It [abortion] will likely find its way to
the Supreme Court in the coming years as
the next and terrifyingly, perhaps final, test
of Roe.
1273
—Rebecca Traister,
Abortion Under Attack:
Women on the Challenges Facing Choice
Abortion numbers down
fter abortion was legalized in 1973
the number of abortions increased,
peaking at 1.61 million abortions in
1990. Since that time abortions have
steadily declined; and the latest data
available shows 1.21 million abortions for
2005 (still above the first year of
legalization which was somewhere around
900,000.)
1274
Abortion numbers are down.
Confessions from pro-choice
literature
―The rate of abortion in the United
States is at its lowest level since
1974.‖
1275
—
Guttmacher Institute report, 2008
Supreme Court Rulings
The law of abortion, now more than ever,
rests on nothing more than arbitrary
judicial will.
1276
—Michael Uhlmann,
First Things
n April 18 2007, the Supreme
Court made a groundbreaking
decision, banning an abortion
procedure for the first time since 1973. The
banned procedure is D&X, more commonly
known as partial-birth abortion. According
to MSNBC news, surveys showed that more
than 60% of people were already in favor of
a ban. That a majority of people were in
favor of the ban appears likely from the
tiny group of protestors against the ban.
Just 15 protestors turned up in Salt Lake
City, a city which has 1.2 million. Planned
Parenthood
had
said
―hundreds
of
thousands‖ of Americans opposed the bill,
and yet at press time, a mere 300 people
had signed their opposition to the ban.
MSNBC also noted that most Americans
favor further restrictions on abortion. It
will now be up to the states to confirm this
ban.
Pro-Choice study finds
‗surprising‘ results
es, women are more interested
spending time with the family they
do have than keeping abortion
A
O
Y
395
rights legal. So says the ―surprising‖ results
from the pro-choice Center for the
Advancement of Women
(CAW). The
results of their two-year study, in which
3,300 American women were surveyed,
revealed some bad news for the pro-choice
movement (kudos to them for still printing
it). Under the sub-heading ―surprising new
priorities‖ the study writes, ―Abortion was
not considered a high priority. Only 41% of
women
surveyed
identified
keeping
abortion legal as a top priority. Of greater
importance to women is the ability to take
time off to care for family (74%), reducing
drug and alcohol addiction (72%), reducing
sexual harassment (71%)…,‖ etc.
Their results continue: ―In addition, the
study confirmed an increase in the number
of women supporting severe restrictions on
abortion. Fifty-one percent (51%) support
abortion only in cases of rape, incest or to
save the life of the woman, or not at all.‖
1277
And that‘s straight from the mouth of
pro-choicers. Like I said, times are
changing.
Polls say Americans want
more restrictions
hen the polls show that a
majority of Americans think
abortions should be allowed
only in certain circumstances that usually
means in cases of rape, incest, and to save a
woman‘s life. These cases make up a tiny
fraction of all abortions.
For example, according to a 2005 study
by the pro-choice Guttmacher Institute:
1% of respondents cited rape as a
contributing reason in choosing abortion
less than 0.5% cited incest as a factor
12% cited health problems as a factor
(these included ―morning sickness,‖
depression and old age)
1278
That means, 86.5% of abortions do not
fit in the ―certain circumstances‖ category
according to the women themselves! The
number gets even smaller when women
were asked what was the primary reason
they chose abortion. Only 4% cited
physical health concerns and under 0.5%
said rape was the reason. Incest was not
even mentioned.
1279
That means most
Americans believe that more than 95% of
other abortions are performed primarily for
the wrong reasons.
Did you know?
Women are more pro-life than men!
1280
This shouldn‘t come as a surprise, seeing
as women are the ones bearing children.
We know firsthand what it means to
give life. This should also make us stop
to think — are men more pro-choice
because it‘s politically correct, or are
they actually in it for themselves?
W
396
Young people have a voice
and they‘re using it
he amazing part is, it‘s the young
people of today, not the old folks,
who
are
spearheading
this
movement to end abortion. Here are some
things you folks are doing:
The Great Canadian Wishlist
In 2007 the CBC held a competition on
Facebook to see what would be the most
popular wish for the country, which they
would announce on the news a month
later. People across the country posted their
wishes and anyone supporting them could
add their vote. The number one wish with
9,212 votes was a wish started by a young
Canadian guy called Dave Gilbert. His
wish? To abolish abortion in Canada. Later
on the news he said, ―I think the
significance of this is that it shows
Canadians and politicians that, you know,
we do want to talk about this. It‘s not a
closed issue…‖
1281
Marches for Life
Every year young people get out and
march across the land and each year the
marches keep growing. What are they
marching for? Marching for peace in the
womb. Marching for life, for the the most
precious freedom of all. It‘s a symbolic way
to say, we care and we‘re standing up for
those who don‘t have a voice. Most of the
marchers are actually young people — now
that‘s exciting! This year in 2010 the
organizers estimated attendance at well
over 300,000 people.
1282
Polls and young people
A 2003 Gallup Poll of 517 teens found
that 72% believe that abortion is morally
wrong. This is astounding! Seven out of ten
young people believe that abortion is
wrong. It will be interesting watching these
young people grow up and seeing how they
influence the politics of abortion in this
country.
The poll also found that only 19%
thought abortion should be legal in any
circumstance; 32% thought it should be
illegal and 47% thought it should only be
legal in certain circumstances, which we
are not told what they are, whether they
are the life of the mother or what.
1283
In
other words, a majority of 79% of young
people believe there should be restrictions
on abortion.
Students for Life of America
Students for a Life are active on many
college campuses, educating fellow students
and forming pro-life groups across the
nation. They have been especially
successful
with
undercover
exposés
T
397
including taping:
a clinic employee admitting a late
abortion would involve a child born
alive (infanticide)
a clinic employee encouraging a young
girl to lie about her age (rape)
cooperative pro-life students arrested
and hauled off despite their first
Amendment rights
For more details on how to get active
and involved, check out our resources
section at the end of the book.
Reason #92
―Abortion is not the popular
choice today‖
Reason #93
Abortion may not be
medically necessary
Might we save both?
If the mother‘s actual life were threatened,
a conscientious doctor would try to save
both.
1284
—
Dr. Willke and Mrs. J.C. Willke,
Abortion
his is the ultimate reason to keep
abortion legal, and truthfully, my
current perspective is that if it came
down to it, the mother‘s life should come
first. However, I would like to question if
abortion is really medically necessary in
many of these instances.
While she may be sick or even dying
(God-forbid) abortion is not the universal
panacea we think it is. Pregnancy is a
natural bodily function and stopping that
body function, might not actually help
anything.
Sure, you might say, it will take some
pressure off her heart or whatever, and it
might, if it‘s a late pregnancy when her
body is working hard to help the baby.
Then, on the other hand, the abortion may
weaken her by opening up the possibility of
infection when she is already weakened.
T
398
The emotional stress and trauma of such an
abortion may have an unwanted effect on
her nervous system and/or immune system
(which is tied in to the emotions). The
other possibility is that her condition may
be too late to really help anyhow.
Let‘s be clear: today there are more ways
we can help save both lives. We have new
drugs, new natural therapies and new ideas
— such as an early birth — that may help
in these situations. Let‘s look now at some
specific problems that are said to require an
abortion.
Girl with risky pregnancy gives
her opinion:
―I definitely agree that in cases where
the
mother
requires
emergency
attention and the life of the child may
be lost, she should still be given the care
she needs. But what about cases where
doctors recommend abortions in CASE
of an emergency or the health of the
mother?‖
1285
The Case of an Ectopic
Pregnancy
n an ectopic pregnancy the embryo
grows outside of the womb — usually
in the small fallopian tubes which
adjoin the uterus. There is typically a 0%
survival rate for the embryo, although there
are a few rare exceptions (see further
down). The problem with an ectopic
pregnancy is that the fallopian tubes are
intended as a tunnel — not a permanent
home — for the fertilized egg. They are not
big enough or strong enough to support a
baby. The tubes can rupture as the embryo
grows, and this rupturing could cause fatal
internal bleeding for the mother. When the
tubes rupture the embryo would die — or
in an exceptionally rare case, the embryo
reattaches somewhere else.
In many cases the body recognizes
something is wrong and a tubal pregnancy
is
naturally
expelled
through
a
miscarriage.
1286
In fact, according to the
American Academy of Family Physicians,
―at least 14 studies have documented that
68-77% of ectopic pregnancies resolve
without intervention.‖
1287
The dilemma is
not knowing which women will have
problems.
When I started this research I was
convinced abortion in this situation was
always absolutely necessary.
1288
What I
found out is that in some cases, such as with
an early pregnancy when the woman is
displaying low levels of the hCG hormone,
some doctors manage the case by close
observation, knowing that some women
will simply reabsorb the ectopic pregnancy
and the body will fix the problem by
itself.
1289
Monitoring is necessary because
I
399
they don‘t know who will have problems
and who won‘t.
Close monitoring (with hefty doses of
prayer) would be my personal choice now
that I have the information; however, this
is considered such a life-threatening
condition that pro-life groups support the
removal of an ectopic pregnancy. Perhaps
one day we will be able to transplant an
ectopic pregnancy directly to the womb
where it is meant to be. For now, though, if
there is a real risk that the woman‘s life will
be lost, then I believe it is a sad though
important action to take the embryo out.
Besides, what good would it do if both of
you died?
For how abortions can increase your
risk of ectopic pregnancy in the future turn
to
Reason #30: Abortion carries risks
.
Exceptions to the rule
In
an
unheard-of
event,
Meera
Thangarajah, a 34-year-old mother was in a
hospital delivering her second child. When
the doctors went to deliver the baby via
caesarean they found the baby growing not
in her womb but in one of her ovaries! Her
ovary was stretched tissue-paper thin from
the pregnancy but, incredibly, it had not
ruptured and the baby was healthy.
1290
Then there was the case of little Millie-
An who grew in the space inside her
mother‘s abdomen. The fertilized egg had
come out of the fallopian tubes and, instead
of moving to the uterus, had fallen into the
wrong space and grown! Persistent little
seed! The placenta attached to the outside
of mom‘s bowel, which was able to pass on
the oxygen and nutrients Millie-An needed.
Doctors only discovered the situation
during labor when the baby wasn‘t
coming.
1291
In another case the baby implanted in
the lining of the bowel. Thankfully the
baby was fine and grew just right. The
biggest problem was detaching the placenta
from the bowel. It was a total shock to
surgeons performing the supposed C-
section.
1292
For another surgeon performing an
emergency C-section, it was a surprise to
find the baby not where it was supposed to
be but attached to the outside of the uterus.
Thankfully, this ectopic pregnancy also
ended successfully for mom and baby.
1293
Another recent story went like this.
―‗What's that?' he asked, pointing to what
looked like a large air bubble at the top left
of the screen in front of us. 'Oh, my
God,' the hospital consultant gasped. 'That's
your womb… and I don't think your baby's
in it.'‖
1294
The fertilized egg had got lost and
implanted on the mother‘s bowel, thus
explaining her stomach pains whenever the
baby moved. After an early delivery via
surgery, both were fortunate to have made
it through.
1295
In still a rarer case, a woman gave birth
400
to triplets — two of grew them in the
womb and the other grew in her abdomen!
It appears the fertilized egg got stuck in the
fallopian tubes and that as he grew the
tubes ruptured (with no apparent problem
for mom) and the embryo attached itself to
the (wrong) side of the uterus! Mom
thought she was giving birth to twins and
only discovered 10 days before birth that
she was having triplets — and that one was
growing in the wrong place. A high-risk
caesarean delivered the babies early and
they are now doing well. Like many
surgeries such as this the placenta was left
intact to shrink on its own — and decrease
the risk of maternal hemorrhage.
1296
Cancer
Today it is possible for almost any patient
to be brought through pregnancy alive,
unless she suffers from a fatal illness, such
as cancer or leukemia. And if so, abortion
would be unlikely to prolong, much less
save life.
1297
—Alan Guttmacher, M.D and founder of the pro-
choice Guttmacher Institute
ancer
is
something
that
is
considered by many to be a situation
where an abortion is absolutely
necessary and there may be a case where it
is. Hypothetically, in the rare case that a
woman
becomes
pregnant
while
undergoing treatment for cancer of the
uterus,
one
of
those
treatments
recommended might be removal of the
uterus. If that became necessary after other
treatments failed, and if it were not possible
to prolong the pregnancy till a viable birth,
then the baby‘s premature death should be
mourned as a loss of life — it is not
nothing. It‘s not that the baby was
intentionally aborted — it‘s that his life was
lost while trying to save his mother‘s life.
This would be a really tricky situation. I
think I‘d be praying for a miracle, but I
can‘t say what I‘d do. I did read of one
woman in this situation, and her prayer
resulted in the pregnancy ending naturally
so she could continue treatment.
However, having said that, in many
cases an abortion may actually make things
worse. In fact, it made it much worse for
one woman. That woman was Allegra
Roseberry, a 41-year-old with terminal
liver cancer. While in the hospital to start
cancer treatment, she discovered the
startling news that she was 23 weeks
pregnant. This came as a total surprise,
especially since she had needed the help of
fertility drugs 20 years earlier when she
conceived her only son. In a case like this,
it may be feasible to schedule an early
induced delivery, thus giving the mother
time to undergo radiation treatments, if she
wishes. But no option other than abortion
was given to Allegra. Allegra died from that
C
401
abortion. She died from sepsis, which is a
whole body infection. The irony of it all is
that specialists said she couldn‘t continue
the pregnancy because it would weaken her
health. Unfortunately, Allegra was not
offered a consultation with a high risk
obstetrician. Instead, specialists urged an
abortion so that she could try an
experimental cancer treatment.
1298
Some promising news is that new
techniques are being developed to help
both mother and child. Just recently the
ABC news reported on how chemotherapy
is being given to mothers later in pregnancy
and does not appear to cause birth defects,
―A specific ‗regimen‘ of chemotherapy used
for pregnant cancer patients has enabled
the births of dozens of healthy babies.‖
1299
There is also a support group for
pregnant women with cancer,
www.pregnantwithcancer.org
.
Their
website is worth checking out if you are
looking for hope that you can fight cancer
and still deliver a healthy baby. A quote
from one of the survivor stories reads: ―His Dostları ilə paylaş: |