F
Fidelis_Unus
Guest
Generally I have found statistics unhelpful in such discussions as eyes start rolling. I can give a couple sources that support a 70% figure, these are ones that we know about. The sources are: Reasons Given For Having Abortions In the United States, William Johnston. More current sources can be found at **afteraboriton.org. Hear from the women who have actually gone through it. ** For example, see Pregnancy and Sexual Assault, The Psychological Aspects of Abortion, Dr. Mahkorn, “Dr. Sandra Mahkorn found that 75 to 85 percent chose against abortion.”…and I have nothing against someone making that choice when it’s the right one for them. Do you have statistics for raper survivors not having emergency contraception or abortions? That’s where they have that choice. When people have the choice, plenty of them make the “right” choice, but if they did’t have the choice, they end up resenting the lack of choice even though that lack of choice didn’t personally constrain them.
As for the effect on wider society, again that’s straying away from the moral argument to an empirical argument.
This would indicate that we are not helping women by encouraging an abortion to make it easier for them. The guilt from abortion gets intertwined with the guilt of abortion, making recovery more difficult and what would have been a more short term trauma becomes a lifelong sense of guilt and loss, at least according to these women. I believe that we try to help women in the short term and, instead, cause more suffering for them in the long term. This is what happens when we interfere with God’s will. Well-intentioned? absolutely, but are we really helping them? I don’t think so.
One additional thought, provided abortions for incest victims has been shown to perpetuate abuse, not end it. see Victims and Victors: Speaking Out About Their Pregnancies, Abortions, and Children Resulting from Sexual Assault. Battle Creek, Acorn Publishing. A pregnancy would post a threat to an abuser and, particularly if the abuser is a family member (which is usually the case) a victim can be forced to have an abortion and, thereby, allow the abuse to continue. A pregnancy may have been a way to get out of the abuse.
That said, YES society suffers, women suffer, and this is not a classroom. Not noting this means I get attacked for religious beliefs when my opinion on abortion is not just faith-based.