
The Dáil rejected People Before Profit-Solidary TD Ruth Coppinger’s bill to ban fox hunting faced defeat, voted down by government parties despite public support for ending the practice.
The measure aimed to stop packs of dogs chasing and killing foxes, labelled cruel and outdated. Coppinger called it a step toward compassion for animals.
Yet on the same day, her other bill pushed to repeal all limits on abortion, including the three-day wait period and criminal penalties for procedures right up to birth. This would allow abortion on demand at any stage, for any reason.
Here’s the stark hypocrisy: one bill protects foxes from being torn apart alive, deemed barbaric.
The other green-lights the dismemberment of unborn humans, often fully formed and viable, through methods like suction or forceps that crush skulls and limbs. Abortion on demand treats human life as disposable, ending it for convenience while sparing animals the same fate.
This inversion of values is telling. Society rallies to shield wildlife from pain, but shrugs at the routine killing of the most vulnerable humans.
Over 10,000 abortions occur yearly in Ireland since legalization, many late term.
If fox hunting merits a ban for its inhumanity, how does abortion escape the same scrutiny? It doesn’t.
The push for abortion on demand for any reason up to the moment of birth is not popular even among the more liberal minded in society and to push for its legalisation at Christmas time almost seems like the work of some kind of Satanic, anti-human cult.
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