Posted on 01/11/2017 4:10:12 AM PST by Morgana
Like so many others, Allison Schneider was bitterly disappointed when she woke up on Nov. 9 to learn that Donald Trump and not Hillary Clinton won the presidential race.
Schneider, an OB-GYN resident intern at the Kaiser Oakland Medical Center in California, recently wrote a column for the Huffington Post about how she hopes to be an abortion practitioner some day and how the election results affect her work.
She wrote:
The afternoon of November 8th, I felt elated. My co-resident and I had successfully placed an IUD in a frightened 17 year-old in need of emergency contraception, preventing an unwanted teen pregnancy. And, a woman was about to be elected president.
The next day, as I stared numbly at my computer at 6:30am in the pre-operative charting room, I struggled to keep my mind focused on the surgeries I was going to perform that day.
My senior resident, a woman of unflappable composure in even the most dire emergencies, walked into the room. We looked at each other, embraced, and cried. This strong surgeon, mother, and mentor briefly cracked under the weight of the visceral grief we shared.
Its no secret that abortion advocates really wanted and expected Hillary Clinton to win the presidential election. Clinton supported abortion on demand, including late-term abortions, and opposed common sense regulations such as sex-selection abortion bans and safety requirements for abortion facilities.
In comparison, Donald Trump describes himself as pro-life and has been filling his administration with strong pro-life leaders who oppose abortion. Among the current hopes are that federal lawmakers will soon move to defund the abortion giant Planned Parenthood of its nearly half a billion dollars in taxpayer funding. Trump promised to sign such a measure if it reaches his desk.
Trump also promised to appoint pro-life justices to the U.S. Supreme Court. One seat, that of the late Justice Antonin Scalia, currently is open. Several more also could come open under Trumps administration, creating the possibility of a conservative-majority court that could reverse Roe v. Wade.
Both of these promises are worrisome in Schneiders mind:
As womens health care providers, we cannot stand on the sidelines and watch while Roe v. Wade and Title X funding ― which supports vital family planning services for the most vulnerable women in our population ― rest on the chopping block. If any one of Trumps proposed conservative nominees to the Supreme Court are confirmed, we will be fighting once again to preserve a womans constitutional right to make her own healthcare choices.
Keep up with the latest pro-life news and information on Twitter.
If given the opportunity, this administration will wage a war on womens health and we have to show up to fight it. In states like Ohio, where Governor John Kasich recently signed a bill into law banning abortion after 20 weeks with no exceptions for rape or incest, this battle has already begun.
Schneider ended her column with a call to action, urging abortion supporters like herself to stand up against these pro-life initiatives.
She concluded with these final, ironic words: Every baby I deliver reminds me of who were fighting for. This is their future. They deserve better than Trumps America, and so do we.
Unfortunately, its those babies who she and her fellow abortion advocates also are fighting against. Because of Roe v. Wade and the work of abortion practitioners in the past 43 years, close to 60 million unborn babies have died unjustly in abortions.
The election results are a signal that the American people are ready for a change. Abortion has destroyed too many babies lives and hurt too many womens and mens for far too long. Pro-lifers are hopeful that the incoming administration will be one that embraces every human being as a valuable, irreplaceable member of society, including those not yet born.
Again, no sale. You are just going to stick to your story no matter what, just like every liberal, and expect the world to do your bidding on the basis of your moral indignation.
That is a childish, self-centered, and foolish approach to life.
You don’t have to believe a damn thing. In fact, I encourage you to not believe anyone and seek the truth all on your own.
When you go out there just keep in mind that not all things are perfectly clean cut and can be measured like a yardstick. People and society are not something you can judge/run like a predictable machine. The secrets and intricacies of mankind go deeper than the proverbial rabbithole.
There’s still more than enough mystery to go around and nobody truly has solutions to many of the most dire issues we face...
Another common scenario --- again, if she's young and living in the parental household --- she may see her pregnancy as her ticket to independence: with a baby she can more easily become an emancipated minor, set up her own household independent of her mother, get her own welfare and benefits. So she keeps the pregnancy secret hoping she'll have a baby. But when her mom or dad discover she's pregnant, they may bring decisive pressure on her to abort, even in mid-pregnancy.
Another story you hear: she actually wants to solidify her "relationship" with her abuser, and thinks having a baby together will do it. Doesn't work out, the guy insists she gets an abortion, maybe even threatened her and treats her rough, and after a lot of stalling, finally she succumbs and aborts the baby.
These girls need guidance, and lots of it.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.