Abortion is an issue that is increasingly becoming more widely accepted, approved and even encouraged. This is an issue that must be addressed by the Christian church in America and across the global. Not only does abortion kill millions of unborn children each year, it also speaks to the heart problems of selfishness, conceit, and hopelessness that characterize so many people in the church, country and world. This is a problem that cannot be ignored. It is wrong on many levels and it is the duty of Christians to stand up and speak up for those who have no voice and mothers who feel that they have no hope. According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention website, 699,202 legal abortions were reported in 2012, the most recent statistics available on the site. That means that for every 1,000 babies born alive, 210 babies were aborted. Women in their twenties accounted for most abortions performed in 2012, most likely due to the fact that they felt too young or unprepared to raise a child. Perhaps the most depressing statistics to read on abortions are the reasons that they occur. A survey conducted of 1,209 abortion patients in 2004 reveals that nearly 73% of women who have abortions said that having a child would interfere with their education, career, or plans. 48% said that they did want to raise a child as a single mother or that they were having relationship issues. Others cited reasons such as not having proper finances to raise a child or that they were not
Abortion is the termination of a human being in the womb; currently abortion is legal in Canada, USA, some parts of Europe and many more countries. Many people are against the legalization and many other are with the legalization, many believe that it should stay legal because they believe women should have control over their bodies and they know what is best for their life. There is also many people who are against the legalization of abortion and they believe it should be banned
Imagine yourself as a 16 year-old girl or boy who made a mistake and ended up with an unwanted pregnancy. Would you want to go through with the pregnancy or would you want to have an abortion? You think that it will be easy and you can go on in life. Then your life starts to go down hill, you miss a lot of school, and can’t make it to work. You end up dropping out of school. This all would’ve been easier if you got an abortion. I support people who get abortion. People say it is killing a life when it is only a fetus that isn't developed all the way. Also women can do what they want to their own body, and Women will do what they want even if it is illegal or legal. They will do it regardless.
As I mentioned in my last paper, people often disagree on moral issues. Strong opinions lead to the formulation of strong arguments whether opposing or advocating for a specific stand. To say, one of the most widely debated moral issues is abortion, which is defined as the termination of a pregnancy followed by the death of the embryo or fetus.
Just because abortion is legal in all fifty states it is not morally right because a fetus is technically still a person, killing is against the law, and it goes against God’s will for us to have the right to live. In 1973, the Supreme Court case of Roe v. Wade changed the course of American history. The outcome of this case made abortion, “the termination of a pregnancy resulting in the death of the fetus,” legal in all fifty states (Abortion Facts). Abortion has become one of the most controversial topics in our nation, and is becoming a substantial issue (Sproul 47). Every abortion takes the life of a child, the most innocent of human beings. Not only does an abortion kill the fetus, but the procedure itself is very gruesome and can cause pain to the child or the mother (Abortion facts). On average, there are around 700,000 abortions per year in the United
In the past five years (2011 to 2016) there has been over 230 abortion restrictions enacted by states in the US. In 2016 alone, there has been 1,256 provisions relating to sexual and reproductive health and rights. Of these 1,256, 445 provisions attempted to restrict access to abortion services (Nas, E., Benson Gold, R., Ansari-Thomas, Z., Cappello, O., & Mohammed, L., 2016). Women’s rights as a human and as a US citizen are being violated through these restrictions. There is currently a strong disagreement in the US as to whether abortion is morally wrong or not.
The most abortions that take place are ones by women between the ages of 20 and 24, and majority of the women that get abortions are from minority groups like African Americans and Hispanics, also women who suffer from low incomes. The fact that women who get abortions are young, minorities, and have lower incomes makes sense because these women are going to be subjected to harsher environments. Young women that suffer from low incomes are going to have more of a need for an abortion because they aren’t going to have the means to pay for a child, and an abortion. R. Stein (2008) states that in 2004 that one percent of abortions were ones performed on white women while three percent procedures on Hispanic women, and five percent on African American women (para. 8). It’s fair to say that the reason that many of abortions are performed on minority groups is because they don’t have the same knowledge about protection, and contraceptives as those who are in the majority groups. R. Stein (2008) states that political science professor at the University of Alabama Michael J. New who works with Family Research
Before I can expound upon my position on abortion I must first put forth the definitions of recurrent terms in my argument. For the purposes of this paper, abortion is the destruction of a fetus at any stage of development. A fetus constitutes a fertilized egg. The moment the sperm and egg converge, it becomes a life. My position on abortion states that abortion is always immoral, but is in some cases understandable. Immoral is a wrongness—something that should not be done on a principle of society. I also term some abortions as understandable, although still immoral, because there is a greater purpose behind it. I will further explain this seemingly contradictory statement later on in my argument.
have the mind set, that either they want to keep their baby themselves, or just get rid of
1.Abortion is a hot topic these days. We hear about it on television and on
Abortion, a strong word that has multiple meanings. In a room full of people when this word is mentioned it quickly brings attention to the speaker. Different opinions and different beliefs is something that will always be a problem when it comes to this topic. Although many people believe abortion is a bad thing, there will always be the other half of the people that believe abortion isn’t good, but it might be the safest way to go. In addition more than 750,000 teenagers become pregnant every year. These young girls clearly have no idea how to take care of themselves, so to think they would have to take care of a baby is insane. We believe that teenage girls who want to get an abortion have every right to without parental consent.
According to the Guttmacher Institute, in the year of 2011, there was around 1.06 million abortions performed in the U.S., and by the age of 45, 30% of women would have had an abortion. When considering having an abortion, the surgeon must first indicate how many weeks is the patient because there is different procedures for different week stages. Abortion alone is very dangerous, therefore there are many risks that the patient must consider before agreeing to it.
Abortion is the termination of a human pregnancy. There are people who are pro abortion and there’s people who are against it. Abortion is a choice that should be allowed to all U.S citizens. There there’s the side that abortion is evil and cruel and humans have no rights to take another human beings life away. Taking both sides into consideration the answer came to a yes, abortion should be/stay legal in the united states. Reasons why abortion is good is less kids end up in adoption, religion, and poverty.
Abortion has been preformed for over thousands of years. It was first started for the fear among the “native” Anglo-Saxon women. They believed that the population would be dominated by the children of the incoming immigrants, who had higher birth rates at the time. In the mid-to-late 1800s, states began legalizing abortion but antiseptics were unfamiliar, hospitals were not common, and doctors did not have the knowledge to understand abortion. As years went on, the scientific method began to take over medical practice, technology and it increased the prevention of infection. Abortion procedures became more effective and much safer. The only problem was the states that were anti-abortion, led women who needed abortions to get them from
In today’s society, people do not realize the harm they do towards the unborn child inside the womb. The United States should avoid abortion being legal for the sake of the unborn child life. One should be concerned with the pros and cons about abortion. All evidence considered, people should keep in mind that abortion should NOT be legal.
“expulsion from the uterus of an embryo or fetus before viability (20 weeks ' gestation [18 weeks after fertilization] or fetal weight less than 500 g). A distinction made between abortion and premature birth is that premature infants are those born after the stage of viability but before 37 weeks ' gestation. Abortion may be either spontaneous (occurring from natural causes) or induced (artificially or therapeutically)” (medilexicon, 2016).