Let's talk about this term, "murder", wrt an abortion. I know the radical 
preachers have seized on this term as a graphic and ugly description of 
abortion. But, have any of them known a murder victim? Someone who had a full 
life and a circle of friends and family, those that loved them, who would never 
see them again? Hard core memories of this person remain, their smile, their 
belongings, the many activities shared, their pictures in the high school 
yearbook. I lost two friends that way in high school, both young women, one was 
hitchhiking, and the other's car broke down. 

 And does anyone think about the actual mindset of a murderer? Aside from 
killings done in the heat of the moment, murderers are violent thugs and 
predators who deliberately enjoy inflicting pain on others - As evil as it 
gets. 
 

 To call abortion "murder" is over the top hyperbole, and those radical 
preachers spreading such nonsense should, if they can see over their massively 
inflated egos, be ashamed of themselves. Abortion is not murder, and it never 
has been. To equate it this way simply tells me that the ones raising this 
issue are either incredibly naive and thoughtless, or far more interested in 
creating conflict, than resolution. Doesn't sound Christ-like to me - 
Carelessly equating abortion with "murder" is more like creating a political 
wedge issue, to rally the flock. 
 

 Pardon my cynical view of the radical preachers who rally their followers 
around the abortion issue, though it seems far easier for these men to gang up 
on women thinking of terminating their pregnancy, than it does to tackle the 
real problems of the world, their families, and within themselves. 
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <mdixon.6569@...> wrote :

 About 53 million abortions since Row v Wade.About 300,000 last year. Hitler 
murdered 6 million innocent lives alone in a 5-6 yer period. Stalin murdered 
about 20 million, Mao about fifty million. We've got them beat!

 

 From: "awoelflebater@... [FairfieldLife]" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
 Sent: Sunday, September 20, 2015 8:50 AM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] 'Debate from Hell'
 
 
   

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <mdixon.6569@...> wrote :

 I guess it depends on your definition of *judge*. Do I recognize poor 
choices?Is it  from poor up bringing or low intelligence.-or is it something 
else. Does that person learn from their mistakes or do they keep repeating the 
same mistake over and over. Do they ever figure out that they are making 
mistakes and , poor choices. Do they feel any responsibility for their choices? 
Do they even care? Do they feel entitled to make mistakes without consequences? 
Some people learn things the easy way, others the hard way.  How much empathy, 
compassion and understanding is expected of me? For how long and to what 
degree? Are they taking advantage of my good will? If it's their nature to 
learn things the hard way, is my help actually retarding their learning 
process? Some people are real victims of circumstances through no fault of 
their own. They didn't make poor choices  but shit happened. Maybe their 
husband died or just left them or became totally disabled. Aren't  they more 
deserving of my empathy and compassion than someone that never grew up? When I 
was younger, out of wedlock births were relatively low. Today, I think it is  
over or at least close to half. Something is dreadfully wrong. When it comes to 
the woman that has the abortion, I am fully aware that she is probably confused 
and frightened of her future  and doesn't know what to do and ends up taking 
the remedy with the quickest results. I feel terribly sorry for her because  I 
don't think she really and fully understands what she has just done. Yes, 
she'll always remember it and the anguish. But she was talked into it and told 
it was the best thing to do. This is what the Beast does. What is the Beast, 
it's the system!

 

 Overview:
 

 Quick Stats • Half of pregnancies among American women are unintended, and 
about four in 10 of these end in abortion.[1]
 • About half of American women will have an unintended pregnancy, [2] and 
nearly 3 in 10 will have an abortion, by age 45.[3]
 • The overall U.S. unintended pregnancy rate increased slightly between 1994 
and 2008, but unintended pregnancy increased 55% among poor women, while 
decreasing 24% among higher-income women.[1,6]
 • Overall, the abortion rate decreased 8% between 2000 and 2008, but abortion 
increased 18% among poor women, while decreasing 28% among higher-income 
women.[3]
 • Some 1.06 million abortions were performed in 2011, down from 1.21 million 
abortions in 2008, a decline of 13%.[4]
 • The number of U.S. abortion providers declined 4% between 2008 (1,793) and 
2011 (1,720). The number of clinics providing abortion services declined 1%, 
from 851 to 839. Eighty-nine percent of all U.S. counties lacked an abortion 
clinic in 2011; 38% of women live in those counties.[4]
 • Nine in 10 abortions occur in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy.[5]
 • A broad cross section of U.S. women have abortions:[3]
 58% are in their 20s; 61% have one or more children; 56% are unmarried and not 
cohabiting; 69% are economically disadvantaged; and 73% report a religious 
affiliation.
 

 
 


 









 













 
  


 













  




 


 












 


 










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