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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: Karen Lawrence who wrote (209788)12/13/2001 5:33:10 PM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (1) of 769670
 
you are a fool also...because you do not like the outcome you call it illegitimate:

here is some more for your fool: you can celebrate with that other one.

The Post-Abortion Coverup
By Jenny Tyree

[Jenny Tyree is a freelance writer in Colorado Springs, Colorado]

There are some who claim that most women who abort their children do not
suffer. Ms. magazine makes such a claim in its September issue saying that
post-abortion stress (PAS) is a "made-up term" and a "bogus infliction
invented by the religious right." Planned Parenthood liked the article so
much that it appeared on the main page of the groups Web site.

To whom are abortion advocates listening?

Not to Carrie Gordon Earll, bioethics analyst for Focus on the Family.
"Having an abortion is not like having your tonsils removed," Earll said.
"A woman is forever changed by pregnancy regardless of how that pregnancy
ends."

Not to Teri Reisser, author of A Solitary Sorrow: Finding Healing and
Wholeness After Abortion, and a therapist who, with her husband, has
counseled hundreds of post-abortive women.

Not to Julie Parton, manager of Focus on the Familys Crisis Pregnancy
ministry. "PAS affects women regardless of cultural setting and religious
background," Parton said. "Abortion violates the natural maternal instinct
of a mother wanting to protect her offspring."

And not, apparently, to many women who have experienced abortion.
Although the Ms.article gives statistics and cites studies to support
their theory, the greater evidence says that abortion not only kills an
unborn child, but also hurts the women those advocates seek to help.

Abortion advocates point to the fact that neither the American
Psychological Association (APA) nor the American Psychiatric Association
identify PAS as a diagnosis. They also cite the independent studies of
Surgeon General C. Everett Koop and the APA in the late 1980s, and the
conclusion of both that abortion did not contribute to psychological
problems in women.

Another study conducted by Brenda Major at the University of California at
Santa Barbara in August 2000 is singled out as further research supporting
this theory. The Major study found that only one percent of post-abortive
women suffered extreme psychological distress. This study also reported
that the greatest emotion women experienced after abortion was relief.

There is, however, information that has been overlooked by the Ms. article
and abortion advocates. Reisser said the process by which the American
Psychiatric Association adds a diagnosis to the body of disorders is
notoriously slow. The process is even slower when an issue is politically
charged.

In addition, the reports made by the Surgeon General and the American
Psychological Association both acknowledged the fact that most of the
studies used to draw their conclusions were flawed scientifically.
Furthermore, while many pro-life authorities agree that relief is the
strongest emotion experienced immediately following an abortion, Earll
said the Major study also found that as time passed the women surveyed had
an increased dissatisfaction with their abortion decision, and an increase
in negative emotions.

More recent statistics reflect troubling information for abortion
advocates who would champion the cause of womens emotional and physical
health.

In Finland, researchers identified suicide rates among aborted women were
higher (35 percent) than women who gave birth (six percent).

According to research in The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse,
women who abort their first pregnancy are five times more likely to report
subsequent substance abuse than women who gave birth, and four times more
likely than women whose pregnancies ended through miscarriage or
stillbirth.

In the United States, 13 out of 14 studies found more breast cancer among
American women who had chosen abortion. The link between the two is so
strong that The New England Journal of Medicine listed abortion as a risk
factor for breast cancer.

The Ms. article does relate the testimony of some women, but once again
seems to neglect the whole truth. Words such as "sadness," "grief, "
"regret," "loss," and "guilt" are listed as emotions experienced by women
after abortion, but they are not attributed to the death of a child.
Instead, abortion advocates say women are recovering from making the
abortion decision, grieving the loss of another relationship, or perhaps
suffering from the stress induced by "antiabortion movement" protesters.

"You would think that abortion advocates who claim to be pro-woman would
want women who were hurt or injured by abortion to have access to
information to help them," Earll said. "With this article, the
pro-abortion extremists show their true colors: theyre more committed to a
political agenda than to women."
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