fbpx
Breaking Campus News. Launching Media Careers.
Student health centers covering up the truth about abortion-inducing drugs

Students deserve to know the full facts of the matter

At least several university health centers, and probably many more than that, are hiding the truth about emergency contraception from their students. There is very compelling scientific evidence that emergency “contraception,” far from simply preventing conception, can also destroy the newly created human beings that result from it: An embryo needs to be able to implant to the uterine wall to survive, and studies have shown that emergency contraception can prevent that from happening, leading to the death of the embryo—the human being.

In a sense it is understandable why a student health center would want to conceal such awful information. It is very probable that most student health centers, like most places on most campuses, are run by pro-abortion liberals, those who have a near-manic fixation on “reproductive freedom,” by which they generally mean freedom to kill unborn humans. Contraceptives represent something of an absolute good to this political demographic; emergency contraceptives are likewise viewed as something of a miracle drug. Hiding the truth about what these drugs can do is thus something of a paramount priority.

Students deserve better than this. Any young woman who comes into a health center to get Plan B should be made aware that (a) she may already be pregnant, and (b) the pill she’s about to take may kill the human being inside of her. State-funded colleges, in particular, should be mandated by law to force their health centers to abide by this policy. The law permits abortion, and for now pro-lifers have to be satisfied with that. There is no reason, however, that anyone has to be lied to about any of it.

MORE: These campus health centers don’t tell students truth about emergency contraception

IMAGE: Olga Dobrikova / Shutterstock.com

Like The College Fix on Facebook / Follow us on Twitter

Please join the conversation about our stories on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Reddit, MeWe, Rumble, Gab, Minds and Gettr.