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PBA411H: The Psychology of Killing
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=l9ia9KeyCc0#
Gregg Cunningham notes from Tomboy
- Lt. Col. Dave Grossman:
- Theology / Moral Injury
- Hauerwas, War and the American Difference, , Part 2 Chapter 5
this is huge
- moral injury and the post-abortive syndrome
- deep aversion to killing our own species, nevermind our own offspring
- identity questions: “I'm not the good person I thought I was” (Timothy Kudos?)
Fellows debates
- “I'm just a technician”
- SG: Can you describe the procedure? Fellows: Well, first the woman calls the receptionist…
Working in the abortion industry – effects on abortion providers, etc.
- JVM paraphrase “There are 3 kinds of abortion providers…”
- Some who don't know what they're doing, and they stop when they actually see the violence of abortion – Nathanson, Abby Johnson, etc. seeing abortion
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- “[Annette Lancaster] says the job began to make her feel 'dark and morbid,' and she was troubled by the way she says she and some of the other workers referred to fetal remains. 'I just now started being able to use the deep freezer in my home by going through [therapy], because we used to call the freezer the 'nursery' … And we used to think that was funny,' she says.”
- Some who have “consciences congealed over with blood” – I think that Fellows may fall into this category… https://www.endthekilling.ca/blog/2013/02/06/late-term-abortionist-and-banality-evil
- Some who have a competing set of graphic images in their heads: abortionists who got involved because they saw the gruesome effect of back-alley abortions on women. This number is apparently dwindling though: https://www.thestar.com/life/health_wellness/2010/11/20/a_young_abortion_doctors_dilemma.html
- “Those who followed were trained by the pioneers, who relayed horror stories of hospital wards full of women rendered permanently infertile, or with deadly infections and perforated uteruses from illegal abortions…James's generation has less tangible reasons to be abortion doctors, having lived much of their life with it being legal in Canada. For them, the sense they are saving lives is not as strong. They have to look deeper for reasons to join — and endure — a tough profession. That is why there are fewer of them.”