WhiteRoses wrote: » Oh please, spare me. I’m giving you facts. This is what happens. Whether you like it or not this is the truth.
2wsxcde3 wrote: Another woman lied to about abortion. Are you saying she should flush the little baby down the toilet?
2wsxcde3 wrote: » The baby is buried in the family plot, often without being registered. And its not a "clot". I came across this story online: ... Another woman lied to about abortion. Are you saying she should flush the little baby down the toilet?
2wsxcde3 wrote: » We're talking about dumping a readily identifiable baby into raw sewerage??? Can you not understand how countries who practice FGM for example look at us here in the west and think we are as gone in the head as we like to think they are?
Martina1991 wrote: » In a medical setting I'm sure couples have the option in Ireland to keep the remains if the choose. But if they don't want to keep it, the products of conception (that's what their called in a hospital) are placed in containers in formaldehyde and disposed of as medical waste. They are not flushed down a toilet.
2wsxcde3 wrote: » And used to heat hospitals.Aborted babies incinerated to heat UK hospitals (Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2016/03/15/aborted-babies-incinerated-to-heat-uk-hospitals/ ) Sound familiar? The nazis used the corpses of jews they had gassed to heat the houses in the concentration camps.
WhiteRoses wrote: » I don’t think you realize how offensive you are being. This would be very distressing to read for anyone who has suffered a miscarriage. Shame on you. You don’t have a clue.
2wsxcde3 wrote: » I'm not trying to be offensive, but abortion advocates were calling for an "honest and open debate on abortion in this country". I don't think people shouldn't call for an honest and open debate and then tell people to shut up about what happens to the bodies of babies that are aborted.
WhiteRoses wrote: » Whether an abortion or a miscarriage occurs, whether you are pro life or pro choice, there is the same ending for pregnancies lost before 12 weeks. They are passed the way I explained earlier. None of this nonsense about the family plot. You are the one who keeps bringing miscarriages into this. Nobody told you to shut up. You were told what happens the ‘bodies’, and you didnt like that answer so you started harping on about burials and headstones and Nazis and FGM.
Charmeleon wrote: » You have me confused, in one post you say people flush miscarried babies down the toilet and this is just the facts, yet in another post you say pointing out the fact that foetus remains were incinerated for heat is extremely insensitive and shameful? What gives?
WhiteRoses wrote: » Whether an abortion or a miscarriage occurs, whether you are pro life or pro choice, there is the same ending for pregnancies lost before 12 weeks. They are passed the way I explained earlier. None of this nonsense about the family plot.
2wsxcde3 wrote: » There seems to be a juxtaposition here. Some people are happy to flush pre-12 week unborn babys down the toilet while others give pre-12 week unborn babys a respectful burial, even if not always in the family plot. Here are stories at this link of women giving respectful burials to miscarriaged babies even as low as 4 weeks:https://community.babycenter.com/post/a21467597/what_did_you_do_with_your_miscarried_baby . I think this is in tune with the reality that the unborn baby that has died had a beating heart. Are these women delusional?
kylith wrote: » Miscarriages at home usually go down the loo, later term miscarriages which, for whatever reason, the parents cannot or won’t take are disposed of as medical waste. They’re not chucked in a fire place, they are incinerated properly. What would you suggest that the hospitals do with them?
2wsxcde3 wrote: Sound familiar? The nazis used the corpses of jews they had gassed to heat the houses in the concentration camps.
2wsxcde3 wrote: I think this is in tune with the reality that the unborn baby that has died had a beating heart. Are these women delusional?
2wsxcde3 wrote: » There seems to be a juxtaposition here. Some people are happy to flush pre-12 week unborn babys down the toilet while others give pre-12 week unborn babys a respectful burial, even if not always in the family plot. Here are stories at this link of women giving respectful burials (and a name) to miscarriaged babies even as low as 4 weeks:When I miscarried I passed the baby onto my pad. I was very early (4 weeks) but could tell that tissue was different and was my baby. I got a soft cloth and put him on it, I wrapped him, and buried him in our yard. Then I lit a candle and put it there alone with a piece of paper that I wrote his name on and a flower. It was my way of marking his grave. Even a year later all 3 items were still there! However, I do regret burying him there because we moved about 6 months ago. It was very hard to leave him there after being able to visit him whenever for 2 years! The last day before we left I did light his candle one more time.https://community.babycenter.com/post/a21467597/what_did_you_do_with_your_miscarried_baby . I think this is in tune with the reality that the unborn baby that has died had a beating heart. Are these women delusional? I think they are in tune with the reality that this was a human being.
WhiteRoses wrote: » What has this got to do with repealing the 8th, please remind me?
2wsxcde3 wrote: » Bury them in the angels plot. Some hospitals in Ireland have one and offer parents to bury their miscarried baby there, or the parents can take the baby home. Its open to the parents.
2wsxcde3 wrote: » We're brainwashing future generations that it is ok to kill an unborn child and flush their remains down the toilet into raw sewerage. I don't think that's a good idea. It lowers human dignity.
WhiteRoses wrote: » Sorry but this has absolutely nothing to do with repealing the 8th. If you have an issue with how miscarriages are dealt with and take offense to the fact that the majority of the WORLDS population doesnt conduct funerals for pregnancies lost pre 12 weeks, then you are quite entitled to. But it’s absolutely nothing to do with this thread.
Charmeleon wrote: » Do you not think it is interesting that in the UK they are banning the burning of aborted babies or miscarried babies for heat, but not banning aborting them in the first place? I think it shows we have a deep seated concern as to how all forms of human life are treated and that as much as the repeal campaign wish to reduce the value of a fetus to zero, the average person doesn't believe it is like 'medical waste'.
2wsxcde3 wrote: Pro-abortionists are saying that if something is a problem - get rid of it. I'm worried how that would subconsciously play out in the mind of someone who is suffering from depression and on the brink of taking their own life.
2wsxcde3 wrote: We should be sending the message that life has value. And even if something is unwanted, there are other options available that offer a way out that doesn't end in the loss of a life.
Andrew Beef wrote: » The issue that many people have with the issue is the idea that abortion will evolve into a method of contraception. That would be truly shocking in my view.
Andrew Beef wrote: The issue that many people have with the issue is the idea that abortion will evolve into a method of contraception.
Martina1991 wrote: » You use the word option but want to restrict the options of women in Ireland and effect their maternity care.