Abortion Is Not Death — It Is Refusal to Reproduce a World That Kills
Tuesday, April 8, 2025
Anti-abortion laws are not about protecting life.
They are about preserving the reproduction of the system.
The system needs bodies.
Not loved beings. Not conscious subjects.
But bodies — for labor, for punishment, for surveillance, for statistical continuity.
Pregnant women become infrastructures,
and the system pretends to mourn embryos while discarding living children in orphanages, on sidewalks, in prison cells.
It does not care about life.
It cares about reproduction.
And yet, the woman who chooses to abort is shamed, threatened, blamed for “killing.”
But what she is doing is something much more terrifying to the system:
She is refusing to participate.
She is saying: “This body will not be used to prolong a reality I did not choose.”
An embryo at 6 weeks has no consciousness.
It is not a person.
It is an extension of the woman, and when she says no,
she is not killing —
she is reclaiming the boundary between life and repetition.
Because what is actually being birthed,
in unwanted or unconscious pregnancies,
is not a child —
but often the very structure of existential death.
Children are not just born.
They are inserted into a system that trains, breaks, assigns, and disciplines.
Many mothers see it too late:
their daughters assaulted, their sons indoctrinated,
and the voice within them says: “I did not stop the pain. I passed it on.”
Abortion, then, is not death.
It is the interruption of the death-machine.
It is not violence.
It is an act of love toward the unborn, the born, and the not-yet-conceived.
It is the decision to say:
“This world is not yet ready. I will not offer another being to its mouth.”
Those who abort are not monsters.
They are the ones brave enough to say:
“No more death disguised as life.”