jill stanek doesn't want to prevent abortions.jpg
Where to begin…
I’ve been writing quite a bit on the new pro-abort tactic of wanting to find “common ground” on abortion.
One initial problem is the “common ground” parameters pro-aborts unilaterally set (kind of a “common ground” deal breaker from the get-go, I’d say) disallow any conversation on abortion when discussing “common ground” – on abortion. The closest they will allow is discussion of “reducing the need for abortion,” but that cannot mean “reducing the number of abortions,” no.
malachi.jpgI say we discuss what Americans would consider “common ground” on this topic, such as banning 3rd trimester abortions, sex-selection abortions, and race-based abortions.
Americans by-and-large agree those are bad. Americans also by-and-large agree parental involvement laws are good as are laws mandating informed consent before abortion.
Americans would be surprised to learn the abortion lobby disagrees, which is why we can’t discuss abortion when trying to find “common ground” – on abortion. Americans would be shocked to learn hard core pro-aborts even disagree that aborting a baby who would otherwise be born under the wrong zodiac sign is wrong.
But I digress….


A couple of weeks ago, I wrote a poll question based on a post Steve Waldman of Beliefnet.com wrote for RH Reality Check’s “common ground” site. My question was:

Steve Waldman of Beliefnet wrote: “My ‘common ground’ fantasy involves a pro-life leader… declaring, ‘We will be open to looking at family planning efforts, including contraception, to reduce the number of abortions.'” Do you consider comprehensive sex ed and widespread contraception distribution “common ground”?

~75% of you thought Steve’s dream was a nightmare.
Steve responded in an email to me…

Jill, I’m curious about something…. IF family planning could be disentangled from Planned Parenthood funding, would you support it? (By the way, by family planning I mean education and health care that includes abstinence education and birth control education.)

Steve and I engaged in an email exchange about these 2 approved “common ground” topics – comprehensive sex ed and widespread contraception distribution – which pro-aborts non-coincidentally consider winners for them with the public.
Steve requested permission to post our exchange, which I gave. Here ’tis.
Steve then rebutted what I said. He wrote that 1 of 2 of my “most important points… were… [e]ven if she could be convinced that sex ed reduced the number of abortions, she still would not support it.”
Actually, that’s not what I said. I said:

No, I would only support abstinence training with perhaps an explanation of the harm of contraceptives – the failure rate, that the pill is composed of artificial female steroids, etc.(Hormonal contraceptives are bad for women. They’re simply artificial female steroids. If we understand the harm of male steroids, why not the harm of female steroids?)

guttmacher facts.jpgI meant that. I’d support a discussion of the harm of contraceptives within an abstinence education format, for instance the failure rate, as exampled on the right, taken from the Guttmacher website failure statistics of the 2 most common contraceptives. (Click to enlarge.)
In fact, some of it is already discussed – that no contraceptive prevents STDs…that STDs are morphing in multiple strains – some incurable, at least one, deadly. Others are growing more and more resistant to treatment.
I think we need more of that sort of education. Hormonal contraceptives are much of the reason why there has been a spike in breast cancer over the past few decades (along with abortion).
Most importantly, people should know hormonal contraceptives and the IUD may abort a 5-9 day old preborn baby.
But Steve overlooked my point… which is where the aforementioned RH Reality Check title and post today comes in. Kathleen Reeves made an astounding leap from Steve’s false relay of my thoughts. She wrote:

Steven Waldman proposes the following hypothetical situation: more premarital sex and fewer abortions. Would pro-lifers accept this trade-off?
Jill Stanek wouldn’t, as she explains to Waldman….

Well, wow. I don’t know where that came from. Furthermore, what the hypothetical Kathleen proposed is ridiculous, far-fetched and, frankly, as immature as the title she gave her piece. It is statistically impossible to say there is a way to have more premarital sex and less abortions. No matter how many contraceptives one uses and how correctly, more premarital sex will have to result in more unwanted pregnancies and more abortions.
There was so much more that Waldman and Reeves wrote that I’d like to address, particularly on Steve’s hypothesis of allowing “lesser” sins to prevent “greater” sins. Maybe tomorrow….

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