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The Case Against Abortion

Melbourne woman dies from abortion in Croydon, Melbourne a week before Christmas.

Life Network Australia - Wednesday, December 21, 2011

The Age have reported that "A 42-YEAR-OLD woman died days after attending a controversial abortion clinic in Croydon last week".

It goes on to say that "Authorities have confirmed that the woman was taken to the Box Hill Hospital where she died on Sunday, after earlier having ''a procedure at a private Croydon clinic''.

According to the article,  the Coroners Court of Victoria's spokesperson said that "the death of the woman, from Sunshine, would be investigated".

This is the fourth investigation involving this particular clinic in six years.


Life Network Australia has been supporting a campaign for the month of December, following the tragic abortion of 32 week old twin boys. In light of yet another tragedy, we urge you to please email and phone Premier Ted Baillieu and Health Minister David Davis, as well as your local member - to voice your objection to the current Victorian laws that allow these situations to occur.  


1. Call Premier Baillieu (            03 9651 5000      ), the Health Minister, David Davis (            03 9096 8561      ) and your local member.

2. If you have access to a fax machine, please fax at them today

 Premier Baillieu - fax no 03) 9651 5054 and  David Davis fax 03) 9096 3373



T'was the Week Before Christmas - poem.

Life Network Australia - Friday, December 16, 2011

Written by Anna von Marburg - Used with permission.

T'was the week before Christmas when all through the state,

No one seemed to care about the unborn babies' fate.

Parliament had recessed without even a mention

Of the "twins" at the hospital killed with intention.


The Premier claimed it was a private matter

David Davis retreated, refusing to chatter.

In 2008, Emily's list shrieked "It is settled.

Abortion up until birth, don't you dare meddle!"


When out on the street there arose such a clatter,

They sprang from their apathy to see what was the matter.

Young people filming, asking the electorate just what they knew,

Tragically uniformed with absolutely no clue:


School excursion? You'll need parental permission.

Not so for abortion, in this law's edition.

You can have an abortion, Mum will never know,

Parents have no rights, that's just the first blow.


Suspected sexual abuse, all professionals must report

except an abortionist, who you can't take to court.

No counselling, no information, and no support

The only real choice you're given is where to abort.


No pain killers when aborting babies, no not a gram

but a chicken requires it, or behind bars you'll slam.

Nurses and doctors with a conscience, you now have no voice.

You must participate in an abortion, you don't have a choice.


Hippocrates stated, "Doctors first do no harm."

But pressuring mothers remains the sad norm.

Late term abortions are all the new rage,

Dismemberment, heart injection… just depends on baby's age.


From conception he's human but that's just for kicks.

Three months, four months, five, months, six

Seven months, eight months, in fact up until birth,

Is the time you can kill him while he lives on this earth.


Stay with me, don't vomit, we're nearly there

The last of the atrocities is coming to bear.

54 babies, aborted but failed,

Born alive and left to die (in a cold metal pail?)


The Victorian government voted to NOT investigate these deaths.


EMILY's list, Early Money Is Like Yeast

Is the group of women who created this beast.

Now charging to Queensland with their yeast infection,

Spreading destruction before their election.


Save the babies, help the mothers, before it's too late,

If we don't change this law, consider our fate.

Like dominoes, states will fall in Victoria's path,

Mindlessly drowning in a Baby Blood Bath.


Politicians, relax and have a good rest

Because when you return, we'll give you our best.

The Victorian Abortion Law must finally fall

because a person's a person no matter how small.


Merry Christmas to all and to all a good night!


ACTION:

1. Share the AbortionActivistAnon videos with everyone you know. Post them on your fb page (and prepare to be un"liked.") Here and here and here. More videos are on their way.

2. Find your Vic MPs , contact them here, the Premier here and the Victorian Health Minister

3. Sign up for action alerts on lifenetwork.org.au 

'Missing you already' - A poem by a father who grieves the loss of his baby to abortion

Life Network Australia - Thursday, December 15, 2011
  • Used with permission from an author who wishes to remain anonymous.

    "I wrote the following from my personal experience. I think it captures all that I felt back then, and still feel today".

    Missing You Already ©

    We never got to see,
    Your smile break the morning sleep or
    the sound of your cry
    Announcing your arrival.

    The sounds of little feet
    when you’d learn to walk,
    and the gargle of commentary
    that you’d consider to be talk.

    The cry for help when you
    first hurt yourself,
    and your tears, as we’d leave
    you at the school gate.

    The pains that you’d endure
    as your heart gets broken,
    the pride we’d feel
    when you’d graduate.

    The happiness of seeing
    your wedding day,
    And the birth of your first child.

    We never got to see you
    for long at all.
    Yet, the breaking of our
    Hearts is so intense.

    The tears we cry
    fall not from memories of past,
    But from thoughts of
    what could have been.

    But what hurts the most,
    is that we never had
    the chance, just to say
    We love you.

    For anyone wishing to learn about the impact of abortion on men, the Real Choices Australia conference will be held in Melbourne in May 2012. Click here for more information

'What we learn before birth' - Annie Murphy Paul

Life Network Australia - Thursday, December 15, 2011

When does learning begin? Food preferences, attachment to mother, emotional development, clues to prevailing conditions and familiarisation of mother's voice are all developed in the womb.

This presentation by science reporter, writer and mother, Annie Murphy Paul, dispels the myths of pre born babies being merely "a cluster of cells", "a blob of tissue" and of babies having no consciousness before birth.  View here




Melbourne, what do you know about Vic abortion laws? We ask the people (you tube footage of responses).

Life Network Australia - Thursday, December 08, 2011

Two teenagers hit the streets of Melbourne to find out what people know (...or don't know) about the current abortion laws in Victoria. Check out their responses! 

In part one, Mary and Hayley asked the public "How far into pregnancy is it legal for a mother to abort her baby in Victoria?"

In part two  - They asked "Is parental consent for minors required by law in Victoria?"

Please phone now (and again tomorrow) to express your dissatisfaction with the current abortion laws in Victoria 
Premier Ted Baillieu               (03) 9882 4088       

Email ted.baillieu@parliament.vic.gov.au 

Victorian Health Minister David Davis            03 9096 8561      

Email david.davis@parliament.vic.gov.au   

Moral madness of abortion horror

Life Network Australia - Friday, December 02, 2011

Abortion mix-up storyWritten by Lyn Bender - Eureka Street. Used with permission.

 When it comes to grasping the right to life of any unborn or even unconceived living being, we are a dramatically split society. We celebrate conception, and, with compassion for the infertile, supportIVF programs. We also sanction, at a conservative estimate, 80,000terminations a year. 

This dichotomy was tragically brought home by the ghastly medical error that occurred last week at Melbourne's Royal Women's Hospital. A decision was made to terminate, at 32 weeks gestation, one unborn twin, who was diagnosed with congenital heart problems. In a horror medical error, the 'wrong' (healthy) twin was killed. An emergency caesarian was then performed to terminate the surviving twin.

This case is troubling, and the trauma and grief to all involved must arouse our empathy. We may also ask why a decision would be made at such a late stage of gestation to terminate a foetus.

The event highlights the extent to which medical advances allow us to decide who shall live and who shall die; who we shall mourn and who we shall discount. On what basis do we decide? Do we need to re-examine our views and values regarding the taking, denying or promoting of new life?

These decisions are made not only in consideration of health or emotional needs, but are influenced by socio-economic factors, social constraints and many other pressures and medical possibilities, including the rejection of disability.Late term abortions present us with a particularly shocking paradox. At 23 weeks we may place a premature newborn in intensive care to fight for its life, or terminate another foetus who may indeed have survived to full term.

The debate about abortion has reflected another split. On one side are those who champion the mother's right to choose. On the other are those who elevate the rights of the child.

Leslie Cannold, president of Pro Choice Victoria, and Margaret Tighe, veteran founder of Right to Life Victoria, personify these opposing positions. Cannold argues unflinchingly in favour of the pregnant woman's right to choose. Tighe argues on behalf of the unborn child, declaring that we must protect the rights of the vulnerable unborn above all other considerations.

The community vacillates between these views and often practices a form of denial. 'We' (society), by attitude and by law, discount the 'equality' of the unborn. We make it a lesser entity.

Ending a pregnancy becomes a 'decision', rather than an almost insoluble dilemma between two opposed sets of rights: those belonging to the already-born, especially the mother, and those of the voiceless unborn being.

In my view we can only come close to an authentic place in this moral quagmire by affording equal rights to the foetus.

Many will be horrified and see this as a promotion of the old order, of the enslavement of women to the birth-life cycle. But to say we should award human rights to the foetus is not to say we may not sometimes decide in favour of termination. However we must afford the foetus the right to be heard.

It is especially true for a foetus that could survive outside the uterus, albeit with medical intervention. If our decision rests on pretending that the unborn child is just a cluster of cells, or that some can be deemed fit and others unfit for life, we run the risk of a kind of moral madness.

I am not writing this from lofty heights. I had an abortion at age 30, which I deeply regret. The prevailing wisdom was that this was not a person, and that to have a baby in adverse circumstances was irresponsible. Had my unborn child been given the status of an equal being I may have been able to make a different choice. 

It is time that we face up to the inconvenient truth and grant rights to the unborn. This may be the last unexplored frontier in the implementation of human rights. 


Lyn BenderLyn Bender is a Psychologist and a former member of the Suicide Prevention Australia Board. 

 


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