

“If only one person has asked me not to do it,” she sobbed, “my baby would be alive today.”

“I can’t go back and undo what I’ve done,” she continued. “But I pledge to you, and to God, that I will be there, in front of the abortion clinic, to help some other woman save her baby.”

Listening to her story, I couldn’t help but wonder how many other babies have been killed simply because no one was there.”

Richard Exley Abortion: Pro-Life by Conviction, Pro-Choice by Default (Tulsa, Oklahoma: Honor Books, 1989) 67 – 68

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Pro-Choicer compares premature baby to pig

Pro-Abortion activist Charles Hartshorne writes:

“The nervous system of a very premature baby has been compared by an expert to that of a pig. And we know, if we know anything about this matter, that it is the nervous system that counts where individuality is concerned.”

Charles Hartshorne “Concerning Abortion: An Attempt at a Rational View” Christian Century, vol. 98, no. 2, January 21, 1981

23-wee-preemie

Above: Premature baby at 23 weeks. is he equivalent to a pig?

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Woman pressured to abort allegedly unhealthy twin

A woman named Mary in Melbourne had a 10 week ultrasound that showed one of the twins in her womb was smaller than the other. The doctor suspected that the little boy was badly disabled. She writes:

“This meant the baby was likely to have gross abnormalities because although it’s normal for twins to differ in size late in pregnancy and after birth, in early pregnancy they should be exactly the same size to be normal.

The doctor immediately recommended that I should ‘terminate that fetus’.

‘You mean kill the baby?’ I replied, at which he got a bit upset with me and asked me not to use such language!”

The doctor preferred the term “selective reduction”…..

One or more babies in the womb are injected in the head with saline, which kills them, and they are then left dead in the womb until the healthy baby or babies are delivered.

This is sometimes done because of abnormalities, but is also routinely done for mothers who simply don’t want twins, triplets or quads.

How parents of healthy babies choose which will live and which will die, and how a mother lies on a table while a saline needle is inserted in her stomach to kill one of her babies is beyond me, but apparently this is normal.

My main memory of all of this is the doctor’s incredible nonchalance.

He was not only blase about what he proposed to do, he was even eager to do it – and he was quite forthright about his belief that any baby with even a suspicion of abnormality, or indeed any baby the parents simply did not want, should be dispatched forthwith.

He was keen to perform this procedure on me as soon as possible, without any further testing of any kind.

I even remember him reminding me that I was not being fair to my other larger twin if I did not allow him to kill the smaller one. This was because I was already at risk of premature birth.

I’m university educated and am a pretty strong woman with a good marriage – so together, my husband and I found the strength (although it wasn’t easy at the time in an emotional state) to resist the doctor’s recommendations and stall for time…

How do single women, or women intimidated by the medical profession, or emotionally fragile women, or women with poor family support resist the eagerness that some in the medical profession have to solve what they simply see as a ‘problem

I still remember lying on the table waiting to have this test, arguing with the doctor as he stood over me, huge needle in hand, as he tried to convince me to have the amnio test done on both babies rather than just one – ‘because you may as well now that you’re here’.

This from a man who knew that the risk of miscarriage after an amniocentesis is about 1 per cent for a single pregnancy and up to 5 per cent for twins. He still wanted to double the risk – to ensure that we didn’t bring any handicapped babies into the world.

We managed to resist this pressure and only had the amnio on the smaller baby, although I will regret until the day I die even agreeing to this, as I nearly miscarried the following day.

I have a result sheet issued by the doctor from my 10-week ultrasound on which are written the words, ‘fetus 2 not viable’.

I like to compare this document with the child it refers to – now an 11-year-old, funny, sensitive, gifted, football-playing, blues-guitar-addicted, satin-skinned and perfect little boy, our son.

It turned out that the only explanation there was for the boys’ different sizes early in pregnancy was that they must have been conceived a week or two apart . . .

I was not told that this could be a possible explanation until well after I was meant to have made a decision to inject my son Paul in the head with saline.”

Andrew Bolt “Born in defianceHerald Sun 10th March 2006

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Grandmother mourns her aborted child

A grandmother was pregnant herself when her 18-year-old son came to her and told her that his 17-year-old girlfriend was pregnant. Initially, it appeared that the girl planned to keep her baby. But her parents pressured her to have an abortion, and she eventually agreed.

“I tried my hardest to talk to her and told her I would support and help her as much as she needed, to no avail. I held her hand as I begged her for the life of my grandchild, but the limp clammy hand signalled it was falling on deaf ears.

I got home from work one Sunday evening to find my 18 year old son sobbing uncontrollably as he told me the abortion was scheduled for the next day. I held him in my arms and sobbed with him. He wrote the most beautiful poem to his unborn child (he believed God had shown him it was a daughter) … it was written in love and a broken heart, and to this day, tears my heart out. I pleaded with God the whole night for the life of this child, my own baby kicking in my belly… I knew there was nothing I could do…

Every November I remember that day, and every beginning of June I think of how old she would be now, just 2 months younger than my own daughter. I know I will see her one day, and I know my son and I did all we could, but the loss is still palpable.”

Cassy Fiano “Abortion robs grandparents, too: ‘I think of how old she would be now’ Live Action News March 19, 2018

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