Half-Aborted

I’ve known this before this article, and I’ve mentioned it here. Though it has yet to be answered…at all. So, I thought I’d post up an article to see if any pro-abortionists have an answer.

[quote]What’s worse than an abortion? Half an abortion.

It sounds like a bad joke. But it’s real. According to Sunday’s New York Times Magazine, demand is rising for “reduction” procedures in which a woman carrying twins keeps one and has the other aborted. Since twin pregnancies are generally safe, these abortions are largely elective.

Across the pro-choice blogosphere, including Slate, the article has provoked discomfort. RH Reality Check, a website dedicated to abortion rights, ran an item voicing qualms with one woman’s reduction decision. Jezebel, another pro-choice site, acknowledged the “complicated ethics” of reduction. Frances Kissling, a longtime reproductive rights leader, wrote a Washington Post essay asking whether women should forgo fertility treatment rather than risk a twin pregnancy they’d end up half-aborting.

In comments on these articles, pro-choice readers express similar misgivings. “Even as a woman who has terminated a pregnancy, I totally understand the author’s apprehension â?¦ something about it just doesn’t feel right,” says a Slate reader. A commenter at Jezebel writes that “if I were put in the position and decided to/needed to abort a single fetus, I could. But if I knew that I was keeping the baby and it turned out to be twins, I don’t think I could have a reduction.”

To pro-lifers and hardcore pro-choicers, this queasiness seems odd. After all, a reduction is an abortion. If anything, reduction should be less problematic than ordinary abortion, since one life is deliberately being spared. Why, then, does reduction unsettle so many pro-choicers?
For some, the issue seems to be a consumer mentality in assisted reproduction. For others, it’s the deliberateness of getting pregnant, especially by IVF, without being prepared to accept the consequences. But the main problem with reduction is that it breaches a wall at the center of pro-choice psychology. It exposes the equality between the offspring we raise and the offspring we abort.

Look up any abortion-related item in Jezebel, and you’ll see the developing human referred to as a fetus or pregnancy. But when the same entity appears in a non-abortion item, it gets an upgrade. A blood test could help “women who are concerned that they may be carrying a child with Down’s Syndrome.” A TV character wonders whether she’s “capable of carrying a child to term.” Nuclear radiation in Japan “may put unborn children at risk.”

This bifurcated mindset permeates pro-choice thinking. Embryos fertilized for procreation are embryos; embryos cloned for research are “activated eggs.” A fetus you want is a baby; a fetus you don’t want is a pregnancy. Under federal law, anyone who injures or kills a “child in utero” during a violent crime gets the same punishment as if he had injured or killed “the unborn child’s mother,” but no such penalty applies to “an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman â?¦ has been obtained.”

Reduction destroys this distinction. It combines, in a single pregnancy, a wanted and an unwanted fetus. In the case of identical twins, even their genomes are indistinguishable. You can’t pretend that one is precious and the other is just tissue. You’re killing the same creature to which you’re dedicating your life.

Sophie’s Choice is a common theme in abortion decisions. To give your existing kids the attention and resources they’ll need, you have to terminate your fetus. This rationale fits the pro-choice calculus that born children are worth more than unborn ones. But in the case of reduction, the child for whom you’re reserving attention and resources is equally unborn. She is, and will always be, a living reminder of what you exterminated.

This is what tortures pro-choicers. “I just couldn’t sleep at night knowing that I terminated my daughter’s perfectly healthy twin brother,” says a commenter in the Times story. A Jezebel reader worries about “all the poor surviving twins who will one day find out that their other is missing.” Another Jezebel reader writes:

I’d have a much easier time aborting a single baby or both twins than doing a reduction. When you reduce, the remaining twin will remain a persistent reminder of the unborn child. I think that, more than anything would make killing that fetus feel like killing another human, even though it wasn’t fully developed. It would feel that way because you would have a living copy of the person you killed.

That’s the anguish of reduction: watching the fetus you spared become what its twin will never be. And knowing that the only difference between them was your will.[/quote]

Read more: Twin reduction abortions: Why do they trouble pro-choicers?

So what do you have to say about reduction?

Absolutely sickening.

And no more sickening than any “normal” abortion. But this does perfectly illustrate the reality of what is happening in abortion. One child is being murdered. Plain and simple.

Can you imagine learning you had a twin but your mother decided to have it ripped to pieces and sucked from her womb?

WTF is wrong with people?

I thought that was a reference to Charlie Day (always sunny), but that is really fucked up.

How could a HUMAN ever say these words?

“I’d have a much easier time aborting a single baby or both twins than doing a reduction. When you reduce, the remaining twin will remain a persistent reminder of the unborn child. I think that, more than anything would make killing that fetus feel like killing another human, even though it wasn’t fully developed. It would feel that way because you would have a living copy of the person you killed.”

Seriously, what the hell do people think?!? I am starting to understand why this country has the imbeciles it has in public office, especially our leader who is pro-choice.

This is an example of how clever word choice can turn something serious into something sounding slight. A ‘reduction’ sounds simple and ordinary, hiding what it truly is; the slaughter of an unborn child.

And I agree with Cortes ^ imagine how you would feel if you found out your mother had your sibling slaughtered.

[quote]kneedragger79 wrote:

And I agree with Cortes ^ imagine how you would feel if you found out your mother had your sibling slaughtered.[/quote]

More than just the feeling that your mother murdered the twin sibling you were meant to have, it could just have easily been you she murdered.

Seriously…

W. T. F. is wrong with people?

I think if you for abortions you have to be 100% in favor of this practice. They say it’s the woman’s choice to do with her body as she pleases, so whats wrong with picking one twin over another? What’s wrong picking and choosing your child if you are for abortion?
Wanted a girl and got a boy? Abort the boy when you find out, try again. Fail again, abort again. If you’re for abortion, you are for it in any form it comes. Why not take out a twin if it’s a boy and you only want the girl. Or that having 2 may be to financially straining so you take one out.

I don’t see how you could be for abortion and not for all these practices…It’s not like these practices make abortion any worse. When you’re at the bottom, it’s hard to go lower.