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Warning - Please Read!
If you are offended by explicit language, and graphics that describe what a abortion is, please leave now. This page is dedicated to God, and the 35 Million or so, babies who have been murdered with the blessings of our court system, government, media and the modern day death camps (Clinics). We will be presenting facts on this issue from the Bible, the dictionary and other sources on Pro-Life and will clearly show that pro-choice is nothing more than cold blooded murder of the innocents. This issue is not for debate or discussion, these are the facts, period, if you don't like the truth, and would rather listen to the devil and follow him, you should leave now, because if you stay here and read on you will find the truth and just might be freed from this sin and find forgiveness and eternal life. If you have views or opinions that conflict with these statements, please feel free to express them, to your toilet bowl now (that is where they belong) or garbage bucket, or to wherever you might discard the once living human remains, that you thought was ok to kill. Tell them and God, not me, why this is ok!
And why your above this-Exo 20:13 Thou shalt not kill.
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The Ultimate Pro-Life Resource List Really great Pro-life Site, with lots of articles and links
The Pro-Life Infonet is a daily compilation of pro-life news and information. To subscribe, send the message "subscribe" to: infonet-digest-request@prolifeinfo.org. Infonet is sponsored by Women and Children First . For more pro-life info visit http://www.prolifeinfo.org/ and for questions or additional information email ertelt@prolifeinfo.org![]()
The five icons below show how a partial birth abortion is performed! Remember this is a living human being, just prior to birth, how in God's Holy name can you call this a choice! They are sucking the brains out of a living baby, ITS COLD BLOODED MURDER !!!!!!!



Meanings from various sources will be stated below and
be torn to shreds when exposed to the truth!
If your not totally against
ABORTION after reviewing these facts on this page CLICK HERE and see real
pictures of what you say is OK, that is if you dare!!!!!!!
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The Seed of Abraham has tried to include all the different types of links that could be useful to the Born Again believer, Biker or not. Everywhere that you go you hear about the dangers of second hand smoke, WHAT ABOUT HELL??? The evil of tobacco use among teens, yet no mention of the 50,000 or so people who get killed by drunk drivers each year on our roads. The horror of child abuse, missing children, and reminders of the war crimes committed by madmen like Adolf Hitler who was responsible for 9 Million deaths and how we will never let that happen again, EVER !!! Thank God that will never happen in the United States of America, your wrong it is happening now, but we don't call it murder, we call it nice names like Pro-Choice, Family Planning, or just plain abortion. God calls it MURDER and we have killed innocent babies and have throw their remains into our dumps across our land. God have Mercy on us! Choose to follow God, Choose Pro-Life! We do really care about children, whether they are born yet ot not. If your interested in the Pro-Life movement or want to find out more about them, please click on list sites or random to learn more. If your web site is dedicated to the Pro-Life movement apply to this ring, and get involved with God's work on saving unborn lives, and help stop the murders that are being committed in the United States!
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Following meanings taken from the American Heritage Dictionary
embryo 1.a. An organism in its early stages of development, especially before it has reached a distinctively recognizable form. b. An organism at any time before full development, birth, or hatching .2.a .The fertilized egg of a vertebrate animal following cleavage. b. In human beings, the prefetal product of conception from implantation through the eighth week of development.( So I guess a embryo is different in human beings then.)
fetus 1. The unborn young of a viviparous vertebrate having a basic structural resemblance to the adult animal. 2. In human beings, the unborn young from the end of the eighth week after conception to the moment of birth, as distinguished from the earlier embryo. (Note here again we have a seperate meaning for human beings.)
abortion 1. Induced termination of pregnancy and expulsion of an embryo or fetus that is incapable of survival. (Funny how embryo and fetus are mentioned as being equal now, do you think the babies pictured above would of survived with their brains left in?)
Explain this to me, some so called aborted babies (fetus) have been saved from the rubbish barrels alive, how can they be incapable of survival? I've seen pictures of how the egg splits, and splits and grows, isn't that life? Or do you still want to call it a thing to justify murder? So when are we going to start killing the unwanted old people? And why do we call that Doctor K, Doctor death? Isn't that just a later choice? And why do they call it suicide, couldn't we call it post abortion, wouldn't that sound nicer???????
A spade is a spade, and murder is murder no matter how you dress it up!!!!!!!!
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Following section is taken from, "Abortion," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1993 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1993 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation
Abortion, termination of pregnancy before the fetus is capable of independent life. When the expulsion from the womb occurs after the fetus becomes viable (capable of independent life), usually at the end of six months of pregnancy, it is technically a premature birth.
Types of Abortions
Abortion may be spontaneous or induced. Expelled fetuses weighing less than 0.45 kg (16 oz) or of less than 20 weeks' gestation are usually considered abortions. (Now age and size don't make a difference)
Spontaneous
It is estimated that some 25 percent of all
human pregnancies terminate spontaneously in abortion, with three out of four
abortions occurring during the first three months of pregnancy. Some women
apparently have a tendency to abort, and recurrent abortion decreases the
probability of subsequent successful childbirth.
The
causes of spontaneous abortions, or miscarriages, are not clearly established.
Abnormal development of the embryo or placental tissue, or both, is found in
about half the cases; these abnormalities may be due to inherent faults in the
germ cells or may be secondary to faulty implantation of the developing ovum or
to other characteristics of the maternal environment. Severe vitamin
deficiencies have been shown to play a role in abortions in experimental
animals. Hormone deficiencies also have been found in women who are subject to
recurrent abortions. Spontaneous abortions may be caused also by such maternal
abnormalities as acute infectious diseases, systemic diseases such as nephritis
and diabetes, severe trauma, and excessive physical activity. Uterine
malformations, including tumors, are responsible in some instances, and extreme
anxiety and other psychic disturbances may contribute to the premature expulsion
of the fetus. See also Birth Defects.
The most common
symptom of threatened abortion is vaginal bleeding, with or without intermittent
pain. About one-fourth of all pregnant women bleed at some time during early
pregnancy, however, and up to 75 percent of these women carry the fetus for the
full term. Treatment for threatened abortion usually consists of bed rest.
Almost continuous bed rest throughout pregnancy is required in some cases of
repeated abortion, and vitamin and hormone therapy also may be given. In
addition, surgical correction of uterine abnormalities may be indicated in
certain cases of repeated abortion.
Spontaneous
abortion may result in expulsion of all or part of the contents of the uterus,
or the embryo may die and be retained in the uterus for weeks or months in a
so-called missed abortion. Most physicians advocate the surgical removal of any
residual embryonic or placental tissue in order to avoid possible irritation or
infection of the uterine lining.
Induced
Induced abortion is the deliberate termination
of pregnancy by removal of the fetus from the womb. It is currently performed by
any of four standard procedures, according to the period of gestation. Suction,
or vacuum aspiration, is used in the first trimester (up to 12 weeks). In this
procedure, which normally takes 5 to 10 minutes on an outpatient basis, the
cervix (neck of the uterus) is opened gradually with a series of dilators and
the uterine contents are withdrawn by means of a small flexible tube called a
cannula, which is connected to a vacuum pump. To ensure that no fragments of
tissue remain, a spoon-tipped metal instrument called a curette may then be used
to scrape the uterine lining. Introduced in China in 1958, vacuum aspiration
soon replaced the traditional early-abortion procedure, dilation and curettage
(D&C), in which the curette is used to dislodge the fetus. Pregnancies in
the earlier part of the second trimester may be terminated by a special suction
curettage, sometimes combined with forceps, in a procedure called dilation and
evacuation (D&E). The patient may remain in the hospital overnight and may
experience a menstrual type of bleeding and discomfort. After the 15th week of
gestation, saline infusion is commonly used. In this technique, a small amount
of amniotic fluid is withdrawn from the uterus by means of a fine tube or
hypodermic needle through the abdominal wall and is slowly replaced with a
strong (about 20 percent) salt solution. This induces uterine contractions in
about 24 to 48 hours. The fetus is then usually quickly expelled and the patient
leaves the hospital about a day later. Late abortions are accomplished by
hysterectomy under general anesthesia; this is a major surgical procedure,
similar to a cesarean section but requiring a much smaller incision lower in the
abdomen.
When performed under proper clinical
conditions, first-trimester abortions are, as surgical procedures, relatively
simple and safe. The likelihood of complications increases with length of
gestation and includes infection, cervical injury, perforation of the uterine
lining, and hemorrhage. Data compiled in recent years, however, show that even
late abortions now place the patient at less risk than full-term delivery.
Regulation of Abortion
The practice of abortion was widespread in
ancient times as a method of birth control. Later it was restricted or forbidden
by most world religions, but it was not considered an offense in secular law
until the 19th century. During that century, first the English Parliament and
then American state legislatures prohibited induced abortion to protect women
from surgical procedures that were at the time unsafe, commonly stipulating a
threat to the woman's life as the sole (“therapeutic”) exception to the
prohibition. Occasionally the exception was enlarged to include danger to the
mother's health as well.
Legislative action in the
20th century has been aimed at permitting the termination of unwanted
pregnancies for medical, social, or private reasons. Abortions at the woman's
request were first allowed by the Soviet Union in 1920, followed by Japan and
several East European nations after World War II. In the late 1960s liberalized
abortion regulations became widespread. The impetus for the change was
threefold: (1) infanticide and the high maternal death rate associated with
illegal abortions, (2) a rapidly expanding world population, (3) the growing
feminist movement. By 1980, countries where abortions were permitted only to
save a woman's life contained about 20 percent of the world's population.
Countries with moderately restrictive laws—abortions permitted to protect a
woman's health, to end pregnancies resulting from rape or incest, to avoid
genetic or congenital defects, or in response to social problems such as
unmarried status or inadequate income—contained some 40 percent of the world's
population. Abortions at the woman's request, usually with limits based on
physical conditions such as duration of pregnancy, were allowed in countries
with nearly 40 percent of the world's population.
U.S. Legislation
In the U.S., legislation followed the world
trend. Fourteen states adopted the moderately restrictive type of abortion law
between 1967 and 1972. Alaska, Hawaii, New York, and Washington legislated
abortion on request with few restrictions. In 1973, the United States Supreme
Court declared unconstitutional all state statutes but the least restrictive
type. Noting that induced early abortions had become safer than childbirth and
holding that the word person in the United States Constitution “does not include
the unborn,” the Court defined, within each of the three stages of pregnancy,
the reciprocal limits of state power and individual freedom:
“(a) During the first trimester, the abortion
decision and its effectuation must be left to the medical judgment of the
pregnant woman's attending physician. (b) After the first trimester, the State,
in promoting its interest in the health of the mother, may, if it chooses,
regulate the abortion procedure in ways that are reasonably related to maternal
health. (c) For the stage subsequent to viability, the State, in promoting its
interest in the potentiality of human life may, if it chooses, regulate and even
proscribe abortion, except where it is necessary, in appropriate medical
judgment, for the preservation of the life or health of the mother.”
Resistance and Controversy
Opponents of the 1973 Supreme Court ruling,
arguing that a fetus is entitled as a “person” to constitutional protection,
attacked the decision on a variety of fronts. State legislative bodies were
lobbied for statutes narrowing the implications of the decision and
circumscribing in several ways the mother's ability to obtain an abortion. A
nationwide campaign was instituted to amend the Constitution to prohibit or
severely restrict abortion. “Right-to-life” groups also engaged in grass-roots
political activity designed to defeat abortion proponents and elect abortion
opponents. Abortion became, rather than simply a legal and constitutional issue,
one of the country's major political and social controversies from the late
1970s through the 1990s. Many state legislatures responded with a succession of
statutes imposing additional procedural requirements on women who sought
abortions; federal court decisions holding these new statutes unconstitutional
usually followed each legislative initiative.
Recent Developments
Several of the most controversial issues
eventually reached the United States Supreme Court. Two such issues, posed by
Missouri legislation, were typical of many statutes passed by the legislatures:
the law allowed a married woman to obtain an abortion, even during the first
trimester, only with the consent of her husband; the law allowed an unmarried
minor to obtain an abortion only with the consent of her parents. In a 5-4
decision, the Court held both provisions unconstitutional because they unduly
burdened a woman's right to obtain an abortion. The issue of abortions for
unmarried minors has been especially controversial, as other states, including
Massachusetts, have sought to require parental consent for the procedure. In the
case of Massachusetts, a sharply divided Supreme Court held the statute
unconstitutional if the minor can prove to a court (1) that she is sufficiently
mature to make the abortion decision independently of her parents' wishes, or
(2) that the desired abortion would be in her best interests. In 1983 the Court
reaffirmed its 1973 ruling by striking down an Akron, Ohio, law that restricted
access to abortion.
Efforts by state legislatures to
deny public funds for abortions have fared better in the United States Supreme
Court. In 1977 the Court ruled that neither the Social Security Act nor the
Constitution prevented a state from restricting the (federal- and
state-financed) Medicaid program to “medically necessary” abortions. In a
companion case, the Court held that a city may refuse to allow elective
abortions to be performed in a publicly financed city hospital. A subsequent
congressional limitation of Medicaid eligibility for elective abortions (the
Hyde Amendment) was held constitutional by a divided Court. In 1989, in a
landmark 5-4 decision, the Court upheld a Missouri statute barring all public
employees and taxpayer-supported facilities from performing abortions unless the
pregnant woman's life was at stake. The Court also let stand a Missouri
requirement that before performing an abortion on any woman thought to be at
least 20 weeks pregnant, a doctor must test whether the fetus could live outside
the womb.
During the 1990s the debate over abortion
has focused on the issues of whether federal funding should be provided for
institutions that perform abortions and whether it is legal for protesters to
blockade abortion clinics and harass those who perform abortions. In 1993
President Bill Clinton pledged to try to appeal the Hyde Amendment.
Contributed by: Christopher Tietze
Cyril C. Means Jr.
Robert J. Levy
Bibliographic entries: B523, B524.
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