It was 1973, the year that Roe v. Wade legalized abortion in all 50 states. “Hazel” was a woman who underwent a “safe and legal” abortion and suffered a horrific death.
After the abortion, Hazel became extremely sick and suffered organ inflammation. She developed gastritis so severe that it caused internal hemorrhage. She bled so much that she aspirated blood into her lungs and suffocated to death— essentially drowning in her own blood.
Hazel was one of at least 104 women and girls killed by legal abortion from 1972 to 1975. The study that recorded their deaths also admitted that an author’s previous claims on the safety of abortion were founded on unadjusted death-to-case rates and noted that abortion at or after 16 weeks was significantly more dangerous than a full-term birth.

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