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Common Ground Common Sense > Issues that Affect Our Lives > Civil Rights and Civil Liberties > Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Archive
so angry I could spit
These stories sound sadly familiar to ones I heard (and experienced) as an escort:

http://www.prochoiceactionnetwork-canada.o...nti-tales.shtml
QUOTE
"We too have seen our share of anti-choice women, ones the counselors usually grit their teeth over. Just last week a woman announced loudly enough for all to hear in the recovery room, that she thought abortion should be illegal. Amazingly, this was her second abortion within the last few months, having gotten pregnant again within a month of the first abortion. The nurse handled it by talking about all the carnage that went on before abortion was legalized and how fortunate she was to be receiving safe, professional care. However, this young woman continued to insist it was wrong and should be made illegal. Finally the nurse said, 'Well, I guess we won't be seeing you here again, not that you're not welcome.' Later on, another patient who had overheard this exchange thanked the nurse for her remarks." (Clinic Administrator, Alberta)


QUOTE
"My first encounter with this phenomenon came when I was doing a 2-week follow-up at a family planning clinic. The woman's anti-choice values spoke indirectly through her expression and body language. She told me that she had been offended by the other women in the abortion clinic waiting room because they were using abortion as a form of birth control, but her condom had broken so she had no choice! I had real difficulty not pointing out that she did have a choice, and she had made it! Just like the other women in the waiting room." (Physician, Ontario)


I like this doc who called a spade a spade and sent the girl packing:

QUOTE
"Recently, we had a patient who had given a history of being a 'pro-life' activist, but who had decided to have an abortion. She was pleasant to me and our initial discussion was mutually respectful. Later, she told someone on my staff that she thought abortion is murder, that she is a murderer, and that she is murdering her baby. So before doing her procedure, I asked her if she thought abortion is murder -- the answer was yes. I asked her if she thought I am a murderer, and if she thought I would be murdering her baby, and she said yes. But murder is a crime, and murderers are executed. Is this a crime? Well, it should be, she said. At that point, she became angry and hostile, and the summary of the conversation was that she regarded me as an abortion-dispensing machine, and how dare I ask her what she thinks. After explaining to her that I do not perform abortions for people who think I am a murderer or people who are angry at me, I declined to provide her with medical care. I do not know whether she found someone else to do her abortion." (Physician, Colorado)
cutecat
The statement that bothered me the most was "I don't beleive in abortion but I think it is right for you." This statement was made by my mother.
lazyboy
I can understand people who have had an abortion, later expressing their regret about it, but I cannot understand these three cases where they know what they are about to do is wrong yet they are willing to go ahead anyway. Some people on this forum obviously are going to disagree with this statement. ie Those who do not think it is wrong.
so angry I could spit
Even those who are pro-choice myself would agree with you lazyboy. The 3 stories I picked were representative of the many cases of "pro-lifers" who come off the picket line, abort and go right back to picketing - it makes no sense to anyone but those like them. There is a small percentage of them that change their views and become pro-choice after they experience an unintended pregnancy and weigh their options, but it appears as though many terminate, rationalize and judge their own situation as the extremely rare one in which the mother is beyond reproach.
lazyboy
If they still do not feel they did wrong afterwards, this makes them IMO, the hardest of the hard.
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