Posted by
PatriciaK on Friday, February 06, 2009 7:13:55 PM
I do realize it is bit of a morbid question. However, I figure those who vote to keep this act protected by law should feel comfortable enough thinking about it. After all, pro-choice voters feel it is a "right" for a mother to kill her child, and despite their protests that they do not "like" abortion, their votes do protect the one-thousand-per-day abortion rate in the U.S., a rate sure to rise with Obama's promise to Planned Parenthood that he will pass the FOCA on his first day in office (see
www.jillstanek.com for details and video).
So, there you are, let's say, five weeks old. You catch wind that your mother isn't sure she wants to "keep" you.
As you listen to your mother weigh the pros and cons of letting you live, do you merely shrug your shoulders and concede to one of the numerous defenses given by the pro-choice camp? ("Well," you think, "it is her body"/"Well, it is her choice"/"Well, it is between her and her doctor"/"Well, Obama did say it was above his pay grade to determine whether I am a "person.")
As you listen to your mother debate whether or not she should end your life within the next few days, do you still want to tell the government to keep its life-protecting laws "out of your mother's womb"?
As your mother passes through the doors of Planned Parenthood, do you still find those pro-life protestors "annoying" as they try to speak for you who cannot speak?
And as your mother decides, that, yes, she will abort her child, you, do you still praise the United States for protecting her rights while denying you yours?