Grace Is Stoked
Gold Member
- Jan 23, 2019
- 594
- 262
- 180
As a female I personally could never have a willful, voluntary abortion. A miscarriage is a type of natural abortion and are much more frequent than people think, but I am speaking about an abortion as a form of birth control.
Abortion can not and has never been used as birth control.
The definition of birth control is methods that PREVENT pregnancy.
It's impossible to prevent something that has already happened.
Plus, for someone to use it as birth control, they would have to use it every time they got pregnant from sex. Which is impossible.
Here in America we have regulations on abortion. Every state sets regulations on how often a woman can have an abortion. The minimum time is 6 months. It's mostly to protect the woman's fertility. If a woman has too many abortions and are too close together, it scars the lining of the uterus and she is infertile for life.
So if a woman gets pregnant too soon after an abortion, she can't have another one.
Abortion has never been used as birth control.
It's impossible to prevent what has already happened.
Here's the honest and factual definition of birth control from good old Webster's dictionary.
Please learn the honest meanings of words and use those honest meanings.
View attachment 312192
I’m sorry that you disagree with my interpretation of birth control but I would imagine that you know what I mean. I would not have an abortion for any reason which would include a voluntary, controlled ending of that pregnancy in order to prevent birth.
No I don't know what you mean.
I know the meaning of the words birth control and by definition abortion can't be used as birth control.
It's impossible to prevent what has already happened.
I understand you want to use your own definition of those words but that isn't honest.
I posted what the dictionary says the meaning of those words are. Yet you don't accept it.
Which means there is no point to try to discuss this with you.
You aren't dealing with reality or you don't know what you're talking about.
ok no worries. Honestly you seem more interested in definitions more than the action anyway and that’s not what I’m trying to discuss.