MDG Staff Writer
Abortion is murder and to urge others to murder is an abomination.
HELENA — “On Saturday, about 400 people came to the Montana State Capitol to rally against restrictions on abortion rights.
They took part in a “March for Reproductive Rights,” one of hundreds of events across the country under the umbrella of the nationwide Women’s March. At noon, the participants marched around the Capitol, holding signs and chanting slogans like “Stand up, fight, back, reproductive rights are under attack.”
Speakers criticized a series of laws passed by the Montana Legislature this year that tightened abortion restrictions.
“We need equality; we need equity restored into our families, our communities, and our country,” said Marci McLean.
Three of those new laws – which would ban abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, restrict access to abortion-inducing drugs and require physicians to ask women seeking an abortion if they want to listen to the fetal heartbeat – were set to go into effect Oct 1st. A judge in Billings temporarily put the laws on hold this week.”
These people are so demented in their thinking, as if a physician asking a woman if she wants to listen to her own precious baby’s heartbeat is a bad thing.
During the rally, state Rep. Mary Ann Dunwell, D-Helena, shared a story from her own life. As a young woman living in Louisiana, she chose to have an abortion and traveled to Texas to have the procedure because there were no closer providers.
“I felt shamed,” she said. “It was a tough, tough decision I had to make – but, you know, it was my decision. We need to protect that right for all of you, for all of the young women.”
Those taking part in the rally said the fight over these policies is going to continue.
Dunwell should feel completely and totally ashamed for her self-focused and selfish act. The taking of a child’s life is a horrifically shameful thing. And she’s encouraging other women to do the same.
Please read the full story here where Dunwell and others encourage women to harm their children.