This short letter uses up the word count to make very few logical or effective points in response to Mike Schoutten’s piece about abortion and infanticide. What a shame that those who defend abortion really only have euphemisms like “abortion care” to rely on. But she’s probably a provider, so we can understand why she must bury herself in euphemisms in order to keep on doing abortions instead of actually helping women. (I’m sorry if that sounds bitter or angry, but I don’t have a lot of time for these “women’s advocates.”)
Re: Abortion law would halt slide toward tacit acceptance of infanticide, Dec. 18
The op-ed does not take women into consideration, but rather uses some elements of rare situations and makes generalizations that provide an inaccurate picture of abortion care in Canada.
Abortion is a medical procedure which is regulated through College of Physicians and Surgeons in each province, just like every other medical procedure in Canada. Infanticide is another matter entirely which is regulated through the justice system. The need for abortion will always exist; I would like to live in a country where it is safe and legal.
Jill Doctoroff Director, Elizabeth Bagshaw Women’s Clinic








Translation: we only do feticide here. Infanticide should be regulated by the justice system, but trust the doctors to regulate themselves when it comes to feticide.
Which I would be fine with, actually, if the doctors would actually police themselves when it comes to abortion. But they don’t. For example, the College of Physicians and Surgeons in Alberta says, in their guidelines, that abortion should not be performed past twenty weeks.
However, according to Alberta Health statistics, abortions past twenty weeks have been performed in clinics every year since 1992. I am unaware of any doctor or clinic ever being assessed penalties for breaking the guidelines. If the colleges that profess to monitor doctors would look out for their own, you would see far less public outcry over the status quo on abortion in Canada.
Just read that letter again.
“The need for abortion will always exist”
So…is it a need, or a choice? If it is a real, medical, need, then fine, but we don’t choose our medical needs. Women don’t need abortion. They choose it.