Posted on 12/31/2019 3:53:09 PM PST by Kaslin
The Christmas story celebrated each year by millions worldwide tells of an unwed teenager who becomes pregnant after she responds yes to a life that redeems all of humanity. But that isnt stopping some media outlets from deeming the holiday season appropriate to promote abortion, which says no to life, instead.
On December 23, Rewire.News published an opinion piece with the headline, All I Want for Christmas Is for Texans to Be Able to Afford Their Abortions. Womens centers and even the ACLU of Texas shared the story on Twitter. In the piece, OB/GYN activist and Physicians for Reproductive Health Fellow Ghazaleh Moayedi asked readers to consider donating to an abortion fund so that women wouldnt have to choose between affording Christmas presents or paying for an abortion.
Moayedi told the story of one patient who wanted an abortion at nine weeks pregnant.
While she made it clear that shed prefer the medication abortion, Moayedi wrote, she told me with tears welling up in her eyes, I think Im going to have to wait until after Christmas; I wont have the money until then.
Thats when Moayedi got a sinking feeling.
Not only would her pregnancy be past the point where I could offer her the medication abortion she desired, but waiting four additional weeks would mean the cost of her abortion would increase, too, she worried. [T]his mother-of-fours access to health care was being driven by a very real and common fear: buy Christmas presents for her children or obtain a timely, affordable abortion.
Moayedi revealed that, as an OB/GYN in Texas who performs abortion care, she has these conversations with patients almost daily. But she also urged that the challenge of paying for an abortion was happening throughout the United States.
However, there was hope, she claimed.
The National Network of Abortion Funds and its 70-plus member organizations have been on the frontlines of abortion access, she wrote, and, people from across the country call abortion funds like the Texas Equal Access Fund.
Moayedi called for a world where no family is forced to choose abortion solely because they cannot financially afford to parent because All people deserve to parent when they want and to parent their children in safe, healthy, and supportive environments where they thrive.
The pro-life movement wants much of the same: for children to live and thrive but from their very beginning at the moment of conception. Thats why Americans who identify as pro-life dedicate their time and finances to helping pregnant women and new moms in need. Among other things, they support pregnancy centers nationwide which provide free housing, medical supplies, clothing, and educational classes.
But, Moayedi argued, those who suggest that ending poverty would end abortion, or that women with low incomes seek abortions simply because of poverty, fail to see women as autonomous humans with goals, aspirations, and desires. Autonomous humans once theyre born, that is.
Thats because, she said, Women with low incomes choose abortion for all the same complex reasons that women with middle and high incomes do.
She didnt provide any numbers or research to back up her words. Instead, she repeated her Christmas concern.
No mother should have to choose between her ability to end a pregnancy when she needs to and paying her rent, feeding her children, or buying them Christmas presents, she said, even though thats a part of a daily reality she witnesses.
Every person has the basic human right to quality health care, which includes timely access to abortion care, regardless of income, she added. What a gift that would be to Texas families.
What a gift it would be to the unborn too, if OB/GYNs in the media like herself considered the unborn as patients alongside their mothers.
Moayedis argument that women should be able to afford both Christmas presents and an abortion limits women by telling them that they need to be able to end anothers life as a disposable thing for their own sakes. Instead, American society should encourage a culture where women feel empowered to buy both Christmas presents and raise their children.
The piece isnt surprising for Rewire.News, which describes itself as an outlet with Evidence-based reporting on sexual and reproductive health, rights, and justice. But the timing is.
Christmas is the wrong time to promote abortion. Then again, theres never a right time to promote the ending of a human life.
Here we have another: Darwin Award Winner!
When the birth of a baby is the reason for the season.
I didn’t think abortion enthusiasts were allowed to post on FR. We’re pro-life and we have standards.
It’s a comeback dig to the leftist. Get it? Don’t be so rigid and literal.
I’ve used that line with every liberal nut that argues pro choice. I say, “too bad your mother wasn’t “
Shuts them up every time.
I don't mind being called literal and rigid on this one, because I know for a fact that your retort is part of the problem. Some pro-abortion people are actually OK with the idea that their mothers could have snuffed them.
I was shocked when I realized this. I was on a downtown sidewalk in Pittsburgh PA handing out info about a pro-life pregnancy center. Two young women, one white and one black, started arguing with me about it. They both unhesitatingly said that anything that reduces human unhappiness is a good thing, and the best, most effective and most commonsense way is to abort babies so they don't have to live is this sh---y world.
They both vehemently agreed that they had no problem with the possibility that their mothers could have "nipped them in the bud."
I ended up saying I was glad they were born. They laughed at me. I just repeated, maybe with a tear in my eye, "I AM glad you were born." "I'm not," one of them snapped back.
< As they walked away, one of them crumpled up the leaflet I'd given her, and tossed it on the sidewalk. The other one took two more steps away, and then turned back and picked up the leaflet, kinda smoothed it out, gave it back to me and said "Sorry."
I just shot her a look. She remarked under her breath, "Well, maybe somebody needs that."
Its intersting that those three women in the picture holding up the abortion signs are beyond childbearing years.
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