The grim ledger of Planned Parenthood’s latest annual report, released with a chilling sense of routine, much like factory statistics, lays bare a truth that should shake any society with a pulse of moral clarity. The abortion behemoth, cloaked in the sanctimonious garb of “women’s health,” has once again scaled new heights of infamy, extinguishing 402,230 unborn lives in a single year—a grotesque 2.42% rise from the 392,715 it dispatched the year prior.
That’s 1,102 babies snuffed out daily, 46 every hour, a relentless conveyor belt of death that dwarfs any historical genocide in its cold efficiency. And for this, Planned Parenthood reaped over $2 billion, a financial empire built on the ashes of the most vulnerable.
The numbers, stark and unyielding, tell a story of an organization running away from its purported mission.
Worse still, the report’s opacity reeks of calculated deceit. The American Life League, a watchdog with no patience for euphemism, branded it “disingenuous” for omitting data on abortion pill distribution. This practice may account for as much as 80% of abortions in some states.
And then there’s the money.
The case for defunding Planned Parenthood is not merely compelling—it is morally inescapable.
The numbers, stark and unyielding, tell a story of an organization running away from its purported mission.
Over the past decade, abortions have surged by 22.8%, while taxpayer funding—$792.2 million in the latest tally—has ballooned by 49.9%. Meanwhile, pregnancy tests have plummeted by 16.4%, prenatal care by a staggering 62.8%, and cancer screenings by 54.4%.
Planned Parenthood is not an oxymoronically named healthcare provider; it is a specialized killing machine, diverting resources from genuine care to fuel its core business: abortion on an industrial scale. As Michael New, a scholar with a knack for cutting through the fog, put it on X: “More tax dollars, more abortions, less health care.”
They defend their practices by calling it women's 'reproductive rights,' when it's the exact opposite of reproductive.
Worse still, the report’s opacity reeks of calculated deceit. The American Life League, a watchdog with no patience for euphemism, branded it “disingenuous” for omitting data on abortion pill distribution. This practice may account for as much as 80% of abortions in some states.
Researcher Katherine Van Dyke is blunt: the true body count likely far exceeds the reported 402,230. This is not an oversight, it's a deliberate veil, hiding the full scale of the carnage. Katie Brown Xavios, director of the League, called the timing of the report’s release—just after Mother’s Day—“horrifically inappropriate,” a macabre flourish that underscores Planned Parenthood’s contempt for the very concept of motherhood.
Then we have the women on X bragging about how many abortions they had as if it's an accomplishment. That's like being proud of your race, as if you had something to do with it.
And then there’s the money.
Taxpayers, most of whom recoil at the thought of subsidizing the slaughter of babies, are footing the bill for the lavish salaries of Planned Parenthood’s elite, with CEOs pocketing an average of $317,000 annually, while they're nestled comfortably in the 98th percentile of American earners.
Nearly half of the $1.286 billion spent on “medical services” comes from public coffers, funneled not just into abortions but into pushing sex education on children and peddling hormones to vulnerable youths, a new frontier in their exploitation. This is not healthcare; it is ideology dressed in a lab coat, profiting from confusion and despair.
When is the American public going to take their collective foot off the gas pedal [or electric vehicle accelerator]?
The case for defunding Planned Parenthood is not merely compelling—it is morally inescapable.
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An organization that kills more babies each year, sidelines actual healthcare, and thrives on taxpayer largesse while obscuring its true toll has no claim to public support. To continue funding it is to endorse a betrayal of the most fundamental human right: the right to live. The question is not whether we can afford to defund Planned Parenthood, but whether we can afford the cost—to our conscience, our humanity—of letting it persist.
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