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How an abortionist’s own words belie abortion as a “solution”

Jun 17, 2016

By Dave Andrusko

Abortionist Dr.Yashica Robinson

Abortionist Dr.Yashica Robinson

Yesterday we wrote a post titled, “No decision from Supreme Court on Texas law, NY Times generates more pro-abortion propaganda.”

Part of the avalanche of agitprop from the Times is what it calls an Op-Doc film–“The Chosen Life”–the “latest film in a series by independent filmmakers supported by Chicken & Egg Pictures. Directed by Dawn Porter, The Chosen Life chronicles the challenges faced by Dr. Yashica Robinson, the only practicing OB GYN in Huntsville, Alabama, who provides abortions.”

The Chosen Life is only 11 minutes, 25 seconds long. It’s easy to see why Dawn Porter was drawn to Dr. Robinson.

She is young and a classic hard worker who grew up poor and appears to works largely with African American women. Like Porter, Robinson is also African American.

Moreover, Robinson sees no incongruity between aborting babies evidently up to mid-to-late second trimester and delivering babies.

“I don’t really separate abortion care from everything in obstetrics and gynecology,” she tells Porter calmly. (She says everything calmly.) “I do everything, I do C-sections, I do hysterectomies, I tie tubes.”

But, if you listen with even just one ear, Robinson belies the story Porter and the Abortion Industry routinely tell us–and vulnerable women.

For example, Robinson had her first child at 15, just as she was starting high school, and her second son before finishing high school.

What does Planned Parenthood tell women in similar circumstances? Their only hope is abortion–or abortions.

Not Robinson. “Despite the fact that I had made a quote unquote mistake, I graduated number two in a class of over 400 students.”

Her next remark is a stunner, and so counters the Planned Parenthood line that Porter either missed it altogether or was so impressed by Robinson she had to leave it in.

“People talk down to you–that you’re not going to amount to anything and that‘s just enough to push you over the edge,” Robinson said. {She likely meant over the top or over the finish line.}

“You need one person that tells you that you can still can do whatever it is you want to do, and I want to be that one person for somebody.”

Exactly. Women (or especially girls) need to know that having their baby does not end their life, but aborting their child ends his or her life.

How did confirmation of this pro-life truth sneak past Porter?

Categories: Abortionist