Pro-choice Comic
safe-legal-abortion-is-prolife:
“Here is a short comic about the sneaky strategies used by the anti-abortion movement in the UK…based on the excellent investigation from Education for Choice, partially published on the Guardian last Summer.”
*Pregnant people, not just cis women.
I didn’t know the UK also had CPCs akin to those in the United States. I’m glad there are people committed to countering and exposing their lies, though.
(via stfuprolife)
IDAHO ANTI-ABORTION BILL COULD SEND WOMEN SEEKING ABORTIONS TO CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTERS | Like lawmakers across the U.S., Idaho legislators are considering a bill requiring women to receive an ultrasound before having an abortion, which could add up to $200 to the cost of the procedure for women. But one requirement in the legislation is for the state to post a list of clinics that provide free ultrasounds. It’s expected that most of the organizations listed will be crisis pregnancy centers, known for deceptive tactics to try to stop women from having abortions. But the bill’s sponsor, state Sen. Chuck Winder (R), has no issue with codifying the deceitful tactics because the point of the ultrasound bill is “to convince a woman not to go through with abortions.”
*pregnant people, not just cis women.
Fla. budget would cut family planning, keep anti-abortion funding intact
Florida’s $70 billion budget will strip about $4.4 million in family planning dollars from the state’s Medicaid budget. The state’s funding for controversial crisis pregnancy centers, however, remains intact.
The Legislature is set to vote on the final budget tomorrow.
Last year, $27.8 million dollars was allocated to family planning services in the Medicaid budget. This year’s budget (.pdf) allocates about $23.4 million.
Unlike last year, the budget does maintains funding for Healthy Start Coalitions and family planning grants for local governments. The state’s last budget cut many services for low-income, at-risk women and children.
This year, Healthy Start Coalitions, which provide education and home visiting programs for at-risk first-time mothers are not slated to suffer any more budget cuts. The Coalitions have been effective in significantly reducing the state’s infant mortality rate over the past 20 years. Due to last year’s budget cut, Healthy Start Coalitions were forced to eliminate jobs and serve fewer clients. Meanwhile, needs for their services have increased.
Florida is among a slew of states to have made significant cuts to family planning services for low income women.
Reuters reported this week that “tens of thousands of low-income women and teenagers across the United States have lost access to subsidized birth control as states slash and restructure family planning funds.”
“Montana and New Jersey have eliminated altogether their state family planning programs,” Reuters reported. “New Hampshire cut its funding by 57 percent and five other states made more modest program trims.”
The deepest cuts to family planning services for low-income women were levied in Texas.
As our sister site, The Texas Independent reported, “women’s health funding saw a reduction of about $74 million, leaving more than 160,000 mostly low-income women without access to basic health care… the Legislative Budget Board estimated those cuts could lead to 20,000 more unplanned pregnancies each year.” The cuts have poised the state to lose even more funds from the federal government.
Though funding for family planning services is in jeopardy, state funding for crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs) remains intact for the seventh year in a row.
Year after year, CPCs, which are mostly religious centers that aim to dissuade women facing unplanned pregnancies from having abortions, have received $2 million from the state’s coffers. Some of these centers have been found to distribute medically inaccurate information about abortion and receive little oversight and regulation from state agencies.
Democrats have long tried to unsuccessfully strip CPC funding from the budget, as other health services have suffered deep cuts under increasingly austere budgets. The centers serve fewer patients and offer fewer services than other groups that deal with women facing unplanned pregnancies, such as Planned Parenthood or Healthy Start.
_____________________________________________
*People that use contraception and/or need abortions, not just cis women.
CPCs are one of the most wasteful uses of federal and state funding. It makes no sense that legitimate, scientifically/medically/economically sound programs like family planning and Planned Parenthood are facing controversies in their funding because people don’t want their tax dollars being used for other people’s healthcare yet my tax dollars are funding verified liars who antagonize pregnant people and have nothing to offer the communities they invade with the sole purpose of manipulating.
Also, props to The American Independent for using an ARCC stock photo instead of an inevitable preggobelly image.
A story illustrating the obstacles people would face in states with 72 hour waiting periods prior to an abortion (2011)
[Waiting periods would affect all pregnant people, not just cis women.]
If a judge doesn’t intervene, on July 1, women in South Dakota could face an extreme attack on their right to choose legal, safe abortion. As we wait for the court’s decision, we wanted to give readers an idea of what will be at stake for women in the state. The following story illustrates what could happen if this first-of-its-kind law goes into effect in a state where women already face significant barriers to abortion access.
Let’s start from the beginning with a woman who lives in Mound City, S.D. with her devoted husband and their two children. It has been a hard year—her husband lost his job 18 months ago—but she has been able to pick up shifts at her job at the diner, and they are plugging along.
When she gave birth to their second child she experienced some complications, and her obstetrician advised her that another pregnancy would be more difficult and could pose health risks to her or the child. She and her husband use contraception, but two years later, the method fails. When she finds out she is pregnant, suddenly she is facing one of the most difficult decisions of her life. After thought and prayer, and with the support of her husband, she makes the choice to end the pregnancy. She knows that her state has a law requiring that women wait at least 24 hours more before accessing care, so she calls to schedule an appointment with the only abortion provider in South Dakota, already thinking about the five-hour drive to Sioux Falls, where the clinic is located.
But the receptionist on the phone tells her something shocking: because of a new law, she will have to come into the clinic for two appointments; what’s more, the two appointments have to be 72 hours apart.
She starts doing the math in her head—can her family afford her three-night stay in a motel? Then she hears the clinic staffer explain that their only provider flies in from out of state just once a week, so the 72-hour wait requirement between appointments really will be at least one week. Her heart sinks—she knows those will be the longest seven days of her life.
With the two appointments scheduled, she asks her manager for the necessary days off. He wants to know why, but she cannot bring herself to share this personal decision with her boss. He says he will get her colleagues to fill her shifts, but that she may not be able to go back to the full schedule she has now when she returns.
She wants her husband to come with her, but they can’t afford childcare. Her insurance doesn’t cover abortion services unless her life is under threat, and with the cost of gas and lost wages, her spouse must stay to take care of the kids. Luckily, she has a close friend who is able to come to the first appointment, so she won’t be alone.
When she gets to the clinic, her doctor tells her there’s yet another requirement to meet, then hands her a list of names of anti-abortion organizations, known as “crisis pregnancy centers” (CPCs). She’ll have to select one of the three, the doctor explains, and go in person for “counseling” and an evaluation.
The next day, the woman and her friend make their way to this new and perplexing extra appointment. A man in a white coat greets them, tells her friend to wait in the lobby, then ushers her into a back room alone. Soon it becomes clear that her “counselor” is not doing much counseling at all - the questions this stranger asks are really personal. She becomes more and more uncomfortable, but still answers, giving intimate details about her situation, her choice, and her family. The counselor’s mood changes and he walks out of the room, and on his way out, turns on a gruesome, terrifying video. She is in tears by the time the counselor returns, but he gruffly begins listing off health problems that he claims are associated with abortion - breast cancer, mental illness, substance abuse.
After the woman is finally allowed to rejoin her friend, on the ride home, they talk about what the counselor had said, and her friend is skeptical because she’s never heard of this information. When they get back to Mound City, they start Googling and find the back story behind these false claims. It turns out that what this woman is enduring is the new law requiring all women seeking abortion services first to get an evaluation and counseling at a CPC or, as their anti-choice proponents refer to them, “pregnancy help centers.” Sadly, many of these CPCs do nothing to help women, often even intentionally misinforming and misleading women seeking pregnancy-related information, their sole intention to dissuade them from exercising their right to choose. To the anti-choice activists who work at CPCs, “counseling” is lecturing and propaganda, and the only decision deemed “informed” is a decision against abortion care.
For the next seven days, she relives the interrogation, lecture and nightmarish visuals to which she was subjected. Finally the day of her appointment arrives, and she drives another five hours back to Sioux Falls. By the time her ordeal is over, she will have put nearly 1,300 miles on her odometer.
At the clinic, her physician tells her that the woman from the CPC, a volunteer with no medical training, has sent over an evaluation of their meeting that includes notes opining about her mental state and capacity to make an informed choice about abortion care. The physician tells her that the notes will be in her medical records permanently, but the bright side, the doctor says, is that at least there is proof she was honest when she signed a form attesting she had even been there. Otherwise, the CPC counselor has no responsibility even to verify that they met—it would be her word against theirs. Finally, her doctor says there’s one more step, and begins reciting from a piece of paper—she is informed that she will be ending “the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being.”
By the end of her story, this woman will be changed. Her family will have used their limited resources to pay for her care out of pocket, as well as gas for more than 20 hours of driving, two nights in a motel, and lost wages. The future of her job will be at stake. But worse, she will have paid the emotional cost of being subjected to harassment and propaganda. Even before this egregious intrusion into private medical decisions passed into law in March, women in South Dakota faced some of the most restrictive anti-choice laws in the country. This woman’s story might be fictional, but if the Sioux Falls District Court doesn’t stop it from going into effect by Friday, everything she was up against will be very much a reality.
Are you curious about how other anti-choice laws affect women? Please visit our women’s stories section, where you will see what other women had to endure to access safe, legal abortion care.
[clipped my post for length]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9Zj9yx2j0Y
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0iMScbJJS2g&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_HoM6213kc&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIXHrusvMDw&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y3besWlxHhc&feature=relmfu
The utterly discredited Live Action videos (that no informed person takes seriously) and the genetic fallacy? Really? Like I said, all antichoicers have are lies.
- Live Action hoaxes
- Lila Rose lies [also: here, here, here]
- Margaret Sanger Taken Out of Context
- This whole idea of PP targeting PoC with “Black Genocide” is fucking racist and offensive.
And my original point still stands: CPCs do nothing compared to PP when it comes to helping pregnant people.
It should be pregnant person, not pregnant woman. I’m sure the type of “help” you’re peddling is a CPC or something similar. That’s not the type of help anyone needs, as those organizations are notorious for believing they have a constitutional right to lie. I can’t speak for all pregnant people, but if I was pregnant an abortion is exactly what I would need. I know that already and I’m not ashamed.
If you are pregnant and you do want someone to talk to, call the National Abortion Federation hotline. They can help explain all your options. [Their website is cis-centric though]
The NAF Hotline is available to answer any questions you may have about abortion, unintended pregnancy, or related issues. The Hotline is free, completely anonymous, and offers services to everyone, regardless of their individual situation.
For unbiased information about abortion and about other resources, including financial assistance, call toll-free 1-800-772-9100
Weekdays: 7:00 A.M.-11:00 P.M. Eastern time
Saturdays and Sundays: 9:00 A.M.-9:00 P.M.
For referrals to quality abortion providers call 1-877-257-0012 (no funding assistance provided on this line).
Weekdays: 9:00 A.M. - 9:00 P.M.
Saturday: 9:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.Services:
The NAF Hotline is the only toll-free source of information about abortion and referrals to providers of quality care in the U.S. and Canada. We provide callers with unbiased, factual information about abortion in English, Spanish, and French. We receive thousands of calls a week from women, their partners, families and friends. The Hotline offers:
- Factual information about pregnancy and abortion
- Confidential, non-judgmental support
- Referrals to quality abortion providers in the caller’s area (1-877-257-0012)
- Referrals to funding sources
- Help in understanding state abortion restrictions
- Case management and limited financial assistance for women in difficult situations
People who call the Hotline come from various backgrounds and situations. We are here to offer our assistance and resources because we believe all women should be treated with dignity and given the respect their individual situations deserve.
Reblogging myself because this info is always relevant.
(Source: eternalhomeinheaven)
Abolitionist Society of Oklahoma: Abolitionist Posters on We Heart It. http://weheartit.com/entry/24165071
All I’m seeing are lies, libel, and false martyrdom. Add in some co-opting of slavery abolition and some cissexism and I know I’m looking at an AHA poster.
Planned Parenthood is staffed by actual doctors, with actual medical training, and they provide actual medical services:
Women’s Health [people other than “women” can and do utilize these services]
Includes:
- birth control
- emergency contraception
- checkups for reproductive and sexual health problems
- gynecological exams
- pregnancy tests and pre-natal care
- routine physical exams
Men’s Health [people other than “men” can and do utilize these services]
Includes:
- checkups for reproductive or sexual health problems
- colon cancer screening
- erectile dysfunction services, including education, exams, treatment, and referral
- jock itch exam and treatment
- male infertility screening and referral
- premature ejaculation services, including education, exams, treatment, and referral
- routine physical exams
- testicular cancer screenings
- prostate cancer screenings
- urinary tract infections testing and treatment
- vasectomy
General Health Care
Includes:
- anemia testing
- cholesterol screening
- diabetes screening
- physical exams, including for employment and sports
- flu vaccines
- help with quitting smoking
- high blood pressure screening
- tetanus vaccines
- thyroid screening
- STD testing, treatment, and vaccines
- Planned Parenthood health centers focus on prevention: 76 percent of our clients receive services to prevent unintended pregnancy.
- Planned Parenthood services help prevent more than 584,000 unintended pregnancies each year.
- Planned Parenthood provides nearly 770,000 Pap tests and nearly750,000 breast exams each year, critical services in detecting cancer.
- Planned Parenthood provides more than four million tests and treatments for sexually transmitted infections, including HIV.
- Three percent of all Planned Parenthood health services are abortion services.
- Planned Parenthood affiliates provide educational programs to more than1.1 million young people and adults each year.
CPCs, on the other hand, are verifiably deceptive, manipulative, and downright despicable. And they’re using our tax dollars to spread their lies.
- NARAL report on CPCs in MA
- Undercover investigation in NC
- “False and Misleading Health Information Provided by Federally Funded
- Pregnancy Resource Centers” (Waxman Report).
- NARAL: The Truth About Crisis Pregnancy Centers
- NARAL: Unmasking Fake Clinics
- Exposing Anti_Choice Abortion Clinics (Alternet)
- CPCs Sue For Right To Mislead
- NARAL Maryland CPC Investigation
- CPC Watch
- NAF Crisis Pregnancy Center Info
- History of CPCs
- “AIDS goes through a condom like rice through a tennis racket.” : Stop CPC Lies
- Christian Crisis Pregnancy Clinics Exposed
- Deception used in counseling women against abortion
- The Truth is Better Advice
- What happens when CPCs are unregulated in the city?
- Shotgun Adoption
- What Every Woman Should Know
Then, of course, there is this priceless video:
Please visit http://www.naralva.org/assets/files/cpcfactsheet.pdf to read more about this video.
Here’s some more links provided from a post by Bebinn:
Crisis pregnancy centers intentionally advertise themselves to confuse people looking for answers and clinics. They lie about fetal development, about abortion procedures, about the risks of abortion (more here), about where to get an abortion, and about the services they provide. They harass, stalk, and expose their victims, try to convert them, try to convince them to stay with their abusive husbands, and practice coercive adoption.
George W. Bush and allies funneled millions to dollars in grants to these centers - over $30 million, in fact (PDF).
Then there was the fun time they put out an APB on a pregnant woman attempting to go to Planned Parenthood.
___________________________________________
So forgive me if I hope Planned Parenthood never attempts to embody the “virtues” or “services” of CPCs. That’s not the kind of “help” anyone wants, needs, or deserves.
Regarding Catholic groups which pose as “women’s health” agencies.
And, after visiting their website, I found out that by “abortion counseling,” they actually meant “we’re going to give you the ‘facts’ about abortion, shame you for even thinking that it could be an option, then we’ll keep feeding you bullshit until we feel that we’ve successfully convinced you…
There is an older woman who works for (what I assume is) the above-noted Catholic group in San Francisco.
She stands outside of the Planned Parenthood office in the Mission District, day in and day out, with a little table containing booklets and plastic idols. Based upon my first-person observations, she basically exists for four reasons:
1) Placing anti-choice propaganda inside the pages of children’s storybooks and ladies’ magazines which are in the waiting room. These contain badly-photoshopped images of bloody, stillborn babies uttering the phrase “Mommy don’t kill me.”
2) Attempting to entrap Spanish-speaking clients by offering the aforementioned “counseling” services to clearly-frightened women in their native language.
3) Forcing religious pamphlets on people who clearly do not wish to be bothered, and when rebuffed, becoming verbally abusive.
4) Calling my girlfriend a “whore” for having her yearly exam.
My advice to any woman (or man) who is a client of Planned Parenthood is to collect any visible religious propaganda and turn it into the clerks at the front desk. If you are molested in any way by a person (or persons) outside your clinic, call the police and then invite them to kindly fuck off.
I walked away because my girlfriend asked me to, but the next time that woman calls her a whore, I am going to push her Jesus-witch lemonade stand into moving traffic.
You want to fuck with our rights? Come at me.
-
#abortion #choice #rights
Facilities that provide checkups, physical and gynecological exams, cancer screening, birth control, abortions, and general health care services such as cholesterol and diabetes screening and various vaccines and treatments are generally known as clinics. You know, without the scare quotes.
Planned Parenthood also provides education on sex, sexuality, domestic violence, and sexual abuse to teens, parents, students, and clients. They push for more accessible education and care to minorities, education for adults with developmental disabilities, collect donations for domestic violence shelters, and host workshops for parents and children to talk about sex and puberty and to improve communication.
They provide educational services to over five million people per year, and provide health care services to three million.
In contrast…
Crisis pregnancy centers intentionally advertise themselves to confuse people looking for answers and clinics. They lie about fetal development, about abortion procedures, about the risks of abortion (more here), about where to get an abortion, and about the services they provide. They harass, stalk, and expose their victims, try to convert them, try to convince them to stay with their abusive husbands, and practice coercive adoption.
George W. Bush and allies funneled millions to dollars in grants to these centers - over $30 million, in fact (PDF).
Given the choice between funding one or the other, I’d say the pick is pretty obvious. Wouldn’t you?
So basically what you’re saying is you want my tax dollars to fund CPCs that lie, the Salvation Army which kills people, abstinence only “education” which has been proven to be ineffective and increases unintended pregnancy and STI, war, the death penalty, animal testing, aid to Israel, and Gitmo, but your presshus money can’t possibly be used for clinics that are reputable, trust-worthy, and provide services that keep people alive. That’s is some severe #ProLifeLove.
(Source: craftychristianmamma)
It should be pregnant person, not pregnant woman. I’m sure the type of “help” you’re peddling is a CPC or something similar. That’s not the type of help anyone needs, as those organizations are notorious for believing they have a constitutional right to lie. I can’t speak for all pregnant people, but if I was pregnant an abortion is exactly what I would need. I know that already and I’m not ashamed.
If you are pregnant and you do want someone to talk to, call the National Abortion Federation hotline. They can help explain all your options. [Their website is cis-centric though]
The NAF Hotline is available to answer any questions you may have about abortion, unintended pregnancy, or related issues. The Hotline is free, completely anonymous, and offers services to everyone, regardless of their individual situation.
Weekdays: 7:00 A.M.-11:00 P.M. Eastern time
Saturdays and Sundays: 9:00 A.M.-9:00 P.M.
For referrals to quality abortion providers call 1-877-257-0012 (no funding assistance provided on this line).
Weekdays: 9:00 A.M. - 9:00 P.M.
Saturday: 9:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
Services:
The NAF Hotline is the only toll-free source of information about abortion and referrals to providers of quality care in the U.S. and Canada. We provide callers with unbiased, factual information about abortion in English, Spanish, and French. We receive thousands of calls a week from women, their partners, families and friends. The Hotline offers:
- Factual information about pregnancy and abortion
- Confidential, non-judgmental support
- Referrals to quality abortion providers in the caller’s area (1-877-257-0012)
- Referrals to funding sources
- Help in understanding state abortion restrictions
- Case management and limited financial assistance for women in difficult situations
People who call the Hotline come from various backgrounds and situations. We are here to offer our assistance and resources because we believe all women should be treated with dignity and given the respect their individual situations deserve.
(Source: eternalhomeinheaven)
Molly Redden: A Promising New Law That Pushes Back Against Deceptive Anti-Abortion Centers
The New Republic || December 8, 2011
Excerpt:
In October, San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors passed an ordinance that banned misleading advertisements for the city’s crisis pregnancy centers. The ordinance allows courts to fine crisis pregnancy centers, which counsel pregnant women against abortion, up to $500 every time they falsely imply in advertisements that they offer abortion services. First Resort, Inc., one of the centers singled out by the law, responded with a suit accusing the city of a First Amendment violation in less than a month. The case is now going to the United States District Court for Northern California.
[…]
The activities of First Resort appeared to San Francisco city officials to occupy the more duplicitous end of this spectrum. San Francisco’s city attorney says the non-profit center has paid to be the first Google result when a person searches for “abortion San Francisco.” Although First Resort’s website includes “pre and post abortion counseling” among its services, lists abortion as an option for unwanted pregnancy, and features a testimonial from a client who chose to have an abortion, First Resort CEO Shari Plunkett says the primary reason for its existence is to prevent abortions. And, crucially, nowhere on its website does First Resort disclose that it does not offer abortions or referrals to abortion providers. Omissions like these are at the core of the claim that the center misleads through false advertising.
The San Francisco ordinance addresses these matters using a different tactic than past legislation. Other laws—such as the New York version—have attempted to compel speech, requiring crisis centers to post signs informing women that they do not provide abortion services or that the government recommends fully-licensed medical facilities. Steven Shiffrin, a law professor at Cornell University and a First Amendment expert, explains that while laws compelling speech have proven vulnerable, there is ample judicial precedent behind laws that target advertising. “There’s no constitutional right to deceive,” he says.
In part because of this distinction, there is hope among pro-choice activists that this will be the law that sticks. Amy Everitt, the state director for NARAL Pro-Choice California, said she is very optimistic this could be a working model for cities elsewhere. “We’re not trying to interfere in any way with what they tell their clients once those clients are inside their doors. … This is not about a First Amendment right to free speech. This is about false advertising.”
[…]
(emphasis mine)
A few weeks ago one of the anti-choicers called out, “we can give you baby things!” to a young couple who had driven here from Indiana. This totally reminds me of that and it’s hilarious. OH, BABY THINGS, THAT SOLVES EVERYTHING.
Also, I miss how good The Simpsons used to be.
(via saturniinae)
Feministing: NARAL Pro-Choice NC releases undercover investigation of CPCs
OCTOBER 24, 2011
Today, NARAL Pro-Choice North Carolina released their undercover investigation into crisis pregnancy centers, and it’s pretty friggin’ scary.
The state actually has an intense presence of crisis pregnancy centers — in fact, there are 8 times as many CPCs in the North Carolina than there are abortion clinics. And now, two recent state laws will drive even more funding to the centers:
Money from sales of the new “Choose Life” license plates, which are expected to become available later this year, will go to the anti-abortion centers. On Wednesday, under the new law that places restrictions on abortions, a state-run website will launch and list the places that provide free ultrasounds, a service provided by the private centers.
That’s right, a state-run online registry will send pregnant women in NC to these “clinics,” 94% of which (the report found) have no medical professionals on their staff. And yeah, we all know these centers are, as my grandmother used to say, “full of what the chippies eat” — but many North Carolina folks do not and will not when looking for legitimate reproductive health care.
And not only will they be subjected to lovely anti-choice coercion on their visit, but religious propaganda as well:
The report says one Jewish investigator who posed as a pregnant woman was told at five centers she wouldn’t go to heaven unless she converted to Christianity…
Conversion attempts are hardly a new tactic for CPCs, but this is a reminder: these centers are doing more damage than just interfering with people’s health care (which is bad enough). And now, they’re being state-supported.
Read the full report here.
Christian Pregnancy Crisis Clinics Exposed (by TheYoungTurks)
“Funny definitions of words…” is an understatement. Why exactly do they need our tax dollars? They aren’t employing doctors so it’s not like they need tons of money for high-level salaries. They don’t offer medical services other than a pregnancy test and maybe an ultrasound. So why should proven liars be getting our hard-earned money when legit and secular clinics are struggling? I just did a post about the vile nature of antichoice “charities” and how they claim to be doing such good deeds for free, yeah not happening.
(via daskannnichtsein)
Deception used in counselling women against abortion
Frances Keet approaches a young woman outside an abortion clinic and shoves some pamphlets – “Pregnant? Confused? We can help” – into her hands.
“We offer help so you don’t have to go through with it,” Keet says.
When she learns the woman does not have an appointment but is thinking about it, she ushers her up a long narrow staircase and into a soft-lit room.
There is a comfortable couch. There is a coffee table. There are scale models of fetuses nestled into the womb.
This is the counselling room of Aid to Women, a registered charity set up next door to the Cabbagetown Women’s Clinic on Gerrard St. E. and Parliament St. in Toronto. Its website advertises counselling on unplanned pregnancy and information on abortion and its alternatives. The charity also gives away baby clothes, cribs and diapers.
Keet grabs a clipboard, settles into a padded wicker chair and begins the hard sell.
“I can’t make those decisions for you,” Keet says, but she has some troubling information to share. A woman who has an abortion, she says, puts herself at great risk of developing breast cancer. Terminating a pregnancy is far more dangerous than carrying a baby to term. And she might never be able to get pregnant again.
At one point she says the fetal parts, or “pieces of babies” are sold to medical research. “There was a big truck that was out there. I don’t know if you saw it: a big truck?” she asks, describing untruthfully how the parts are collected in a bin and picked up for sale.
She gives a terrifying description of the procedure itself. She shows pictures of an aborted fetus, limbs lying in a bloody mess. She plays with her lip as she watches the woman stare.
The point Keet drives home again and again is that a woman will, without a doubt, suffer severe emotional pain following an abortion because it is always – always —the wrong decision.
“You get hardened, because you know it’s a life and then that life is gone,” she says.
Aid to Women is one of many pro-life agencies across the continent called “crisis pregnancy centres,” which describe themselves as non-judgmental sources of support for women with unplanned pregnancies, but use misleading information to discourage them from choosing abortion.
These charitable organizations offer free pregnancy tests and counselling to women seeking accurate information about “all” of their options – abortion, adoption and parenting – without always readily disclosing their belief that terminating a pregnancy is the wrong choice.
The Star sent a reporter to eight of these centres in the Greater Toronto Area, posing as a woman six weeks pregnant who was leaning toward having an abortion but first wanted to learn more about the procedure and its risks.
The Star found volunteers and paid staff at the centres were giving out verbal and written information about the physical and psychological risks of terminating a pregnancy – including breast cancer, emotional trauma and infertility – that either lacked context or has been dismissed by medical experts.
The centres are run by compassionate and caring individuals who clearly believe strongly in the integrity of their mission. In the past couple of decades they have become an important part of the battle against abortion.
These are not the people who picket clinics, humiliate doctors or threaten violence. These are quiet servants and soldiers of God who make it their mission to save the unborn by changing the mindset of one woman at a time.
When the Star returned to confront Keet, counsellor and general manager at Aid to Women, she said she believes in what she is doing, even if some of the information she gives women is unclear.
“(Women) aren’t told the truth (at the abortion clinics) either, so not to say I’m lying, but there’s a lot of hidden truths everywhere and hidden stuff that people need to know,” Keet said. “We’ve seen so many women that said, ‘Oh my goodness, I wish I had been told the truth and if someone would have told me, I would have kept my baby.’”
Keet declined to address the specific allegations but emailed a link to an anti-abortion website that urges visitors to “stop the cover up” to explain why she said women who have an abortion increase their risk of breast cancer by 80 per cent.
Michael Connell, president of Aid to Women, could not be reached for comment.
Pro-choice groups and health care workers are concerned the organizations add to the stress of an already difficult situation.
“The greatest concern that we have … is that crisis pregnancy centres are offering misleading information to women who are faced with an unplanned pregnancy,” says Agathe Grametz-Kedzior, program manager at Ottawa-based reproductive rights group Canadians for Choice.
The charity operates a helpline that often takes calls from women who are distressed about information they have received from crisis pregnancy centres.
Victoria Scott is a registered nurse at the Bay Centre for Birth Control at Women’s College Hospital in Toronto, which provides abortion services. She says her job is to guide women through the risks in a realistic and reassuring way.
“I tell them that they statistically have a better chance of dying in a car accident between now and the time they have the abortion than to have one of the more serious complications result (from) having the abortion,” says Scott. “What risks do we take in our day-to-day lives and by choosing to … terminate the pregnancy, am I significantly changing that relative risk? And the answer is no.”
Crisis pregnancy centres are not new to Canada.
The oldest of the 17 found in the Greater Toronto Area has been registered as a charity since 1968 and they appear to have a well-established donor pool. The 14 registered charities that run those centres (excluding one set up at a church involved in many other activities) received a total of $546,851 in tax-receipted gifts in 2008.
But they have received far less attention than their 4,000-plus counterparts below the border, where many are state or federally funded and, in several jurisdictions, are the target of proposed truth-in-advertising legislation.
Here, neither Health Canada nor the Ontario health ministry have much to say about their existence. Neither government funds them. Neither government regulates them.
But they are prevalent and they outnumber abortion facilities.
Canadians for Choice, which tracks access to abortion services across the country, says that in 2008 there were 197 crisis pregnancy centres in Canada (83 of those in Ontario), compared to 151 abortion facilities (36 in Ontario). Many of them are affiliated with the umbrella organizations Canadian Association of Pregnancy Support Services (CAPSS), based in Red Deer, Alta., and Toronto-based Birthright International.
The Canadian Association of Pregnancy Support Services and its affiliates adhere firmly to Christianity and the pro-life position. Its website says that everyone involved must agree with statements of Christian faith and the sanctity of life. The association’s CEO Lola French declined numerous requests for a telephone interview and then was unavailable after receiving an emailed list of questions from the Star.
The Mississauga Life Centre, affiliated with CAPSS, is in the basement of a building in the trendy Port Credit area of Mississauga at Lakeshore Rd. E. and Hurontario St. The volunteers and staff are hip-looking, university-aged women who wear stylish casual clothing such as off-the-shoulder tops and chunky jewellery.
Director Eeleah Cummins sat down with a reporter for some gentle counselling.
The opportunity to counsel was something Cummins had prayed for, publicly. An anti-abortion website run by the Colorado-based conservative Christian organization Focus on the Family has a list of prayers from crisis pregnancy centres across North America, including one from Cummins that the Lord would place the desire in women to come in and discuss their options.
But during this session she just says it is her job to give out information about all three options “so you can go back and make an informed decision.”
Cummins reads from a booklet the Star found at other CAPSS affiliates. On the surface it appears to be a neutral, pro-choice approach to options counselling. A closer look reveals that the pamphlet presents abortion as an option fraught with peril, whereas both adoption and parenting are seen as largely positive choices with minimal risk.
“The most risky part of abortion is the emotional part,” says Cummins. She asks the reporter to read out a list of reactions reported by women who have had an abortion, including one called “anniversary grief”.
“If someone had an abortion May 30, then every time May 30 came around, every year, they’d get depressed or they would maybe be promiscuous that month or they would drink heavy or they would just cry the whole month, and not understand why (they are) crying in May of every year. It doesn’t make sense, right? And if they’ve had an abortion, it’s linked back to that experience,” Cummins says.
Cummins says she knows a woman who found herself unable to vacuum her house because it brought flashbacks of an abortion, although she quickly acknowledges not every woman suffers a traumatic reaction to the procedure.
“But we can’t guarantee that you’re going to be that percentage or the other percentage, so the better you’re prepared for all of that, the better you’ll be,” she says.
Cummins originally agreed to a telephone interview, but insisted upon receiving questions in advance. After receiving the questions, Cummins reneged and emailed a statement noting the centre has a disclaimer on its website that says it does not “refer for or perform abortions” and that it is listed under the “Abortion Alternatives” category in the Yellow Pages.
The distinction between the “Abortion Alternatives” and “Abortion Services” categories is not obvious online, where both pro-life and pro-choice organizations appear under the general heading of “abortion”. Yellow Pages Group says it has received “no inquiries or complaints” about this.
“I would certainly never deceive anyone,” Ruth Gillespie, volunteer co-director of Birthright Mississauga says when asked whether she was concerned that a woman seeking unbiased information about abortion might wind up visiting her office by mistake.
Earlier, an undercover reporter had sat down with volunteer counsellor Liz Nixey at their office in the Dundas St. E. and Hurontario St. area of Mississauga to learn more about abortion and was told the organization preferred to promote life.
The website for Birthright International includes an exhaustive list of services for pregnant women but never explicitly states that it discourages abortion. That only becomes clear when one arrives in the office, where multicultural fetus models tucked into blankets line the top of a bookshelf against the wall and a basket filled with knitted baby socks sits on the coffee table in the counselling room.
Once asked about abortion, Nixey digs into a manila envelope for a blue pamphlet about “the facts of life,” opening it up and pointing to a picture of what a fetus looks like at six weeks gestation.
“I just want … the girl to know what is happening inside of her and what the stage of the baby is at,” Nixey said later when the Star revealed that she had been speaking to a reporter. But Gillespie later says this is generally against policy.
“You know, maybe when she looks back, she might say that she should have asked you first,” says Gillespie. “We’re all just human, you know?”
Reality check: Abortion risks — or myths?
Here are the three main risks that crisis pregnancy centres visited by the Star claim are associated with abortion. Medical experts have largely dismissed them as myths and exaggerations.
BREAST CANCER
What they said: Several centres suggested that a woman increases her risk of breast cancer by having an abortion. The counsellor at Aid to Women said the risk was as high as 80 per cent, whereas a counsellor at Mississauga Life Centre mentioned only a “possible link to breast cancer”.
Reality check: The U.S. National Cancer Institute convened a workshop of more than a hundred leading international experts in 2003 to review the existing studies and concluded that neither abortion nor miscarriage increases the risk of developing breast cancer. The Public Health Agency of Canada (according to spokeswoman Sylwia Gomes) and the Canadian Cancer Society both support this conclusion, and based on its own review, the Society of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Canada recommends that women be reassured of the risk when they seek information about abortion from their doctors.
EMOTIONAL TRAUMA
What they said: Every centre visited by the Star said that abortion can cause negative psychological effects ranging from sadness and guilt to substance abuse and suicidal thoughts. Many of the staff and volunteers said they based this knowledge on working with clients through post-abortion support programs, which tend to be Bible-based and lead women toward asking for forgiveness for terminating a pregnancy. They list the emotional effects of abortion under the label of “Post Abortion Stress” or “Post Abortion Syndrome”, sometimes referred to simply as PAS.
Reality check: The American Psychiatric Association does not list either “Post Abortion Stress” or “Post Abortion Syndrome” in its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, considered the authoritative index of mental illnesses. The association issued a statement in 2008 from then-president Dr. Nada Stotland noting the lack of evidence linking abortion to psychiatric illness.
“A woman may have many emotional reactions to an unwanted pregnancy and abortion – most commonly relief, but also sadness and a sense of loss. These feelings can coexist and, like feelings about any important life decision, they can vary over time,” said Stotland, adding that negative feelings are often associated with the circumstances that led the woman to choose abortion, and not the procedure itself.
FERTILITY PROBLEMS
What they said: Crisis pregnancy centres say abortion increases the risk of future miscarriages and premature births, which they attributed to complications from the surgical procedure such as perforation of the uterus, and could even cause infertility. Several counsellors told stories of women they had met who had chosen to terminate their pregnancies in the past and were now suffering because they were unable to bear children once they felt ready for motherhood.
Reality check: The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists in the United Kingdom includes a review of the literature in its guidelines for induced abortions and concludes there are no proven associations between terminating a pregnancy and subsequent infertility, but did note the procedure may be associated with a small increase in future preterm delivery or miscarriage, although the evidence is inconclusive.
If those problems are due to complications from the surgical procedure, then the relative risks are rare and influenced by factors such as gestational age and the experience and training level of the physician. Choice in Health Clinic in the Bloor St. W. and Keele St. area of Toronto, for example, informs clients that injury to the uterus happens less than once in every 1,000 abortions and major surgery to repair it, such as hysterectomy, happens approximately once for every 10,000 procedures. Their information sheet cites A Clinician’s Guide to Medical and Surgical Abortion(Churchill-Livingstone, 1999), considered an authoritative textbook for abortion providers and sexual health clinics.

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nikosnature:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9Zj9yx2j0Y
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0iMScbJJS2g&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_HoM6213kc&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIXHrusvMDw&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y3besWlxHhc&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNTCZdSyHTo&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8977zALdnkc&feature=related
The utterly discredited Live Action videos (that no informed person takes seriously) and the genetic fallacy? Really? Like I said, all antichoicers have are lies.
Live Action hoaxes
Lila Rose lies [also: here, here, here]
Margaret Sanger Taken Out of Context
This whole idea of PP targeting PoC with “Black Genocide” is fucking racist and offensive.
And my original point still stands: CPCs do nothing compared to PP when it comes to helping pregnant people.](http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m0a8ht4YyV1r7lmn5o1_500.jpg)