Pro-lifers really do care about single moms, and it shows

After Gov. Kay Ivey, R-Ala., signed a near-ban on abortion last week, a Jerusalem-based author tweeted a question often asked by pro-choice advocates to pro-life conservatives:

The author’s sardonic “I’ll wait” was likely a signal she didn’t think many would have legitimate responses. It’s a common misnomer in the pro-choice community that people who care deeply about the fate of the unborn don’t likewise care for the pregnant women struggling to make ends meet should she go through with the pregnancy.

Nothing could be further from the truth: Responses poured in by the thousands. Anonymous, blue-check, and other accounts described hundreds of ways ordinary people have offered help to single mothers. From purchasing a car to furnishing a home, or providing for the mother’s children or adopting orphaned children, thousands of pro-life advocates not only want to protect the unborn but they help the very women who struggle after choosing life.

Last year, the Supreme Court heard NIFLA v. Becerra, which was about a group of crisis pregnancy centers which were forced to advertise for abortions in California, based on a provision in state law. When a significant case faces the scrutiny of the Supreme Court, advocates on either side will file an amicus curiae to bolster one side’s argument or show support.

Before the justices heard this case, the Catholic Association filed a most unique brief. Attorneys interviewed 13 women about how their lives changed dramatically not just because they chose life, but because of the support they received from pregnancy centers the state of California was discriminating against.

One of the women featured in the brief was Angela Jozwicki:

Because of her addiction and the circumstances of her pregnancy, Angela felt that she could not turn to her family for support. Angela started ‘calling a bunch of numbers of places that help pregnant women.’ Soundview Pregnancy Services in Centereach, New York, answered her call and encouraged Angela to come in. At her first visit to the center, staff showed Angela her growing child on an ultrasound. Every subsequent week, Angela met with Barbara, a staff member at the center, and the two watched videos about pregnancy and childcare and spoke about how Angela was doing. When it came time for Angela to deliver, Barbara went to the hospital to be there for Angela. ‘I did not think that she would come, but she was there.’

There are countless stories like this, of women helping other women — not just to save a baby but to help them survive and thrive as mothers, should they chose to keep their child.

Nicole Russell (@russell_nm) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential blog. She is a journalist who previously worked in Republican politics in Minnesota.

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