ProWomanProLife

  • The Story
  • The Women
  • Notable Columns
  • Contact Us
You are here: Home / 2008 / Archives for July 2008

Archives for July 2008

We are not all on the same page

July 25, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

South Dakota has no more abortion providers. Why?

Starting Friday, doctors in South Dakota must tell women seeking abortions …”that the abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being.” Women also would have to be told they have a right to continue a pregnancy and that abortion may cause them psychological harm, including thoughts of suicide.

So the only abortion doctor left in the state up and quit. Why? Because he thinks none of that is true. As we’ve covered in the past, medical textbooks assert that a new life begins at the moment of conception. Peer reviewed journals and respected studies teach us that there are infact serious psychological risks associated with abortion.

Don’t know about you, but I don’t want a doctor to come near me if he hasn’t kept up on his reading. I like my doctors smart.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Planned Parenthood, South Dakota

A pro-abortion leitmotif and a pro-life rant in one happy post

July 24, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

This type of pro-abortion thinking is pretty typical so I’m choosing to highlight this letter to our site through a post.

“Joe Clark” (likely not the former PM) wrote in response to If Morgentaler isn’t sure, why are you?

I’d like to know what you’ve done to actually help women? Have you adopted unwanted babies? Have you worked with women to mentor them, help them get an education, look after their children? It seems like you folks only care about the unborn until it’s born and then you wash your hands. Once that child gets into crime because of being disadvantaged, you’ll want to abolish the laws dealing with youth and lock away the key! Aren’t there real issues to be devoting such time to, such as taking care of the children who are already here and are in such desperate need of help, or in developing countries.

There’s an intellectual dishonesty here. There’s a battle of ideas that goes on behind the act of abortion and our response to life or death. My question for the public, the great beyond, is this: Are you prepared to stand up against killing, or not?

For many, all they’ll be able to do is stand in favour of what is right, to try and create a climate where we don’t kill to solve our problems. Maybe this is all they can do because they have their own family to support and are struggling to do that. Maybe this is all they can do because they are lazy and choose not to take further action. Maybe this is all they can do because they are already involved in a different sort of charity–I know plenty of pro-lifers working to help the homeless, for example. That they make a statement and do nothing more does not make them into hypocrits. The statement itself, for many, will mean they lose quite a lot: social status or job openings, to name but two.

This kind of thinking is as if to say I couldn’t make a statement against genocide in Darfur unless I packed my bags and moved there. It’s not much of an argument, and yet one of the most frequent pro-abortion things to say.

Highlighting my supposed hypocrisy on whether or not I actually help women and children still leaves way too many questions, anyway. What if killing isn’t the best response, even if people around us are indeed suffering?

______________________________

Brigitte adds: I take the point that some women may need help after deciding not to abort their baby. But as they say where I come from: le mieux est l’ennemi du bien. The best is the enemy of the good; if we wait until we can fix every single aspect of a problem satisfactorily before we start trying to improve things, we’ll never get anything done. So while I, for one, wish there were more and better resources for young and inexperienced mothers (whether or not they had considered abortion), I won’t wait to denounce the evil that is abortion on demand until all those resources are in place. If some people want to call me names because of that, well, so be it.

______________________________

Tanya has to jump on this point: “Have you adopted unwanted babies?” 

 

May I point out the imperfect system we have in place in this country, whereby though there are never unwanted babies, there are a tremendous number of children in foster care. The waiting list to adopt a baby is years long. Friends of mine, however, once certified as a foster family, had a newborn baby in their care almost instantly. They’d adopt the child if they could, but she isn’t actually up for adoption. And, to stick a fork in it, they are pro-life. 

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: "Joe Clark"

Ignorance is bliss

July 24, 2008 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

This is a sad story.

Thirty-two-year-old Krista Stryland, a successful Toronto real estate agent and mother, went to a private clinic for liposuction…

Hours later, court documents allege, she lay in a recovery room for 30 minutes without vital signs after a procedure that drained fat from 23 incisions in six different parts of her body.

She was pronounced dead in hospital on Sept. 20, 2007. Her sister says she was a size 6. She says the doctor should have told her that she did not need liposuction…

Stryland’s family has raised several concerns with the college, including [Dr.] Yazdanfar’s alleged failure to warn of risks, leaving Stryland “with the impression that this was a routine benign procedure.”

I was speaking last week with a woman who, a few years ago, considered an abortion. During her consultation, the nurse asked her if she wanted to be made aware of the risks. The woman said she did, and that answer was received with a look of confusion. “I guess most people don’t care to know,” the woman said during our recent conversation. The nurse granted the request, handing the woman a pamphlet that touched on post-partum depression and what to do in case of excessive bleeding or cramping.

What right is a woman exercising when she chooses not to know? Perhaps it’s the right to cover her ears and sing, “la-la-la!” One thing is certain: informed consent is impossible if the information is optional, and scant at that.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: informed consent

If Morgentaler isn’t sure, why are you?

July 23, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

Just a question. Here’s the exchange, quoted from this article:

‘I’m like a newborn baby,’ Dr. Henry Morgentaler told the CBC’s Evan Solomon about surviving a recent stroke and heart operation. ‘I enjoy being alive.’ The irony wasn’t lost on Solomon, who then asked the Canadian abortion doctor ‘how does a guy who’s seen so much death (in Auschwitz and Dachau, where he was imprisoned as a youngster) fight for a cause which many people believe is a form of killing?’

‘I won’t deny there’s an inconsistency,’ Morgentaler answered. ‘Maybe I’ve deluded myself.’

Maybe?

____________________________

Important update: This from John Jalsevac writing in from Lifesite-

Unfortunately the author of the Starphoenix piece where you got this from rather irresponsibly pulled the quotation from Morgentaler in this interview WAY out of context. When Morgentaler admitted that there may have been an “inconsistency” and that he may have “deluded himself”, he wasn’t speaking about abortion at all. By that point in the interview, which comes some 15 minutes or so after Solomon asks this question about the holocaust and Morgentaler’s choice for a cause, they are talking about Morgentaler’s treatment of women. Morgentaler admits that his philandering ways may not be consistent with the love and concern he professes for the female sex on the whole. He’s not expressing doubts about abortion.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: CBC, Evan Solomon, killing, Morgentaler, Order of Canada

About Ezra

July 23, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

Ezra Levant needs help – read the details here. Ezra is a free speech absolutist, and so am I. Regulated speech ain’t free, and as long as we have nitpicking bureaucrats telling us what cartoons we’re allowed to print and what kinds of jokes comedians are allowed to make, we won’t have free speech. The difference is that he’s the one fighting the legal battle, not me. The least I can do is send him some money and ask my readers to do the same. We all benefit from what he’s doing, but it’s not just that. What he’s doing is right.

So. Please consider making a donation. It doesn’t have to be very much – if enough people give $10 or $20, it will make a big difference. If you can afford a bit more, please do (I put in $200 so far). Not only will you help Ezra fight the good fight, but you’ll annoy all the right people, too.

You can either hit the PayPal button on his website (www.ezralevant.com) or send a cheque marked to “May Jensen Shawa & Solomon in Trust”, care of Robert Hawkes, at:

May Jensen Shawa Solomon LLP
The Lancaster Building
800, 304 – 8 Avenue SW
Calgary, Alberta T2P 1C2

Thanks!

___________________________

Andrea adds: If I were to drop the fight against abortion (which I have no plans to do) it would be to fight against the limitations currently placed on freedom of thought in Canada. But then again, maybe I don’t have to drop one to fight the other. The two are linked. Everytime a pro-lifer shows a sign-a factual sign-of what an abortion is there are cries of “That’s offensive!” and said sign is, in many cases, forcibly taken down. There are no official bodies telling me I must refer to killing unborn children as “a woman’s right to choose”–so many do that as a function of self-censorship. In any case, we ought to fight censorship in whatever form it takes. I am glad that Ezra is fighting this so vociferously, and believe we ought to support him.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Ezra Levant, Freedom of speech, HRC

Fewer abortions in Saskatchewan

July 23, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

This article discusses why Saskatchewan has a lower abortion rate. I like the article because the doctor quoted talks about abortion in the context of how to lower the rate. A fine first step in changing the tone of abortion discussions would be to universally acknowledge that having an abortion does not make for a success story for anyone.

“It [the abortion rate] is lower, (but) I think we can still do better. The opportunity is here,” said Dr. Femi Olatunbosun, head of obstetrics and gynecology for the Saskatoon Health Region and the University of Saskatchewan’s college of medicine… Olatunbosun emphasized that access to abortions “is in no way limited” and is not the reason for the lower numbers. Specialists and family physicians in Saskatoon, Regina and several other centres are available to perform induced or “therapeutic” abortions with no wait time, Olatunbosun said.

However, the goal is still to decrease the number of abortions through various other strategies, he said.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Dr. Femi Olatunbosun, Saskatchewan, Saskatoon Health Region

Moving to Nova Scotia…

July 22, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

…where the highest percentage of Canadians oppose the awarding of the Order of Canada to Morgentaler, at 68 per cent. Country wide, this poll shows 56 per cent of Canadians are opposed, in a simple yes/no question.

Filed Under: All Posts

Driving me to despair–or China

July 22, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

The only thing more alarming than this poll question is the result (at time of posting, “yes” and “no” are neck in neck):

Drivers in Beijing have been forced to give up their cars every second day in hopes of reducing smog. Should Canadian cities take a similar approach?

I have a different poll question: “Should Canada drop democracy in favour of a “strong hand,” someone who will be able to decree that pollution, crime,  even abortion levels, should fall?”

Dictators, getting things done. How ’bout it, Canada?

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: air pollution, China, Globe and Mail poll

What if Henry Morgentaler looked like this?

July 22, 2008 by Brigitte Pellerin 3 Comments

Perhaps the silliest argument in favour of the old abortionist: That if only we weren’t so anti-Semitic and bent on detesting ugly people, there wouldn’t be such an uproar over his induction into the Order of Canada.

Many years ago, Montreal Gazette cartoonist Terry Mosher, aka Aislin, published a cartoon that pictured Henry Morgentaler beside a handsome, waspish doctor with an Anglo-Saxon name and posited the question: Do you think if Henry Morgentaler looked like this, there would be this fuss?

We may never know how the debate on abortion might have unfolded if its leading proponent looked like George Clooney. Aislin, also named to the Order in 2003, made his point brilliantly, tacitly alluding to an unfortunate thread of anti-Semitism that also circulates about Morgentaler and his practice.

I’m sure there are pro-lifers who harbour anti-Semitic feelings. After all, there are imbeciles everywhere – including among journalists and politicians and (why not?) pro-choicers. But really, dude, you’re pushing it. On the other charge, that of finding Henry Morgentaler less visually pleasant to look at than certain famous surfing actors I could name, well, gosh, I plead guilty. I didn’t think that was the reason I opposed abortion, but hey.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: anti-semitism, Henry Morgentaler, Order of Canada

I’ll show you radiance

July 21, 2008 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

‘Remember, many girls are pretty, but few are radiant,’ Mrs. Hoffmann tells her protégées.

An article here from the Girls Gone Mild scene. Modesty need not be synonymous with a bowl cut and overalls. But let me take this opportunity to talk about how radiant I am. I got the most astonishing sunburn on Saturday, still “radiant” today. I could heat your home just by entering it. Too bad it’s summer and people are generally seeking out air conditioning.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Girls gone mild, Jennifer Marshall

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • …
  • 8
  • Next Page »

Follow Us

Facebooktwitterrssby feather

Notable Columns

  • A pro-woman budget wouldn't tell me how to live my life
  • Bad medicine
  • Birth control pills have side effects
  • Canada Summer Jobs debacle–Can Trudeau call abortion a right?
  • Celebrate these Jubilee jailbirds
  • China has laws against sex selection. But not Canada. Why?
  • Family love is not a contract
  • Freedom to discuss the “choice”
  • Gender quotas don't help business or women
  • Ghomeshi case a wake-up call
  • Hidden cost of choice
  • Life at the heart of the matter
  • Life issues and the media
  • Need for rational abortion debate
  • New face of the abortion debate
  • People vs. kidneys
  • PET-P press release
  • Pro-life work is making me sick
  • Prolife doesn't mean anti-woman
  • Settle down or "lean in"
  • Sex education is all about values
  • Thank you, Camille Paglia
  • The new face of feminism
  • Today’s law worth discussing
  • When debate is shut down in Canada’s highest places
  • Whither feminism?

Categories

  • All Posts
  • Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia
  • Charitable
  • Ethics
  • Featured Media
  • Featured Posts
  • Feminism
  • Free Expression
  • International
  • Motherhood
  • Other
  • Political
  • Pregnancy Care Centres
  • Reproductive Technologies

All Posts

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Copyright © 2026 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in