What does abortion do to abortionists?
Abortion can also harm those who practice it as well as those who suffer from the injury.
When people think about the effect of abortion on an individual, they often think about the physical or psychological effects that happen to the mother. People would rarely think about doctors, nurses, and other staff involved in an abortion.
Many abortions are performed quickly, clinically, and as uneventfully as possible. However, abortion doctors and staff must deal frequently with abortion matters such as disposing of the remains, dealing with distressed women, and controversy. We should expect harm.
When Bernard Nathanson (depicted in the upper image) was asked, “How could your conscience and ethical training have allowed you to perform abortions?” He replied that neither he nor his colleagues “had the solid inner core of spiritual strength necessary to remind us of the enormity of the evil we were perpetrating. “
We become what we do. Doing wrong harms oneself just as much as it harms others. Abortion can cause more harm to those who practice it than to those who suffer from the injury. Damage can be done to another person even if that person is unaware of it.
An abortionist who performs abortions solely for money not only manipulates himself by using medical skills to serve a lower goal, but also uses his patients by treating them not as ends in themselves, but as sources of money.
Patients can also manipulate the doctor by using him to solve personal social problems. Thus, the endemic mutual use of the persons involved is complete.
The abortionist is no longer a doctor by a hired technician, the woman is no longer a patient but a customer and client, and the health service is no longer a healer but a social engineer.
Both medicine and motherhood are vocations. If a vocation is followed or falsified, it will have profound effects on one’s identity. Abortion, therefore, negatively affects moral character through falsification.
There is a conflicted dichotomy in society of millions of women desperate to bear children (e.g., IVF) and millions of women desperate to avoid children (e.g., abortion). It is reasonable to ask that a similar conflict occur in the abortion industry within the moral character of those who perform abortions.
Abortion proponents self-justify their beliefs by adopting pro-abortion arguments as a defence. They then suppress their conscience by believing their rhetoric. Their thinking is corrupted by actions as brittle thinking crumbles into doubt.
Carol Everett, an ex-abortion centre director, said, “I started to believe my rhetoric.” David Brewer, an ex-abortionist, said, “Physicians are manipulated into going against their consciences and performing abortions, all in the name of helping women.” Dr Bernard Nathanson said, “When one is caught up in revolutionary fervour, one simply does not want to hear the other side and filters out evidence without realising it.”
Kathy Sparks, an ex-abortion centre worker, said, “Sometimes we lied. A girl might ask what her baby was like at a certain point in pregnancy. Was it a baby yet? Even as early as twelve weeks, a baby is formed, he has fingerprints, turns his head, fans his toes, and feels pain. But we would say, ‘It’s not a baby yet. It’s tissue, like a clot.”
A study of ex-abortionists (Ney and Peeters, 1997) showed that around 40% had problems with substance abuse. Bernard Nathanson has said that substance abuse, sexual perversion, and alienation from life are rampant among abortionists. In 2003, a US abortionist was convicted of 22 counts of sexually abusing patients.
The negative effects on abortionists often appear during the exit from the abortion industry. Beverly McMillan, an ex-abortionist, said, “I began to detest what I was doing. More than that, I began to detest myself. I even entertained thoughts of suicide.”
Joan Appleton, an ex-abortionist, spent several years drinking, on drugs, and attempting suicide. Such reactions are not atypical of others who have left the abortion field. She said, “You do badly in relationships. You begin to get a little mentally ill.”
Dr Bernard Nathanson was a pioneer of abortion in America and a leader of the abortion rights campaign before 1973. He performed 5,000 abortions (including his children) and was responsible for 60,000 abortions. He had problems with substance abuse, relationships, and depression.
He slowly became pro-life after seeing an abortion via ultrasound. He admitted lying about the number of abortion deaths before Roe. After his conversion, he wrote books and produced documentaries.
During the decade that Nathanson experienced a change of heart, he said that he had performed many thousands of abortions on innocent children and failed those whom he had loved. He spoke of “existential torment… unremitting black despair… considering suicide, alcohol and tranquilizers.”
Nathanson said that, “I had become as Hannah Arendt described Eichmann: a collection of functions rather than an accountable human being.”
A survey of former abortionists (Ney and Peeters, 1997) said that 100% felt moderately or completely dehumanised. Norma McCorvey, ‘Roe’ of Roe v. Wade, said, “Please understand, these were not abnormal, uncaring women working with me at the clinic. We were just involved in a bloody, dehumanizing business, all of us for our reasons… It’s not easy trying to confuse a conscience that will not stay dead.”
Carol Everett had 3 abortions, had an affair, a drinking problem, and left her husband. She worked as an abortionist, opened her abortion centres, and profited from unethical business practices. She was converted by a Christian preacher and exposed the abortion industry as all lies. She said, “The abortion clinics never accept any responsibility for complications. They just say it was not their fault. The concern is not the patient at this time. The concern is with taking care of the doctor and keeping his reputation and the clinic’s reputation clean.” The documentary “Blood Money” describes the endemic deceit and malpractice in the US abortion industry. It includes testimony by ex-abortionists.
Abby Johnson was the Director of a Planned Parenthood centre. She was pressured to increase abortion numbers to boost business. She assisted with ultrasound-guided abortions. She left the abortion industry and joined the pro-life movement. She also revealed her abortions.
Dr Kermit Gosnell was a Philadelphia abortionist accused of running the most bloody and sordid abortion business ever recorded. His track record included numerous infanticides, deaths of, and injury to women patients, running a filthy clinic, storing bodies of babies in refrigerators, including next to juice, and keeping a collection of severed baby feet in jars.
Live Action has conducted several undercover sting operations on abortion centres, led by Lila Rose. They have revealed complicity in underage sex trafficking and a whole string of violations by abortion centres.
Dr Rachel McNair has researched abortionists and concluded, “There are plenty of horror stories from pre-Roe days… if those horror stories have not stopped, then perhaps it’s not the legal nature of abortion that’s the problem. Maybe it’s the nature of abortion, period.”
However, such a vice as serial killing of the innocent does not result in absolute and irrevocable corruption of human nature. The pro-life movement should develop outreach to both current and former abortionists, not for any strategic or political gain, but out of genuine and hopeful concern for their personal and moral well-being. Abby Johnson now runs a ministry called And Then There Were None.
Human Life International has prayer cards for abortionists, calling for St Michael the Archangel to “come to the rescue of men whom God has redeemed at a great price from the tyranny of the devil.”