TIME celebrated pro-abortion activists’ efforts to press Big Tech companies into selling abortion pills online. This was in response to a leak of a document that indicated the U.S. Supreme Court might overturn. Roe v. Wade.
TIME published an article outlining how pro-abortion activists urge tech companies to facilitate abortions in the event that the Supreme Court reverses their decision. Roe v. WadeAs a leaked draft of an opinion suggests, it could. TIME dramatically described pro-abortion activists’ efforts to stop alleged “disinformation” disseminated by pro-life groups which the paper complained can “lure” potential abortion patients toward information discouraging abortion.
Martha Dimitratou, social media manager of abortion pill information provider Plan C, claimed that social media and tech companies are being “‘counterproductive,’” not helpful, in pushing abortion pills online. Pro-abortion groups and providers are planning a “digital rights conference” in June to make a list of so-called “improvements they would like to see” Big Tech companies adopt pushing abortion pills online, TIME reported.
TIME stated that Meta is not allowing enough advertisements or posts about abortion pills on its platforms (including Facebook and Instagram). TIME also cited distressingly abortion activists. TIME also criticised Google for restricting access to information regarding medication abortion via its ads and search engine. Melissa Grant, chief operations officer at Carafem online abortion provider, was quoted by TIME about the use of social media in messaging. “You might say, ‘I have a great dentist,’ but it’s rare you’d say, ‘Hey, this is a great place to have an abortion,’” Grant said, according to TIME. “We’ve had to find ways to reach people and let them know we’re not a crisis pregnancy center, we’re real, and you can come here and trust us.”
The TIME article alleged that life-ending abortion pills “can in theory be safely taken anywhere.”
TIME advocates say access is the biggest problem surrounding abortion pills. TIME mourned that, due to “societal issues” and “legal and regulatory hurdles,” many people either don’t know about the pills or can’t get them for a fast, easy way to kill their babies.
TIME acted hypocritically by spreading misinformation and claiming it was fighting it. Pro-abortion individuals have to fight supposed online “misinformation,” including information about “abortion pill reversal” treatments, TIME reported. And yet, abortion pill reversals have saved thousands of babies’ lives, according to LifeNews.
Abortion activists complain that “people of color” don’t have enough access to medication abortion. Ford Foundation fellow and civil rights attorney Cynthia Conti-Cook characterized potentially restricted medication abortions among minority communities as foreseeably the next step in their “historical oppression,” as quoted by TIME.
But Republican states are restricting abortion pills’ use, TIME whined.
That’s one reason why pro-abortion activists are pressuring tech companies to sling abortion pills.
TIME even argued that abortion pills are “safer than Tylenol,” disregarding the fact that the pills end the lives of unborn children.
Conservatives under attack. Tell your representatives to demand that Big Tech is held accountable to the First Amendment. If you have been censored, contact us using CensorTrack’s Use the contact formPlease help us make Big Tech more accountable.
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