GRAPHIC: does Wexton support partial birth abortions?
Jennifer Wexton has had a lot to say about abortion, even likening it to “human rights.”
Speaking of human rights, where is she on the Illinois state house’s plan to legalize partial birth abortions?
Don’t partially delivered babies deserve human rights?
And let’s not forgot voters have made a dramatic shift on this issue.
BACKGROUND ON PARTIAL BIRTH ABORTIONS
To Conduct A Partial-Birth Abortion, The Abortionist Must Puncture The Base Of The Baby’s Skull With A Sharp Surgical Instrument. “Partial-Birth Abortion is a procedure in which the abortionist pulls a living baby feet-first out of the womb and into the birth canal (vagina), except for the head, which the abortionist purposely keeps lodged just inside the cervix (the opening to the womb). The abortionist punctures the base of the baby’s skull with a surgical instrument, such as a long surgical scissors or a pointed hollow metal tube called a trochar. He then inserts a catheter (tube) into the wound, and removes the baby’s brain with a powerful suction machine. This causes the skull to collapse, after which the abortionist completes the delivery of the now-dead baby.” (National Right To Life, www.nrlc.org, Accessed 5/31/19)
Once The Skull Has Been Punctured, The Abortionist Inserts A Suction Machine
Into The Wound To Remove The Baby’s Brain. “Partial-Birth Abortion is a
procedure in which the abortionist pulls a living
baby feet-first out of the womb and into the birth canal (vagina), except
for the head, which the abortionist purposely keeps lodged just inside the
cervix (the opening to the womb). The abortionist punctures the base of
the baby’s skull with a surgical instrument, such as a long surgical scissors
or a pointed hollow metal tube called a trochar. He then inserts a catheter
(tube) into the wound, and removes the baby’s brain with a powerful suction
machine. This causes the skull to collapse, after which the abortionist
completes the delivery of the now-dead baby.” (National Right To Life, www.nrlc.org,
Accessed 5/31/19)