(February 4, 2024 at 9:00 pm)ronedee Wrote:(February 4, 2024 at 4:02 pm)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: Bone cancer was simply an example. Disease, malnutrition, poor sanitation - these carry more littluns than abortion.
And the aborted aren’t condemn to misery. Your God must love to watch children suffer.
Boru
73 MILLION A YEAR?! Watch "The Silent Scream" then tell me a fetus doesn't feel PAIN?
Seems an anti-choice documentary can't be both honest and persuasive.
"The centerpiece of "The Silent Scream" is an ultrasound film of an abortion, which is purported to depict the fetus opening its mouth "in a silent scream" of pain and fear, proving that the fetus is "just another person, like you and me." In a panel discussion at the University of Washington School of Medicine, obstetricians with extensive experience in ultrasound reported that they could not make out the fetal features and gestures--including the "silent scream" which the narrator described. The type of camera, doctors and technicians agreed, is switched during the procedure to one that provides less resolution, so that here would be greater latitude for the narrator's description of a "life and death struggle."
While the fuzzy ultrasound is being shown, the narrator holds up a plastic doll which is many times larger and more developed than the fetus in the film, deceptively implying that the fetus looks just like the doll. He also says that the fetus is 12 weeks old, while in conventionally used terms (measured by last menstrual period rather than gestation) it is actually 14 weeks old. In the U.S. about 93 percent of all abortions are performed by the 12th week, when the fetus is extremely small and undeveloped. To further confuse the viewer, the film occasionally shows dramatic pictures of fetuses which were stillbirths or were aborted very late in pregnancy. However, the narrator fails to mention this fact, or discuss the difference between a first-trimester fetus and a third-trimester one. Of course, a layperson viewing the film would have little way of recognizing such distortions, and would likely accept the authority of the narrator."
--The Harvard Crimson
Bolding mine.
I'm not anti-Christian. I'm anti-stupid.