The website is called Real Choices and it’s aimed at women who have found themselves unexpectedly pregnant.
Sounds harmless. Helpful even.
There’s a picture of smiling men and women wearing white coats on its banner, alongside tabs offering useful-looking information labelled “resources” and “education”.
The site looks perfectly independent and non-biased — but on closer reading, it makes a series of startling claims with no credible scientific basis — including that “almost 10% of the incidence of all mental health problems in the community has been shown to be directly attributable to abortion”.
“For between 10-20% of women, the psychological impact of abortion is highly traumatic and affects their ability to function as they used to,” the website claims — adding that “the latest research” demonstrates abortion is corellated with a 155% increased risk of suicidal tendencies.
“Abortion is correlated to substantially increased risks of anxiety, depression, alcohol and drug use,” a pamplet hosted on its website also claims, as The Guardian reports.
Real Choices is just one of a slew of anti-abortion sites masquerading as unbiased “pregnancy advice services”. As The Guardian reports, another site called Pregnancy Help Australia suggests a link for abortion information that says women often suffer psychological trauma after abortions but are called “whiners” by “pro-abortion researchers”.