by LYNN BEISNER
If there is one thing that anti-choice activists do that makes me see red, it is when they parade out their poster children: men, women, and children who were “targeted for abortion.” They tell us “these people would not be alive today if abortion had been legal or if their mothers had made a different choice.”
In the past couple of months, I have read two of these abortion deliverance stories that have been particularly offensive. The first story is one propagated by Rebecca Kiessling, the poster child for the no exceptions in cases of rape or incest. On her website Kiessling says that every time we say that abortion should be allowed at least in the case of rape or incest we are saying to her: “If I had my way, you’d be dead right now.” She goes onto say, “I absolutely would have been aborted if it had been legal in Michigan when I was an unborn child, and I can tell you that it hurts [when people say that abortion should be legal.]”
The second story was on the Good Men Project this week. In an article entitled, “Delivered from Abortion: Healing a Forgotten Memory,” Gordon Dalbey tells a highly unlikely story about his mother’s decision to abort him and her eventual change of heart. I say that the story is highly unlikely because the type of abortion he says his mother was about to have was not available until 50 years later.
However, Dalbey claims to have recovered a memory of being “delivered” from the abortion because as a fetus he cried out to God. He claims that the near-abortion experience had caused him psychological suffering throughout his life. Since recovering the memory, he has experienced survivor’s guilt because he was saved when so many other fetuses have been aborted. In explaining how he overcame this guilt, he quotes a Jewish survivor of the Holocaust who says that the purpose of surviving is to testify to the experience.
Top Comments
The problem with trying to tell the reverse story is how is it possible to tell you, or the world, are not better off for having been born? Of course I wouldn't wish what you have experienced upon anyone, which is likewise something I can barely imagine (I can say I've been pretty fortunate in my life so far, perhaps too much so). But to suggest an existence nipped in the bud would be a worthwhile alternative- is that a call any of us can really make? Or indeed have the right to? Could greater good come out of terrible experiences (I mean, it tok the horrors of WW2 to eliminate Nazism and the deeper, older evils which it was rooted in- militaristic nationalism, anti-semetism and so forth- were the violence and hardships of war not worth it for that?) I guess there are no easy answers.
As for "nothing more than a conglomeration of cells"- an embryo could be said to be that, but a grown human being is still a conglomeration of cells, albeit a bigger and more complex one, if you want to be reductionist. When does something start or stop becoming human?
Here is my story..
My Mother had 2 abortions before finally having me. Her first was when she was 17, in mid 60's. The child would have been mixed, which would have been a HUGE deal at the time. Her second was after that, and from what she tells me, she wanted the second one, but her finance didn't. She got one for him, but soon after he dumped her anyway. But I digress.. if my mother did not have any those abortions, if she did not choose to end those abortions, she never would have had me. Am I PRO-CHOICE? YOU BET YOUR HAPPY A** I AM. I am thankful everyday that my mother had those abortions. If they were illegal, I could not imagine what would have happened to my mother. Our white german family would surely have disowned her, not only for being a teen Mom, but for having a mixed baby? Forget about it! She would likely have been poverty stricken, and her and her baby would have had the worst life one could imagine at the that time. However, my mother had the right to choose, and when she did finally have children, me, she was in a much better place to do so. She was married, financially ok, and able to take care of me. No one should have the right to tell a woman what to do with her body including if she carries a baby or not. If YOUR religion doesn't allow it, then don't YOU do it. God gave all of us FREE WILL and the right to obey him or not, and only God, NOT MAN OR REPUBLICANS, has the right to take it away, and judge our actions . PERIOD.