D
DL82
Guest
With the likelihood of a pro-abortion President at this election, and recognising that neither candidate has a strong history or commitment to pro-life, it may be time to consider other means of ending abortion. (PLEASE, don’t derail this thread by discussing who’ll win the election or the candidates’ voting records, this is just context, ignore it if you disagree.)
Anyway, irrespective of that…
Class action law suits have been launched against tobacco and fast food companies based on the health consequences of their ‘product’ and the way that product is advertised and sold. Even if people freely ‘chose’ to smoke or eat unhealthy food, courts have been known to uphold the idea that they chose in ignorance, and find against them.
Could a class action suit be launched by women who were counselled to have abortions, against Planned Parenthood, or against particular abortion clinics, not for the rights of the unborn but for the psychological damage suffered by the women themselves? It is very rare that abortion clinics really explain the lifelong feelings of loss that often accompany abortion, and many women struggle for a long time to overcome these. Besides the emotional damage, there is also the damage that can be done to a woman’s uterus from abortion, particularly multiple abortions.
Such ‘damages’ could also (possibly) be widened to the loss of a child, understood as the loss of future financial and emotional support from a child, in the same way as medical negligence cases where a person dies unnecessarily.
American medical negligence payouts can be enormous, and the whole healthcare system is struggling at the moment, along with the rest of the economy. A multi-million (or multi-billion) dollar payout from Planned Parenthood would probably bankrupt the organisation.
Here in the UK, the German manufacturers of the morning-sickness drug Thalidomide were forced into a nearly bankrupting pay-out for all the children who were born with missing limbs as a result. Yet the medical profession are carrying out a procedure which was developed and honed in illegal back-street butchers for most of its’ history, which is one of the most violent forms of surgery imaginable, and they seem to escape any kind of scrutiny. Get any abortionist under oath and they will tell you the risks involved in the procedure. They’ll probably also be forced to reveal that the only reason they’re doing that job is because they can’t get any other medical appointment with their poor record and qualifications.
What do people think? Is this idea worth pursuing?
Anyway, irrespective of that…
Class action law suits have been launched against tobacco and fast food companies based on the health consequences of their ‘product’ and the way that product is advertised and sold. Even if people freely ‘chose’ to smoke or eat unhealthy food, courts have been known to uphold the idea that they chose in ignorance, and find against them.
Could a class action suit be launched by women who were counselled to have abortions, against Planned Parenthood, or against particular abortion clinics, not for the rights of the unborn but for the psychological damage suffered by the women themselves? It is very rare that abortion clinics really explain the lifelong feelings of loss that often accompany abortion, and many women struggle for a long time to overcome these. Besides the emotional damage, there is also the damage that can be done to a woman’s uterus from abortion, particularly multiple abortions.
Such ‘damages’ could also (possibly) be widened to the loss of a child, understood as the loss of future financial and emotional support from a child, in the same way as medical negligence cases where a person dies unnecessarily.
American medical negligence payouts can be enormous, and the whole healthcare system is struggling at the moment, along with the rest of the economy. A multi-million (or multi-billion) dollar payout from Planned Parenthood would probably bankrupt the organisation.
Here in the UK, the German manufacturers of the morning-sickness drug Thalidomide were forced into a nearly bankrupting pay-out for all the children who were born with missing limbs as a result. Yet the medical profession are carrying out a procedure which was developed and honed in illegal back-street butchers for most of its’ history, which is one of the most violent forms of surgery imaginable, and they seem to escape any kind of scrutiny. Get any abortionist under oath and they will tell you the risks involved in the procedure. They’ll probably also be forced to reveal that the only reason they’re doing that job is because they can’t get any other medical appointment with their poor record and qualifications.
What do people think? Is this idea worth pursuing?