Why the right shoots abortion doctors not child traffickers.

A question about the murder of “abortion doctor” George Tiller: If abortion opponents are so concerned about children, how come they don’t murder child-traffickers instead of “abortion doctors”?

Why do they care more about the concept of children rather than actual children?
According to the U.S. Department of Justice, there are hundreds of thousands of girls and boys being bought, sold or kidnapped and then forced to have sex with grown men all over the world. They are children born into poverty and sold for sex. So, where are the picket signs and the Promise Keepers? Why are they bombing abortion clinics instead of child traffic operations?
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How to survive an abortion.

unmade bed3 How to survive an abortion.

Men have a moral obligation on abortion: Help women survive their decision.

The protesters at Obama’s Notre Dame commencement speech reminds me that when people talk about the morality of abortion, the barrel of the ethical gun is always pointed at women. Men don’t seem to occupy a bearing in the equation. They should. Not in the formulation of abortion’s legality or the influence of their partner’s choice, but in an entirely different moral obligation: To help women survive their decision. And that lies mostly in bearing witness to their pain.

Two essays give men just that opportunity.

The first, by Ayelet Waldman, makes you so uncomfortable with its raw honesty that you seriously weigh the merits of keeping your head in the sand. “I decided to terminate my pregnancy,” writes Waldman. “I know exactly what I did, I wept for the fetus I killed — and I have no regrets.”

Though Waldman goes to great pains to say she believes in a woman’s right to make the decision, she writes, “I also believe that to end a pregnancy like mine is to kill a fetus. Kill. I use that word very consciously and specifically.” Read the rest of this entry »

Why it took an abortion to discover myself.

unmade bed2 300x204 Why it took an abortion to discover myself.

“Men suck, huh?” said the woman next to me in the abortion clinic recovery room.

No, I thought. I suck –for getting myself in this position in the first place.

I was sitting alone in an abortion clinic waiting my turn. I remember waking up at 5am or so to get to the clinic by 6:30am for a 7am appointment. That turned into a 9am appointment. Let me tell you something. I’ve had very few humbling experiences like that one. I looked around the waiting room and recognized the look on so many of the women’s faces. Most of them were there alone, like me. They had this expression on their face that I will never forget.

Shame.

Their eyes all looked empty. Their mouths were tight. They avoided any and all eye contact. But I still could read their minds. They, and I, were thinking, “What wrong turn did I make to end up here? How did it get that bad?”

I made the decision to terminate my pregnancy quite easily. In fact, looking back on it, I’m alarmed at how easy that decision was. It was never a question. I was completely detached. The father did what a lot of men in his situation do and denied it was his, claiming I was lying and making it up. I can remember him coming over my apartment and giving me $150 dollars, not saying a word, turning and walking away. He wouldn’t even look at me. I went in for my first appointment and was told to come back because I wasn’t far enough along. Yes, I went through the first part, the blood tests, the waiting, the watching women walk in and out of the waiting room with this vacant look in their eyes not once, but twice.

I had two weeks before they could do the procedure. In that time, I did everything I could to avoid thinking that their was a small, peanut sized person growing inside me. It wasn’t until the day before I went in for the second appointment that I found myself talking to him. Yes, I had this gut feeling it was a boy. I asked him to understand why I was doing what I was doing. That I wasn’t ready, couldn’t provide for him, blah blah blah. I gave him a few pat excuses.  The real reason, at least this is what I told myself, was that I just didn’t want him. It’s quite easy to convince yourself of certainly realities and truths isn’t it?

The morning before I went in, I remember looking at this picture of my Mother I have hung on my wall over my bed. That’s when it really hit me. Here I was acknowledging a connection that I never really experienced or acknowledged as I was about to terminate another one.  I said one final prayer to my Mom and asked her to take care of William for me. That was his name. It came to me so easily as I prayed, too. As if it had been there all along. The only person, other than Karen and the father, who knew was my uncle, a Franciscan priest. He wanted so badly to come with me that day, but for obvious reasons couldn’t. Read the rest of this entry »

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