However, my personal experience with abortion is also paradoxical to say the least. Basically, ever since I asked God to show me what happens in Abortion and he answered me by sending the soul of an aborted fetus screaming directly into my body I almost fainted at the distress of the aborted soul. I called for the angels to come and to help and take the aborted soul from my body. Never have I had any doubt after that of just how horrific an experience being aborted is for a soul. I would equate it to being someone during the French revolution who was forced to watch their own beheading by having to look up at the blade coming down upon them and then experiencing all the consciousness that still remains in the head after beheading for up to 10 minutes or more.
But, when I say my experience is paradoxical it is because of present earth overpopulation. So, I see abortion as an alternative to the end of human civilization. So, it is paradoxical in that as horrific as abortion is to a soul, until we develop to the point where no one ever needs an abortion anymore (And I think we will naturally come to that somehow) abortion prevents the end of world civilization through overpopulation. So, until we actually can prevent births that will end civilization some other way, abortion is the horrific solution in the meantime to prevent complete annihilation of mankind.
In fact, I would say I am completely convinced that without abortion humans would have been extinct by 1980.
Here I'm quoting from an interesting article about Akin and the Republicans:
News for is akin really out of the Republican Mainstream
Is Akin really out of the Republican mainstream?
Baltimore Sun - 2 hours agoMissouri is a long way from Maryland, so residents can be forgiven for never having heard of Rep. Todd Akin prior to this week. But when the ...Is Akin really out of the Republican mainstream?
Our view: Missouri candidate's highly offensive remarks regarding 'legitimate' rape expose serious political vulnerability for the GOP
Missouri is a long way from Maryland, so residents can be forgiven for never having heard of Rep. Todd Akin prior to this week. But when the socially conservative Republican Senate candidate suggested that the victims of "legitimate rape" rarely get pregnant, he put himself on the map from Annapolis to Alaska — and launched a political uproar.
Mr. Akin's remark was idiotic for any number of reasons, not the least of which is that it's nonsensical. His notion that the "female body has ways to shut the whole thing down" is not true — at least if one goes by what doctors and scientists have to say on the subject and not ill-informed men from Missouri. Indeed, some medical studies have found the prospects of pregnancy from rape are actually higher than from consensual sex.
But it was worse than just saying something stupid or embarrassing. It reflected a skepticism toward rape that is nothing short of misogynistic. Legitimate rape? What is that? Rape is rape, whether the non-consensual sex is done at gun-point by a total stranger or, as is more common, by someone the victim knows.
Mr. Akin apologized and said he misspoke, but one has to wonder how such a bizarre thought ever entered a person's head. Was he apologetic because he doesn't believe what he said or because so many are offended by it? It was interesting to note that his apology included an affirmation of his anti-abortion agenda, saying he believes "deeply in the protection of all life and I do not believe that harming another innocent victim is the right course of action."
While the Senate race in Missouri could prove critical to the balance of power in that chamber — Senator Claire McCaskill was widely regarded as the Senate's most endangered Democratic incumbent — the remark has touched off a political firestorm far beyond the customary for idiotic remarks made by candidates for the U.S. Senate, Democratic or Republican.
That's because it has once again shown that some members of the GOP are not only insensitive to women but downright hostile toward them. And party leaders clearly know it because some of the loudest condemnations have come from fellow Republicans. It seemingly took only a matter of nanoseconds for the National Republican Senatorial Committee to announce the organization was withdrawing support for Mr. Akin to the tune of at least $5 million. When Karl Rove's American Crossroads super PAC pulls its support, as happened a day later, you know something's up.
But here's the problem. Mitt Romney may have called the Akin quote insulting and inexcusable, but how far is it really straying from GOP doctrine on women's issues, particularly when it comes to their reproductive rights? Rep. Paul Ryan, Mr. Romney's choice as running mate, was co-sponsor of a bill that proudly used the term "forcible rape" in limiting the exceptions to the rule against federal funding for abortions. "Legitimate rape" and "forcible rape" sound pretty closely related, and both seem suspiciously like they must have been coined by people who believe women are prone to lying about being violated in the most humiliating way possible.
Meanwhile, Republicans have been busily approving limits on abortion rights state-by-state whenever an opening presents itself. Recently, the House approved a ban on abortion at 20 weeks in the District of Columbia that would have included victims of rape and incest. And just this week in Tampa, the party's platform committee approved a plank calling for a Constitutional amendment banning all abortions with no exception for rape and incest mentioned.
So what exactly are Mr. Romney and party leaders unhappy about — that one of their own used indelicate terminology or junk science? Sorry, but the party's positions on women's reproductive rights and the rights of rape victims are fair game even if they make Republicans look like a bunch of Neanderthals (no offense to cavemen, by the way).
Democrats are understandably delighted by the chance to change the subject from the economy to women's reproductive health. President Barack Obama's observation Monday that the comments underscore "why we shouldn't have a bunch of politicians, a majority of whom are men, making health care decisions on behalf of women" was right on point.
Why the GOP wants to offend more than half of registered voters and prove itself soft on violent crime to boot is beyond understanding. But such is the path that a party captured by anti-abortion extremists has chosen to take.http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bs-ed-rape-20120821,0,505978.story
No Unwanted Children
I think where the Human race worldwide likely will wind up is a point where abortion isn't necessary for anyone. There would be some sort of mechanism where no one could have children unless there was a guarantee that they would be cared for until age 22 or through college graduation whichever came first. A Guarantee could be provided through an insurance policy paid for by both parents. This would prevent unwanted children worldwide and would also prevent overpopulation. So no children could be born unless they were already financially provided for including an education until they were 22 years of age. This might sound strange today but ALL abortions would no longer exist if all conceptions were governed in this way worldwide.
When there were only 1 or 2 billion people other options might have worked. But now, at 7 billion on it's way to 9 or 10 billion the alternative to something like I'm recommending will be completely horrific for ALL life on earth and Will result in either complete extinction of the human race or we will be reduced to cavemen and cave women again. Think about it.
I was born in 1948 and abortion didn't become legal in the U.S. until the early 1970s. The result of the horrific lives of many many children who were abused in the womb, abused as babies, made crazy growing up without enough food or care, I had to experience in some children my age or older. I watched these abuse kids torture others, sometimes including me. I have had a knife held to my throat by these types while they told me that they were going to cut my head off. I have had blood coming out of my throat (luckily no cut arteries) from to older boys doing this to me when I was between 8 and 10. This also happened on another occasion as well. So, I saw just how sick not having abortion made some kids. They usually committed suicide or someone else (like the police killed them or they died in prison back then). But, if you look at the statistics of how crime has gone down worldwide in countries that practice abortion you can see the results of not so many kids growing up tortured, without food and growing up into adulthood killing and torturing others. So, if you are against abortion completely unless you see this point of view too, then you are being naive and unrealistic and non-pragmatic in your stance.
There are others who might say that morally the human race should not exist if it practices abortion. Though on an idealistic level I might agree with you, as a pragmatist that is kind of stupid because then none of us would exist and I'm sure billions of people would assassinate anyone anywhere who tried to make this idealism actually happen so it is completely unrealistic. So, we are left with finding a way that all on earth can agree with as adults. And I think one of the ways to permanently eliminate abortion would be to separate sex from procreation. By doing this we eliminate abortion permanently. Then, by needing an insurance policy that guarantees from conception to age 22 of education and care for that child or children, the states of the world won't have to pay for the children's education or upkeep. In this way population is reduced and life on earth can continue and not go completely extinct within 500 to 1000 years from overpopulation and food riots and food and water wars which is a problem now growing year by year. Just look at Arab Spring as the beginning of this kind of problem of collapsing states worldwide that will substantially increase in the coming years of droughts and floods worldwide that destroy crops both ways.
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