Speech Pro-Life for Public Speaking
By: Wendy • Essay • 1,102 Words • January 10, 2010 • 927 Views
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“When they took me into the O.R., I took a deep breath and went to sleep. When I woke up, I was in the recovery. I just felt so empty inside - one minute I had a life living inside me and 20 minutes later there's nothing. I just started crying hysterically. The nurse came up to me and said "Why are you crying? You got what you wanted, now be quiet; you're going to worry the other girls." I got myself under control and walked out into the waiting room. As soon as I got out of there I just started screaming and crying, “What did I do?” I had to be carried into the car. I cried all the way home - in my life I have never felt so much pain like that day. It’s been 4 months now, and it still hurts like it was yesterday,” said eighteen year old Shantel Garcia, months after a surgical procedure that changed her life.
On January 22, 1973, Roe v. Wade, an ever controversial US Supreme Court case established that most laws against abortion violate a constitutional right to privacy, overturning all state laws outlawing or restricting abortion. According to Abortion TV’s website as cited in 2003, abortions are one of the most common surgical procedures in the world. However, does that make them justified? Today, I am going to outline for you why I believe abortions should not continue to be legal in the United States and explain the responsible choices women can make, even in the midst of an unwanted pregnancy, that do not involve the termination of our future.
My first problem with abortion is the myth that a baby is not really a living being until its third month of growth. Hence the belief that if an abortion is performed during the first trimester than it merely rejecting a cell within the mother’s womb. However, this myth mostly comes from a series of word choice games. On many pro-choice websites, the reference to an unborn baby is typically a ‘fetus’ or ‘zygote’. According to the Access Science Dictionary 2005, the term fetus is defined as the developing body in uterus from the beginning of the ninth week after fertilization until birth. Before this time, they would call the baby a ‘zygote’, saying a zygote is nothing more than a cell formed by the union of a sperm cell and an egg cell. However, the Access Science Dictionary 2005 defines zygote as an organism produced by the union of two gametes. As referenced in the Texas Education Code in 1998, a 6th grade student should be able to describe the word organism as ‘composed of cells that carry on functions to sustain life’. According to the book Diary of an Unborn Baby, by the 22nd day after conception, the child’s heart begins to beat on its own. By week 10, the baby is 10 million times larger than the fertilized egg, and by week 12 the baby not only possesses all the parts to feel pain, such as nerves and the spinal cord, but at this stage the baby can now also suck its thumb. How can one deny the fact that this “quote” ‘cell’ is a baby if its heart starts beating around its 22nd day of life?
My second concern with abortion is all of the dangers to the mother that occur during and following an abortion. Aside from the risk of going under anesthesia that accompanies any surgical procedure, there is also a chance of perforation of the uterus, cervix, or other organs. Other complications that can occur vary from intensive bleeding to infections to sterility or possible death. Aside from physical dangers, an article titled “How Abortion Hurts Women,” describes the emotional consequences women endure, stating that women who have abortions possess an increased risk of anxiety, depression and suicide. In fact, a 2002 study published in the American Journal of Orthopsychiatry