God Gave Toni Braxton’s Son Autism Because She Got an Abortion

God Gave Toni Braxton’s Son Autism Because She Got an Abortion

In Toni Braxton’s memoir, Unbreak My Heart, she says God punished her for her Abortion by giving her son autism. The lord works in mysterious and dickish ways.

“I was suddenly faced with a choice I’d never thought I’d have to make. Amid my major misgivings about abortion, I eventually made the gut-wrenching decision… In my heart, I believed I had taken a life — an action that I thought God might one day punish me for. … My initial rage was quickly followed by another strong emotion: guilt. I knew I’d taken a life… I believed God’s payback was to give my son autism.”

Braxton was on the pre******ion acne medication Accutane when she found out she was pregnant. One of the side effects of the drug is birth defects so she chose to get an abortion. When she later had children with her now ex-husband, she discovered her son Diezel had autism. She eventually came to the conclusion that God had pointed at her like an angry clinic protestor and screamed, “Baby killer!,” before putting Autism in her son.


Well… um… at least she’s not blaming vaccines so there’s that. Oh, wait. I just didn’t read far enough.

“Maybe it’s just a coincidence that after my son’s first MMR vaccine, I began to notice changes in him,” she writes, saying that her son wasn’t as spirited as when she brought him home from the hospital. She writes that her son wasn’t responsive to affection.

God Gave Toni Braxton’s Son Autism Because She Got an Abortion | The Blemish

Angry Anti-Choice Pol Wants to ‘Set Myself on Fire’ Over Abortion

Angry Anti-Choice Pol Wants to ‘Set Myself on Fire’ Over Abortion

Angry Anti-Choice Pol Wants to ‘Set Myself on Fire’ Over Abortion
خليجية

Oklahoma State Representative Kevin Calvey, a Republican from Oklahoma City, struggled recently to find the perfect way to express just how much he hates abortion. He managed it, spectacularly: by saying on the House floor that, theoretically, he’d love to set himself on fire and die Over it, if his Christian beliefs didn’t prevent him.

According to NewsOK, Calvey was furious Over a proposed bill that would give Supreme Court employees a six percent raise, saying he doesn’t think the court is doing enough to prevent Oklahoma women from having abortions (Oklahomarecently banned a common second trimester Abortion procedure.)

“If I were not a Christian and didn’t have a prohibition against suicide, I’d walk across the street, douse Myself in gasoline and SET Myself ON FIRE!” he remarked, at a reasonable, primal scream-level volume.

Calvey added that he’d self-immolate “to protest the evil that is going on Over there, killing, giving the death penalty, to the will of the people and the will of this **** and protecting the least among us.”

Calvey is the former Vice President of Oklahomans for Life and previously backed “personhood” measures that would say life in Oklahoma begins at conception. Outside the uterus, he has lots of other fun ideas: in 2024, when Muslim leaders were trying to build a mosque in lower Manhattan, he called them “clearly terrorist sympathizers.” This session, he voted in favor of a bill that would ban same-sex marriage, and sponsored a controversial and much-mocked proposal that would make it illegal for county district attorneys to criminally charge state lawmakers.

He told KFOR earlier this week he doesn’t regret his wording during the abortion debate, arguing that threatening to set himself on fire was a perfectly reasonable thing to do: “No, not one bit, I think that I’m hopeful [sic] to draw attention to this serious issue.”

A- I’ve got matches.
B- Nice grammatical error on that sign

SCOTUS Unanimously Strike Down Abortion Clinic Buffer Zone Law

SCOTUS Unanimously Strike Down Abortion Clinic Buffer Zone Law

Quote:
In another unanimous ruling, the Supreme Court ruled Thursday that a Massachusetts law preventing protesters from being less than 35 feet from the entrance to an Abortion Clinic is unconstitutional. In 2000, the court upheld "bubble zones" in which people had to stay at least eight feet away, and that was not affected by the decision. The McCullen v. Coakley decision reportedly hinged on preventing access to public ways and roads. Massachusetts had enacted the law in 2024 after a history of violence at clinics in the Boston area. It is unknown how this will affect similar laws in 15 other states.

US Supreme Court throws out Massachusetts abortion clinic buffer zone law – Metro – The Boston Globe

Oklahoma Becomes Second State to Ban Second Trimester Abortion Method

Oklahoma Becomes Second State to Ban Second Trimester Abortion Method

Oklahoma Becomes Second State to Ban Second Trimester Abortion Method

Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin signed a ban late Monday on intact dilation and evacuation, a common Second Trimester Abortion procedure. D&E is also commonly used in incomplete miscarriages, but the bill’s ******** around that is vague enough that it’s not entirely clear whether or not those are now off the table, too. Kansas banned the procedure last week. This is the new wave of the attack on Abortion rights, and it’s going to be happen very, very quickly.

The bill, HB 1721 in the House and SB 95 in the Senate, is virtually identical to Kansas’s law, in that the final version doesn’t use medical terminology, only a deliberately shocking de******ion of the procedure:

“Dismemberment abortion” means, with the purpose of causing the death of an unborn child, purposely to dismember a living unborn child and extract him or her one piece at a time from the uterus through use of clamps, grasping forceps, tongs, scissors or similar instruments that, through the convergence of two rigid levers, slice, crush, and/or grasp a portion of the unborn child’s **** to cut or rip it off. This definition does not include an Abortion which uses suction to dismember the **** of the developing unborn child by sucking fetal parts into a collection container.

The bill doesn’t specifically make an exception for women having a miscarriage, but it does say an Abortion can’t be defined as the removal of “a dead unborn child.” That should theoretically mean D&Es are still acceptable in the case of miscarriage, but the ******** here is uncomfortably broad.

Like Kansas, the Oklahoma law only makes an exception for health risks so serious it would kill the woman, or would cause “substantial and irreversible physical impairment of a major bodily function, not including psychological or emotional conditions.” Both bills were based off model legislation written by the National Right to Life Committee; earlier this year, anti-abortion website LifeNews promised the new laws would “transform the landscape of Abortion policy in the United States.” Like Governor Brownback in Kansas, Governor Fallin signed the bill quietly, without a public ceremony or even a press release.

In their own press release sent out this morning, the Center for Reproductive Rights decried Oklahoma’s decision.

“With this law, Oklahoma has joined Kansas in an alarming trend toward substituting politicians’ agendas for the judgment and expertise of doctors, and then threatening those doctors with criminal charges if they disagree,” Nancy Northup, the CCR’s president and CEO, is quoted as saying. “Women need to be able to trust their physicians to provide the very best care possible, tailored to their unique needs and circumstances and not dictated under threat of prosecution. It’s time politicians stop passing these dangerous laws and recognize that women’s reproductive health care is a necessity, not a crime.”

The CCR also included a letter from 22 Oklahoma physicians to Congressman Steve Brunk, Chair of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee. They warned that the bill intrudes on the doctor-patient relationship and the safest Abortion method:

Senate Bill 95 represents unwarranted intrusion in the doctor-patient relationship. The bill would restrict the safest and most expeditious way to terminate a second-trimester pregnancy. In many cases, these terminations are necessary for the patient to protect her health or future fertility, and the bill lacks an adequate health exception that would allow physicians to exercise their medical judgment in these circumstances. This legislation could also force physicians to provide substandard care to second-trimester Abortion patients.

Substandard care seems to be the point here, really. The law is set to take effect November 1.

Jemima Kirke Talks About Her Abortion

Jemima Kirke Talks About Her Abortion

She couldn’t afford the extra cost


Girls actress Jemima Kirke is opening up About an Abortion she got during college.
In a new PSA for the Center for Reproductive Rights, Kirke says she became pregnant with her boyfriend’s child while at college in Providence, R.I. “My life was just not conducive to raising a healthy, happy child,” she says. “I just didn’t feel it was fair.”

Even though her family is well off (her father is former Bad Company drummer Simon Kirke, and her mother is fashion designer Lorraine Kirke), she didn’t want to tell her parents About the pregnancy, so she had to pay for the Abortion herself. She scraped together the money with her boyfriend, but they didn’t have enough for anesthesia, so she got the Abortion without it. “The anesthesia wasn’t that much more, but when you’re scrounging for however many hundreds of dollars, it is a lot. I just didn’t have it.”

Kirke presents her story as an example of the various obstacles that are put in women’s way when it comes to making reproductive choices. “We think we do have free choice, and we are able to do whatever we want, but then there are these little hoops we have to jump through to get them,” she says.

The actress and painter said she Talks About her story in order to reduce the stigma surrounding reproductive choices, and because she wants to protect reproductive rights for her two young daughters. “I would love if when they’re older, and they’re in their teens or their 20s, if the political issues surrounding their bodies were not there anymore,” she said, adding that settling the debate About reproductive rights would give them “one less thing to battle.”

https://time.com/3821396/jemima-kirke-anesthesia-abortion-video/