While everyone is certainly entitled to their opinion: to the contrary I and many people I know are completely concerned about the sanctity of babies from conception on. The idea of reaching in their and cutting a live baby apart to drag out piece by piece or injecting it with something that is torturously painful to kill it is far far beyond the societal norms for what should be tolerable or acceptable. It is actually very disturbing just as is the fact that while everyone clamors about killing the inconvenient baby no one ever discusses the lifelong trauma experienced by the mother. Many women dream off and on for the rest of their life about their murdered baby. People just don't want to be bothered with that inconvenient reality. And lastly.....which IS part of the political realm.....there are a great many in this country both religious and not who feel certain that they do NOT want to be complicit with the deaths of multitude of babies because they have allowed it to become normalized in this country. As a nation, we were meant to be better than that. Yes, some women have always and will always seek ways to kill their baby.....and that was on them until we are a country decided to make it law in 1973. Since then the blood of those 70+ million babies is on ALL of our hands and we will ALL answer for it one day.I am not here quibbling over the definition of "life." Rather, I am convinced that practically nobody in America is sincerely "pro-life" in the sense that term is used in political discourse. Nobody who contests the abortion issue really gives a rat's ass for the life of any fetus. It only remains alive as a culture-war issue to fight -- a position to hold as long as possible before falling back. The abortion issue would have faded away long ago if it were not associated with the whole package of social/religious conservatism. Before the 1970s, American Protestants largely ignored abortion, which they dismissed as a Catholic issue -- but then conservative Catholics and Protestants formed an unprecedented alliance, which has more or less held together ever since. That is remarkable, considering the history of Protestant anti-Catholicism in America (even now, there are Protestants of the Jack Chick stamp who are convinced all Catholics go to Hell).