"Choice" Is....

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I think I attempted to shield my child from the pictures and distract her as much as I could. I do remmeber cuddling her in close with her head ‘buried’ into my shoulder so I probably gave the impression that I was afraid for her. I can understand that it wasn’t the best reaction but, given no warning, it was the best I could do at the time. The anger never came until later and I certainly didn’t let her know of my anger. They must know it is wrong and be in denial or something. I know your shocking pictures do make a difference but only to those who are contemplating abortions, not to young children who mostly don’t even know how babies come to be. I do try and protect my children from anything that I think will cause them distress until I think they are of an age where they will be able to cope with and learn from it. I check out films and books before giving them to my kids and generally do my best to keep everything at a level with which they can cope. There have been things outwith my control and that’s just life and I guess I deal with them as they come but you should know that I think the pictures my daughter saw did harm her wellbeing at the time. Had we been prepared, they may not have caused harm.

I think too you should be targeting doctors. I had my eldest quite young and the GP was annoyed that I didn’t have an abortion. I knew, without ever being told that abortions were murder and that I would never under any circumstances do that. I told her that in these words then I had a threatened miscarraige and when I rang her, she told me that I should just keep busy and with a bit of luck I’d lose it! Thankfully, God had other plans and she is now 12 years old and a real blessing.
Linnyo,
I am glad you see that the explanation I gave you was a good one. We agree on much more then we disagree. However I can speak from direct knowledge of many children who were not at all traumatized about the photos. In 2004 for 16 weeks I and many other people drove around the CBR trucks all over the country. We stayed with prolife families everywhere we went. Most of whom had very young children. I was never around when any of the children were told about abortion from their parents but instead of being upset when the familes and other people we met would follow us or drive around our trucks in their hometowns the young children as young as 2 or 3 would be waving and smiling to us from the cars. They understood from whatever their parents told them.
 
Vern - that comes with maturity though. As a young mum, I didn’thave the maturity or the wisdom to know exactly what to do and there were many others just like me. Of course I would know what best to do now but that is because i am more experienced. The point is, the campaigning can be done where it is needed - amongst child-bearing agegroups such as at universities, outside clinics etc and it can be done bu handing out leaflets to adults for them to see rather than in a way in which young children cannot fail to see the shocking images. I’ll tell you this - I never took my kids to another worship event!
I think it’s the adult reaction to the pictures that’s causing all the controversy. And I agree that a negative reaction by an adult can cause a child problems.

But for myself, if one of my grand daughters (1 and 4 yeas old) saw such a sign, the first thing I would do is listen to them. They may not ask any questions at all. But if they did, I would say something like, “There are people who kill children before they are born. These people are trying to stop those bad people, and they are showing pictures of the babies who have been killed so we will all know what a bad thing has happened.”
 
Have the sit down early.

And when children are troubled by what they see, they will ask – answer them!
… A parent is supposed to discuss these matters with the child. Try it – you may find your children are more receptive than you think.
What about when children are in cars with people other than their parents? My children often ride with others. Sometimes children see things like that that are bothersome in their subconscious, but then they never bring it up to their parents.
 
Well, you’ve got a point there, but I’m not sure you can link causally that seeing an abortion photo necessarily leads to not having an abortion. In fact, I would think it hardens the hearts of many a fence-sitting pro-choicer…
Good point. In fact, I know NUMEROUS pro-life people who, when they find out a pro-life group they financially support does this type of thing, they immediately cease all funds to that organization.

I also know quite a few pro-choice people who do think that this is overboard, and the pro-life movement loses all credibility.
 
Boppaid,

We don’t care if people who care more about feelings then saving lives complain about our tactics or if they decide their money isn’t worth saving lives. Here are some powerful stories of women who decided to save their child’s life only because they saw these photos. Will you tell me that the babies who were saved didn’t deserve life simply because you and others aren’t comfortable looking at the truth?:
  1. I’m a 22 year old Spanish girl. I got pregnant by my ex. He wants me to get an abortion and he says that he is not going to be responsible for my child. I was thinking on it because I’m in college and I don’t have anything done yet, but I was looking at the pictures and this is horrible. I don’t know how people can easily kill like this. I’m going to keep my baby; I know we are going to be happy.
    Edison, NJ
  2. I already have two children. I think I am pregnant again, their father thinks abortion is the best way out. He says that the fetus is just a blob… I was trying to find information and prove him wrong. I will not have an abortion thanks to this site. If anything, I will give my baby to a family who will love and care for it.
    Fort Worth, Texas
  3. I’m pregnant now, and [abortion] had crossed my mind, but I wanted to see what it looked like before I decided anything, and this has changed my mind.
    18, Edon, OH
  4. I was considering having an abortion, now I am not.
    Age 20, West Warwick, RI
  5. I was considering having an abortion but I wasn’t sure. After looking at this site I couldn’t kill my baby and destroy an innocent child that was not asked to be brought into this world and kill something that is a part of me. Age 17
  6. I’m 2 months pregnant and had a scheduled appointment to have [an abortion] this Saturday, but there is no way I’m doing it now…thank you so much for saving a precious life. Now I greatly oppose legal abortion…thank you so much!!!
    Age 28
  7. I am pregnant now and now I know what decision to make. I am supposed to go tomorrow and get an abortion at Planned Parenthood [but now] I’m not going.
    Age 21 in NY, Oct. 8, 2003
  8. I’m 19 weeks pregnant and I’ve recently had thoughts of abortion. I’m afraid of being a single parent but now even more [afraid] at the thought of killing a baby what ever the reason be. I myself wouldn’t be able to sleep at night knowing I committed murder.
    Age 22, Houston, TX Oct. 11, 2003
  9. I supported legal abortion until I saw this site. It actually brought tears to my eyes when I saw the photos of aborted fetuses. I feel so bad now since I had abortions before…If I would of known the facts and seen this site before hand, the abortions would not have taken place.
    Age 29, New Jersey, Nov 23, 2003
  10. I’m now 28 weeks pregnant…when I first found out I considered having an abortion. [Now that I’ve seen what’s] involved, I think it is wrong to kill something before it has a chance to live.
    Age 19, San Martin, CA, Dec 14, 2003
 
  1. I was thinking about getting an abortion. I was always pro-choice, but would never even think of doing it to my child. I am in a very difficult situation however, two kids and single and pregnant, so I was considering it. I thought to myself that I would be honest with myself and research FIRST what is actually done to the fetus. I wanted actual pictures of an aborted child. I knew honesty would guide me. I saw the pictures and was devastated. I wondered how someone could think of it as a glob of growing tissue? How could anyone think that way, especially for 2nd trimester abortions? THOSE are NOT abortions, they are plain and simple murders of unprotected babies. This has made my decision as I knew it would. I could NEVER do what all these women do. I am not here to judge them as only god can do that, but I will not be pro-choice anymore.
    Age 26, Scottsdale, AZ
  2. I am currently six weeks pregnant. And all my boyfriend says to do is to get an abortion. And for once in my life I actually considered it. Until, I saw these pictures. Thank you for the harsh truth.
    Age 19, Southern California, Dec. 29, 2003
  3. I am five weeks pregnant and have decided to keep my baby, however, this was not the case when I first discovered my pregnancy. I was going to get an abortion because I have done so in the past, but after seeing the pictures, it has solidified my decision. Please, dear God, forgive me.
    Feb. 24, 2004
  4. I am 17 and from England. I discovered I was 6 weeks pregnant a few weeks ago. I was so unsure of what to do and was in two minds. After visiting your website, i decided i am 100% going ahead with my pregnancy.
    Norwich, England, March 29th, 2004
  5. I am 6 weeks pregnant and was considering abortion after what I have seen on this website, no way!!!
    Age 21, New Mexico, March 30, 2004
  6. I have thought about getting an abortion just because I know I’m not ready for a child in my life yet. Only being 18 it seems hard to settle down and have someone to take care of the rest of your life. But after viewing your site I will not do it.
    Age 18, Michigan, March 31, 2004
  7. I am 10 weeks pregnant with my third child and single and alone. After viewing those pictures … it really changed my mind.
    Age 30, Jackson, MS, April 7, 2004
 
  1. I thought i was pregnant just a few days ago and was seriously considering having an abortion. I’m 17 years old and I have a future but if my future contains a baby boy or girl [your website has helped me] glady except that and if my family disowns me, then they will but it’s nothing I can help.
    Age 17, April 9, 2004
  2. I don’t believe in abortion, but at one time I was considering it. After seeing these horrible pictures, I thought to myself, how could somebody to that to an innocent child. And I changed my mind quickly. I could never do that to my child.
    Age 17, Cleveland, OH April 10, 2004
  3. I was thinking about having an abortion when I found out I pregnat but after I saw this web site I realized that it was the wrong choice. The pictures really changed my mind.
    Age 15, Boise, ID April 24, 2004
  4. My mother wants me to get an abortion but now I refuse to harm a innocent baby like that. This is a vey smart choice and I thank you for this website.
    Albany, GA May 22, 2004
  5. About a month and a half ago I wanted to get an abortion. And I didn’t know anything about them. I’m only 18 and didn’t want the burden of motherhood. So being the computer geek I am I started to search sites… then I decieded to look at pictures. I had no idea what to expect. I’m a happy soon-to-be mom now. And I would like to spread the word about abortions and how grusome they are. Thank you for changing my mind with your pictures.
    Age 18, May 26, 2004
  6. My mom wanted to abort my little brother so I showed her your website and that changed her mind all of the way thanks sooooooooooo much, yall helped me save my little brother, again thanks so much I know I could never repay yall for this but I know all I can say is thaaaaaaaaaaanks.
    Age 20, San Antonio, TX Feb 7, 2005
  7. I think I may be pregnant and my boyfriend wants me to get an abortion, but after seeing these photos I have decided I am definitely not getting one and the doctors who are doing this are wrong…it should not be allowed!
    Age 15, Pinellas Park, FL Feb, 11, 2005
  8. I wouldn’t have an abortion no matter how much my ex tried and pressure me into it…after the images, I couldn’t do that to someone…a baby.
    Age 25, Dallas TX, March 2, 2005
 
Many of these women visited a website. None of them said they had seen the pictures out on a campaign where there were children. Is it a possibility that family places isn’t where the pictures are necessary anyway?
  1. I thought i was pregnant just a few days ago and was seriously considering having an abortion. I’m 17 years old and I have a future but if my future contains a baby boy or girl [your website has helped me] glady except that and if my family disowns me, then they will but it’s nothing I can help.
    Age 17, April 9, 2004
  2. I don’t believe in abortion, but at one time I was considering it. After seeing these horrible pictures, I thought to myself, how could somebody to that to an innocent child. And I changed my mind quickly. I could never do that to my child.
    Age 17, Cleveland, OH April 10, 2004
  3. I was thinking about having an abortion when I found out I pregnat but after I saw this web site I realized that it was the wrong choice. The pictures really changed my mind.
    Age 15, Boise, ID April 24, 2004
  4. My mother wants me to get an abortion but now I refuse to harm a innocent baby like that. This is a vey smart choice and I thank you for this website.
    Albany, GA May 22, 2004
  5. About a month and a half ago I wanted to get an abortion. And I didn’t know anything about them. I’m only 18 and didn’t want the burden of motherhood. So being the computer geek I am I started to search sites… then I decieded to look at pictures. I had no idea what to expect. I’m a happy soon-to-be mom now. And I would like to spread the word about abortions and how grusome they are. Thank you for changing my mind with your pictures.
    Age 18, May 26, 2004
  6. My mom wanted to abort my little brother so I showed her your website and that changed her mind all of the way thanks sooooooooooo much, yall helped me save my little brother, again thanks so much I know I could never repay yall for this but I know all I can say is thaaaaaaaaaaanks.
    Age 20, San Antonio, TX Feb 7, 2005
  7. I think I may be pregnant and my boyfriend wants me to get an abortion, but after seeing these photos I have decided I am definitely not getting one and the doctors who are doing this are wrong…it should not be allowed!
    Age 15, Pinellas Park, FL Feb, 11, 2005
  8. I wouldn’t have an abortion no matter how much my ex tried and pressure me into it…after the images, I couldn’t do that to someone…a baby.
    Age 25, Dallas TX, March 2, 2005
 
Boppaid,

We don’t care if people who care more about feelings then saving lives complain about our tactics or if they decide their money isn’t worth saving lives. Here are some powerful stories of women who decided to save their child’s life only because they saw these photos. Will you tell me that the babies who were saved didn’t deserve life simply because you and others aren’t comfortable looking at the truth?:
If the money starts disappearing, the movement may lose its momentum. YOu should care. Everyone who cares about the pro-life movement should care.

I did read all those testamonies earlier in this thread. I now feel badly that you wasted your time reposting them! 🙂 My question is, why must these pics be posted on a highway? Why not do as the other poster suggested and put them in a binder to show people who you engage in conversations on the street or in pro-life tents?
 
Linnyo,

Good point on those quotes. I can tell you that in 04 when I was traveling around with those trucks every day we would listen on speaker to a phone message or two from women who called into the CBR hotline and pretty often we’d hear a story of a woman who decided not to abort because of our presence or the airplane banner.

In St. Louis I helped save 2 babies who’s mothers were walking across the parking lot at the Planned Parenthood there. In South Dakota a high school girl who saw my truck as I was driving around her high school got pregnant just after we left. Her parents wanted her to have the abortion but this girl wrote into her school newspaper that the only reason she was keeping the baby was because of what she saw that day.

boppaid: You have to be kidding me right? Do you think blacks would have gotten any respect by anyone if they had put the photos of their people being hosed, hanged, and beaten nearly to death by police into a binder and walked around and showed them to people? Come on tacts like that are a waste of time and energy.

We post these photos on trucks because the media won’t show our photos nor will newspapers. That is our last venue of mass media, taking the photos ourselves and making a world which is complicit and complacent in abortion accountable for their actions. There was almost no progress before 1990, before CBR started it’s work with changing people’s hearts and minds towards abortion.

Either you want to stop abortion or you want to talk about it, you can’t have it both ways.
 
Then we are in agreement. We should do what it takes, regardless of how Politically Correct it is.

Are you saying it is morally wrong to show pictures of aborted children? Where in the Catechism do you find that?

Just where are we ‘morally wrong’ to show people the reality of abortion?

In your opinion. But absent a definitive prohibition by the Church you cannot say it is morally wrong.
I don’t know that we agree - I don’t think we should do whatever it takes. We can’t do wrong to do good. I didn’t say the Catechism said that showing graphic death images was wrong. I was reacting to the comments made on this thread that say it’s ok to do things that might be hurtful to others as long as the action in question works - and that there is a burden of proof to show that as long as one thing is more wrong than the other, it’s ok to do it. I am interested in the discussion, but such points don’t work well for me.

I don’t need a definitive prohibition by the Church to figure out if something is wrong. Sex in marriage is beautiful and good - but I don’t think it’s right to show graphic images of this beautiful truth in church. Sure, it’s a truth. It’s reality. It’s important to educate our children about that truth. The Catechism doesn’t specifically state that we can’t show such images. But it doesn’t strike me as ok.

The context of our actions matter. So while I am a lot more open to the use of such pictures, I don’t think it’s good to use them in every situation (and that such usage could even be wrong).
 
boppaid: You have to be kidding me right? Do you think blacks would have gotten any respect by anyone if they had put the photos of their people being hosed, hanged, and beaten nearly to death by police into a binder and walked around and showed them to people? Come on tacts like that are a waste of time and energy.
Well, people like Martin Luther King certainly never stooped to putting up huge billboards up of graphic images of slaves being beaten, or blacks being abused. And you know what? He did wonders for the civil rights movement.
 
boppaid,

Sorry you aren’t going to pull the fact that Martin Luther King didn’t show billboards act on us, he did much more graphic things then that. Please read the following:

During the height of the civil rights movement it was impossible to turn on the tv and not see photos and video of blacks being beaten, nearly to death, by police and instead of journalists having the same integrity today of providing us with the truth they are covering up and supressing the reality of abortion.

***(Slide 13, racist sign)
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote his Letter from Birmingham Jail in response to clergymen who were critical of his approach to fighting segregation. In it he said the following:

“I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s greatest stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the Ku Klux Klan member, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to ‘order’ than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: ‘I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action’; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a ‘more convenient season.’

(Slide 14, lynching)

Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection. But when the injustice of it was brought before the TV cameras of America as our black brothers and sisters were attacked with dogs, hoses, and other forms of violence, people saw the evil that words alone could not convey.***

***The Center for Bioethical Reform’s studies have found that victims always want their sufferings to be known. And the people who respond to their plight do so because they have become intimately aware of the injustice. They know about good and they know about evil. Their knowledge of evil convicts them; their knowledge of good motivates them. Having seen both life and death, they fight for the lives of the oppressed. It is through the exposure of injustice that they and others are convicted to respond.

In MLK Jr’s words “…we who engage in nonviolent direct action are not the creators of tension. We merely bring to the surface the hidden tension that is already alive. We bring it out in the open, where it can be seen and dealt with. Like a boil that can never be cured so long as it is covered up but must be opened with all its ugliness to the natural medicines of air and light, injustice must be exposed, with all the tension its exposure creates, to the light of human conscience and the air of national opinion before it can be cured.”

**
Dr. King’s following words express the bewilderment of negative responses from so called pro-life leaders across the country who have spoken against our tactics.
“When I was suddenly catapulted into the leadership of the bus protest in Montgomery, Alabama, a few years ago, I felt we would be supported by the white church. I felt that the white ministers, priests and rabbis of the South would be among our strongest allies. Instead, some have been outright opponents, refusing to understand the freedom movement and misrepresenting its leaders; all too many others have been more cautious than courageous and have remained silent behind the security of stained-glass windows.
Perhaps it is easy for those who have never felt the stinging darts of segregation to say, ‘Wait.’ But when you have seen vicious mobs lynch your mothers and fathers at will and drown your sisters and brothers at whim; when you have seen hate-filled policemen curse, kick and even kill your black brothers and sisters; …when you have to concoct an answer for a five-year-old son who is asking: ‘Daddy, why do white people treat colored people so mean?’; when you take a cross-country drive and find it necessary to sleep night after night in the uncomfortable corners of your automobile because no motel will accept you; …when you are harried by day and haunted by night by the fact that you are a Negro, living constantly at tiptoe stance, never quite knowing what to expect next…—then you will understand why we find it difficult to wait.

“…I suppose I should have realized that few members of the oppressor race can understand the deep groans and passionate yearnings of the oppressed race, and still fewer have the vision to see that injustice must be rooted out by strong, persistent and determined action.”
**
 
Could it be that prolife/profeeling people don’t really understand abortion, don’t really comprehend the oppression of the unborn? Just as it is possible for someone to hear but not listen, it is possible for someone to know yet not understand.
Perhaps it is easy for those of us who have never been aborted to say graphic abortion photos should not be shown. Perhaps it is easy when you are not the one being dismissed as a “blob of tissue” and disdainfully viewed as a “clump of cells”; it is easy when you are not subjected to dismemberment, disembowelment, and decapitation; it is easy when you aren’t the one to endure poisoning by saline that will burn your skin; it is easy when potassium chloride isn’t injected into your heart to murder you.
But when you imagine that baby being attacked but unable to escape; when you comprehend a baby being in a safe place only to have it invaded by a stranger who will kill her; when that baby cannot defend herself; when you catch a glimpse of her body parts being ripped off piece by piece; when you realize that what you know about this baby’s plight, most people do not—then you will understand why we use pictures.
This is the story of the aborted unborn. This is the story that must be told. Their cries cannot be heard—their screams are silent. But their victimization can be seen. It is the images of their terrible suffering that give voice to their cries and pierce the heart of anyone with a functioning conscience.

The following are words from Dr. King’s niece who is a leader with Silent No More, an international post-abortion group that Fr. Pavone of Priests for Life is the spiritual director of.


"For many years, I have been an outspoken advocate for the unborn child, because in a culture of abortion, the child is like a slave. The new civil rights movement of our time is the pro-life movement, and as I seek to preserve the dream of my uncle, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and of my father, Rev. A.D. King (Martin’s brother), I ask the question, ‘How can the dream survive if we murder the children?’ I grew up seeing these two great men fight for the equal rights of their people.
But equality is not something you can see. What you can see are people. My uncle knew that the ugly reality of segregation had to be seen visually by the American public. He therefore organized events at which the eyes of the media could broadcast the way our people were treated when water hoses and dogs were unleashed on their peaceful marches. People responded to those images, not simply to abstract concepts of ‘segregation’ and ‘equality.’
Likewise, people—and especially African Americans—respond to the disturbing images of aborted children. Sure, some people get angry when we show them. But everyone who fights injustice has to be ready to pay a price. My uncle did, and so did my Dad. So does everyone who has the courage to show the ugly reality of abortion. Don’t be afraid to do so. Many people are grateful. As a woman who has had two abortions, I am grateful that the truth is being shown, so that others can avoid this pain in the first place."
 
I’m confused. (Not disagreeing with you…just looking for clarification.) When did MLK display graphic images on a billboard or similar? (I realize that journalists and the media did…I mean MLK, though.)

I was not aware of any such enormous signs posted by MLK near schools, on highways, etc., where the is no avoiding them. On television is quite different. You can turn off your tv…you can’t hide in your house forever, though.

(If, in fact, I am mistaken, and you point it out to me, I certainly will stand corrected.)
 
Thank you boppaid.

You are respectfully asking the questions I wish to ask.
 
I do not have children yet, but I would imagine that talking to your kids about every disturbing thing they see is easier said than done. Some people handle things better than others.
You are very right. Some people are completely unprepared and baffled at the notion of explaining or teaching their own children.
We talk to soldiers about how to handle the disturbing things we see on the battlefield, but some soldiers come to love violence and some soldiers go AWOL.
This is a fairly recent event…akin to “grief counselors”. When we came home from Vietnam…we were told nothing. We received no counseling, we were told to suck it up…be a man. SO you lived with your nightmares and demons. Many of us still do. And yes…some get comfortable with the violence, some go AWOL, and others commit suicide.
Forcing a disturbing image on someone just seems a bit off to me.
Yes it is. I too saw all of the images of the holocaust as a child. I was an “Army Brat” and we moved to Bavaria in 1956. I was exposed to the aftermath of the holocaust and its images at the age of 6. I have been to concentration camps… But, my father who took us…was prepared to explain all that happened, and why, and what was wrong with what happened. We went to Dachau, the camp near Munich. There was much more there back then, than there is now. On one hand, it was all very disturbing… very disturbing…but I understood what my father told me, and because he taught me well… I handled the images, and that knowledge has helped shape me as a man.

Being properly educated and prepared to present the information and explain it…and the spiritual and real life effects makes all the difference. If you know the meaning of the “Five P’s” you know what I mean. 😃
 
I actually showed both my kids–ages 11 and 14–pics of aborted fetuses contained in links on here. I think they should realize the consequences of having an abortion. Personally, I’m not sure if those pics help in the fight against abortion, but I would rather them see the pics than believe the media’s lie…‘it’s just a blob of tissues, it’s not a baby.’ Clearly…in these pics, it’s a baby!
 
Vern - that comes with maturity though. As a young mum, I didn’thave the maturity or the wisdom to know exactly what to do and there were many others just like me.
But you can learn, no?
Of course I would know what best to do now but that is because i am more experienced. The point is, the campaigning can be done where it is needed - amongst child-bearing agegroups such as at universities, outside clinics etc and it can be done bu handing out leaflets to adults for them to see rather than in a way in which young children cannot fail to see the shocking images. I’ll tell you this - I never took my kids to another worship event!
The problem is, by the time girls reach child-bearing age, their value systems have been formed. It’s too late to show them such things and have much effect.
 
Spend some time on abortionNO.org and you can read hundreds of stories from women who saved their babies because of nothing else other then these graphic photos. Here is a recent one.

**
Another life saved by the pictures. This happens every time we show them, but occasionally, I want to show you their actual words. We got this resonse from a 28-yr-old woman in Idaho who went to our website, www.abortionno.org, and saw what abortion really is:
  1. Do you support legal abortion or oppose legal abortion? “pro-life”
  2. Has this website influenced your thinking concerning abortion? “yes”
    – If so, how? I’m 4 weeks pregnant and was scheduled for an abortion in 5 days, but I felt conflicted about it. Now, after seeing the website, I will not kill this child.
  3. Had you ever seen abortion images before? “no”
    – If so, where?
  4. How much thought have you given to abortion? “lots”
  5. How much time have you spent at this website? “60+”
  6. How did you find this website? I googled it.
There you have it, another baby’s life saved. The story, told by the baby’s mother, confirms it. Praise the Lord!**
 
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