The abortion process
If you still believe in "painless" abortions, read the following before you judge:
One of the reasons abortion is tacitly accepted by Americans is because they can't see the effects of the procedure on the fetus in the womb. Even our TV abortion programs are censored and banned from broadcast by TV stations. This is why the movie "Silent Scream" (which shows what happens in the womb during an abortion) has caused so much controversy and has brought emotions to a boil. The movie shows what happens when an eleven-week-old baby girl is aborted:
The movie uses new sonic technology to show us the silhouette of a child in the womb, struggling but unable to resist the suction machine, her head is torn off, and then you see the dead child dismembered, her head crushed, and then sucked out piece by piece.
No one who has seen this movie will still speak of 'painless' abortion. The doctor who performed this abortion couldn't bear to watch the movie either, and he immediately rushed outside the broadcasting room, even though he had performed thousands of abortions, and he never did another one after that.
Those who understand the circumstances of abortion find it difficult to endure, and the methods used sometimes require more than one method, depending on the age of the unborn child.
Most abortions are performed within the first twelve weeks, and the fetus is still small enough to be sucked out with a powerful suction machine that is twenty-five times more powerful than an ordinary household vacuum.[53] This method is called suction. [53] This method is called suction curettage, in which the force of the suction rips or twists the body of the fetus, tearing off limbs one by one until only the head remains. The head of the fetus is too large to pass through the suction tube, so the abortionist needs to insert forceps into the uterus to seize the head, which floats alone, and then crush it until it can pass through the suction tube, and then the head is removed.
Dr. Chun Nifin described the process, saying, "Basically, the fetus is chopped up and sucked out with a suction device, and it comes out as just a pile of minced flesh."
As the suction tube is turned inside the uterus, the membranes and fluids surrounding the fetus are immediately removed, the tiny creature is torn apart, and finally, the placenta, which is attached to the uterine epidermis, is pulled out. One handbook describes this stage of abortion as follows: "Whenever you notice any material flowing into the tube, the activity stops until it is all out, then it continues to rotate, and throughout the suction excision, you see pink tissue mixed with blood, little by little, coming out through the plastic tube."
Another abortion procedure is called D&e "dilation and evacuation." This procedure is usually used in the fourth through eighth month. The cervix is enlarged, and instead of an aspirator, surgical forceps (like large tool tongs) are inserted into the uterus, holding the body of the fetus, wringing it out part by part, removing it piece by piece, and then crushing and pulling out the spinal and cranial bones and scraping it clean with a cutter or sharp oval shaped knife.
In the D&C "dilation and curretage" procedure, this knife is placed to rotate inside the uterus, and when it touches an obstacle, the knife concentrates on scraping. In other words, the arms of the fetus may be cut away, the legs cut away, the face hacked up, the head chopped off, the body dismembered and severed into many fine pieces, and then the body parts and the placenta are suctioned out ......
The technical term for the systematic chopping up of a fetus's body is "fragmentation" (morcellation ). These procedures come with a number of latent crises; if the abortion procedure is to cut or aspirate the fetus, the body parts must be carefully put back together to confirm that the entire baby is outside the uterus, because any part of the fetus that is left in the uterus is at risk of contracting a virus.In 1978, a report to the Association Planned Parenthood was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Parenthood, described the D&E technique as follows:
"In order to minimize damage to the uterine orifice, the fetus is extracted in tiny pieces, and because the size and shape of the fetal head is usually the most difficult to crush and extract, the staff counts every piece of fetal bone. ...... "
Another abortion procedure is the Saline method, or salt poison, which is used in the fourth through seventh months and was the most common method in the 1970s. [59] This procedure involves inserting a three-and-a-half to four-inch needle through the mother's abdominal wall into the amniotic sac, withdrawing 200mm of amniotic fluid, and replacing it with a strength of concentrated saline. During this procedure, the fetus is swallowing the salt, 'breathing' in it, and basically, the skin all over the fetus' body is ironed and slowly poisoned by the salt, whereupon the mother begins to give birth, expelling a dead, burned, and withered baby. Occasionally, some babies survived this procedure and were born with serious complications because "in the process, the baby's tissues and organs were destroyed by hemorrhaging, and the arteries and veins ruptured leaving huge bruises on the body."
Other abortions are inspired by prostaglandins (prostaglandin). Prostaglandins contain hormonal compounds that, when injected or used in the uterine muscle, can damage the fetus's circulation, contract violently, and then be expelled. Because prostaglandins are not directly toxic to the unborn fetus, such abortion methods result in more fetuses being born as a result of failed abortions than saline methods. Failed abortions are very troublesome for the medical staff, especially the mothers: "The babies struggle for survival, gasping for breath, jerking and moving around in an unforgettable way for the mothers, who have a period of self-blame after watching these babies die, when the scene repeats itself over and over again in their minds."
Usually, if the child comes out while still alive, they let him starve to death, or they strangle or kill him.
In fact, D&E was invented to avoid the problem of unsuccessful abortions because these abortions were so unbearable. Cutting, crushing, or poisoning a fetus while it's still 'hidden' in the womb still results in a fatal outcome, it's just not as clearly visible to the mother and the medical staff. Regardless, it still has the same effect on the medical staff. For example:
McDermott and Chaya in Shasenyi report, "Nurses feel like they are replacing underground abortionists in other cities, and like them, are personally slicing or chopping up the babies (the word they use for the body parts of expelled fetuses, or fetuses that are still warm and sometimes even breathing)." ......
Doctors are not immune. Many countries are reporting that more and more doctors are breaking down in frustration because of the guilt.
There is another method, called hysterotomy, which is used between six and eight months, and which differs from a Caesarean section in only one way: the whole operation is designed to murder the baby, not to save it. The procedure involves cutting open the stomach, going straight into the uterus, removing the baby, leaving him to die without care, or strangling him first as early as inside the mother's body (babies cannot be strangled outside the uterus). Once the baby is outside the womb, he cannot be killed; otherwise the doctor is guilty of murder. By law, he can only be starved to death.
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