So the peppy lady from those AT&T commercials just came out and claimed that the abortion from her past was a pleasant experience. Ah it’s just another day ending in y, isn’t it?
Actress Milana Vayntrub, whom you’d probably recognize from those insipid AT&T commercials, recently penned a column in The Daily Beast for the sake of explaining just how important her abortion was to her.
Not only did Vayntrub talk about the necessity of a woman’s right to murder her own offspring, she also spoke of it in very pleasant terms, calling it a “beautifully boring” experience. Unfortunately, for her daughter/son it was the opposite.
“For so many reasons, I am grateful for the beautifully boring abortion I had and the essential health care I received,” Vayntrub wrote. So it was peaceful and convenient, to the point that it felt like a pleasant experience.
Keep telling yourself it was a nice abortion, yes. Perhaps then you’ll forget it might be one of the worst things you have done.
Vayntrub was also a star in the NBC TV drama This Is Us. The op-ed she wrote for the progressive rag raised the alarm about pro-life activists trying to end the abortion of unborn children. She wrote, “This is not a drill, people. All of us with a uterus may soon be stripped of the constitutional right to an abortion.” Geez with the drama.
She then claimed, “My life as I know it, and motherhood as I know it, was shaped by my right to make choices about my own body. In that way, my birth story is inseparable from my abortion story.” So her life and your “motherhood” is shaped by the freedom to kill her young?
I don’t know. This sounds serious.
Anyways, Vayntrub explained that, like many other aspiring female stars early in their careers, she had to get abortion to stay on the showbiz track. “Ten years ago, I was pregnant for the first time. With my college boyfriend, I lived in an apartment that I couldn’t afford. We were doing whatever it took to get by,” she said, explaining that she was trying to start on the improv comedy scene at the time.
According to the actress, one day she forgot her birth control and then she was pregnant. Vayntrub stated that she had never considered the option of an abortion. She said she knew “immediately” she had to do it.
“I immediately knew the right thing to do was to have an abortion. It was easy. There wasn’t any handwringing or confusion. I’ve always had a strong moral compass.” Though in what universe is having an abortion is a moral good?
It is crazy stuff. She declared, “My compass pointed very clearly in the direction of not bringing a child into the world that I did not want and could not care for.”
What a great decision she made for her child. Is her highly regarded commercial career worth it? Was the abortion really necessary?
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