kinabarina88
New Member
how about the experts who are prolife wat r u sayn about them??katie_tully said:Pro lifers don't trust opinions of experts, because the majority of pro lifers are mindless twits. Self explanatory,
how about the experts who are prolife wat r u sayn about them??katie_tully said:Pro lifers don't trust opinions of experts, because the majority of pro lifers are mindless twits. Self explanatory,
English my dear, so we can understand you.kinabarina88 said:how about the experts who are prolife wat r u sayn about them??
Hahahahaha I love you. Now let me rape you.kinabarina88 said:im not a freakn wannabe!!!! its the truth u gay!!!!!!!!! if thats the best comment u can come up wit u should get a life!!!
how about this.. u stop being a kid..kinabarina88 said:if u ddnt kno how RU486 works..there is the first pill which starves the baby..so in affect u ARE KILLING IT!!!!!!!!!!! therefore it is an abortifacient...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! the 2nd pill is then taken 5 days later and the girl should stay at the surgey for anothr 4 hrs, so basically the 2nd pill induces contractions..but dd u kno that there is a extrememly high risk of foetal body parts that will be left inside the mother..and within a couple of hrs the mother will die of infection...GET A SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION ALL YOU PPL WHO THINK RU486 SHOULD BE LEGAL!!!!!!!!!! abortion proves that ppl are willing to kill for sex!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! SCARY HUH?!?!?!?!?!?!?!??!?!?
If you did not know, RU486 works by "starving" a fetus, in a similar way many pills are being trialled that "starve" cancer.kinabarina88 said:if u ddnt kno how RU486 works..there is the first pill which starves the baby..so in affect u ARE KILLING IT!!!!!!!!!!!
Therefore it is used to abort parasitic entities inside the mother.therefore it is an abortifacient...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Another pill is taken, the fetus falls out of the body and is bagged, everybody is happy.the 2nd pill is then taken 5 days later and the girl should stay at the surgey for anothr 4 hrs, so basically the 2nd pill induces contractions..but dd u kno that there is a extrememly high risk of foetal body parts that will be left inside the mother..and within a couple of hrs the mother will die of infection...
You should all get a typing education like myself.GET A SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION ALL YOU PPL WHO THINK RU486 SHOULD BE LEGAL!!!!!!!!!! abortion proves that ppl are willing to kill for sex!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! SCARY HUH?!?!?!?!?!?!?!??!?!?
A little more info for those who are interested -Rafy said:Therapeutic Goods Amendment (Repeal of Ministerial responsibility for approval of RU486) Bill 2005 has passed the senate. (45-28)
Now the House of Reps has to vote on it.
Abortion drug bill passes Senate
PM - Thursday, 9 February , 2006 18:10:00
Reporter: Gillian Bradford
MARK COLVIN: After a controversial and divisive debate in the Senate, the abortion drug RU-486 is one step closer to being assessed for use in Australia.
Supporters feared that the vote was narrowing after the Prime Minister's intervention yesterday but in the end the motion passed by 45 votes to 28.
It didn't begin as a debate on abortion rights in Australia, but it ended up like that: both sides saw this decision as an important "line in the stand".
It was a turbulent couple of days, as befitted one of the rare conscience votes in the Federal Parliament. And there's more to come.
The bill still has to pass the House of Representatives where the numbers are much tighter.
But for now Senators who supported the drug are relieved that at least one hurdle is clear.
Gillian Bradford reports from Canberra.
GILLIAN BRADFORD: In the end, it wasn't the tight race supporters of RU-486 had feared. But while the numbers fell quite comfortably, supporters like Senator Lyn Allison were more relieved than ecstatic.
LYN ALLISON: It's a win for women, it's a win for families and it's most certainly a win for the Senate.
GILLIAN BRADFORD: There was angry resignation from those who lost the vote, summed up by the Nationals leader in the Senate, Ron Boswell.
RON BOSWELL: This is a dangerous way to have an abortion. I'm disappointed. I know many of my constituents will be disappointed and I think the elected representation of the Westminster system that we have in Australia has been badly, badly let down today.
GILLIAN BRADFORD: The hours of debate have been intensely personal and passionate. Two Senators have talked about their own personal experiences with abortion, while others like Bill Heffernan have spoken more plainly.
BILL HEFFERNAN: This drug is designed to knock over babies.
GILLIAN BRADFORD: It's that sort of language that's angered Immigration Minister Amanda Vanstone.
AMANDA VANSTONE: To those people who choose to list details of adverse reactions that might have been had to someone who's taken RU-486, to list off deaths that might be attributed to it, their argument would carry more weight if they equally listed off the adverse reactions and deaths from surgical abortions, and for that matter, from any other medical intervention.
Life is a risky business. Yes, things go wrong, but where they go wrong is not necessarily an indicator of what we should do for those for whom it will go right.
GILLIAN BRADFORD: The Senate debate has also proven there are no Party lines when it comes to a vote on RU-486.
The former leader of the Government in the Senate, Robert Hill, is a supporter of the bill.
ROBERT HILL: Where women require an abortion, I believe they should be treated with sensitivity and support at what must be an extraordinarily difficult and emotionally stressful time.
I believe they have a right to access whatever procedural options that are safe and can be provided by their medical practitioner. I don't therefore see a role for the Minister of Health in the process.
GILLIAN BRADFORD: There were some interesting bed-fellows. Several Labor Senators sided with their more conservative colleagues in voting against the bill.
Opposition Finance Spokesman Stephen Conroy explained why he went with the No case.
STEPHEN CONROY: I believe the process should be more open and transparent and accountable and that's why I cannot support the bill, a bill that simply says we give it over to scientists and doctors.
GILLIAN BRADFORD: Nationals Senator Fiona Nash is one of the co-sponsors of the bill. She's been especially irritated some of her colleagues have depicted the Therapeutic Goods Administration as a bunch of bureaucrats, ill qualified to deal with the complexities of RU-486.
FIONA NASH: I say to those who think that those people aren't capable of properly assessing this drug, that you are absolutely wrong.
GILLIAN BRADFORD: Supporters of the drug are cautiously optimistic the bill will pass the House of Representatives when it heads there next week, though no doubt the Senators who lost the case in the Upper House will be urging their colleagues to stop this drug becoming more widely available.
MARK COLVIN: That was Gillian Bradford reporting.
Source: http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2006/s1566436.htm
If we are to take the relevant medical organisations as being knowledgeable guides, it's likely that the drug's 'ban' will be lifted some time in the near future. In saying this, I'm assuming that the current bill will be passed by the lower house and that someone will then sponsor the drug for consideration by the TGA.Riviet said:I would just like to ask, from a neutral perspective and based on the facts, which is more likely to occur, the abortion pill being legalised or not?
Neither are trolls, yet they continue to pop up every now and again.Schroedinger said:I think I was mentioning that the levels of spelling and grammar in this forum are for the most part somewhat not conducive to proper argument and discussion.
Two points -withoutaface said:The funny thing is that the people who are trolls on the rest of the forums engage in serious debate here (case in point).