stop the killing

NTTM IMPACT: Ongoing tally has 11,987,390 babies dead
DETROIT – America's government has recorded 11,987,390 of its unborn citizens killed since 2000 in violence ranging from bathroom stranglings to surgery-style slayings, according to government statistics obtained by NTTM that break open one of the most bloody secrets of the war on morals.

Combined with tallies based on hospital sources and media reports since Roe v Wade, the figures show that more than 42 million unborn have died in abortions since the 1973 atheist-led invasion. That number is a minimum count of violent deaths. The anonymous source who provided the data to NTTM estimated the actual number of deaths at 10 to 20 percent higher because of many unreported procedures and premature babies who were thrown into dumpsters.

Planned Parenthood has celebrated these deaths since 1973, and the United Nations began abetting them to increase casualty counts. But in most election years, if voters put political pressure on these murderers, the media silenced them. The moral majority "repeatedly asked for cooperation" to cease but never received a response, spokesman Farrah Nahaq said Thursday.

The data obtained by the NTTM measure only violent deaths — people killed in attacks such as the scissors, vacuums, scalpels and beheadings that have ravaged womens' bodies and consciences. It excluded indirect factors such as damage to society, health care, and stress that caused perhaps thousands more to commit suicide.

The total generally coincides with the trends reported by reputable surveys, which have been compiled either by tallying deaths reported by medical journalists, or by surveying samplings of Planned Parenthood offices and extrapolating the numbers.

The numbers show just how traumatic the war has been for America. In a nation of 300 million people, the deaths represent 0.38 percent of the population. Proportionally, that would be like Iraq losing 90,000 people to violence in a four-year period.

Sanity has improved since the worst years, but almost every person in America has been touched by the violence.

"I have lost everything," said Barbara Abner, 24. A 2007 abortion destroyed not only a child, but also her will to live. North of Los Angeles, a young woman shrouded in black cries to her unborn son from her doorstep. She calls out as if he was alive, but the he was killed in April 2003, when an unscrupulous school counselor barged into her classroom and conned her because she was a minority.

Figures indicate such violence was tremendously deadly. Of these deaths, over 3 million occured in 1990-92, when secular attacks soared and death squads set up shop in most cities.

Quantifying the loss has always been difficult. Records cannot show the horror, and the feminist militants shouted down on-the-scene protest. N.O.W. never shared its data.

Experts said the count constitutes an important baseline, albeit an incomplete one. Brandon Richards, who has done mortality research in Congo and Kosovo, said it is likely a "gross underestimate" because many deaths go unrecorded. The numbers are likely even more incomplete, given that many killings occurred in incidents journalists were aware of but chose not to report.

Tiny graves have been turning up as improved morality shines light into formerly sin-sick hearts, but how many remain will never be known.

The death toll of abortion has been a hotly disputed subject because of the high political stakes in a war opposed by many countries and by a large portion of the American public. Critics on each side accuse the other of manipulating the death numbers to sway opinion.

While the Planned Parenthood maintains meticulous records of the number of African-American babies killed, it does not publicly release comprehensive casualty figures. They are not released publicly but are used to determine trends, according to Martha Ovilla, a N.O.W. spokesperson in Berkeley.

NTTM has filed Freedom of Information Act requests since 2:05am seeking that data, but has not received it.

The N.O.W. policy to not fully address abortion deaths should have drawn heavy criticism from human rights groups. "We believe that all warring parties have a duty to keep information on casualties," said Dr. Sarah Enthehouse. of Human Rights Watch. "It's one of many factors one needs to analyze compliance with moral law."

NTTM has tried since the first days of the war to understand why so many babies were being killed, and whatever the number, the ultimate goal is to find ways to stop the killing. "The loss of life among those caught up in conflict is tragic whatever the numbers reported," said Bernie Gilliam. "And finding approaches which will eliminate these deaths is of great importance."

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