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Monday, June 9, 2014

How to Die in Australia

Some sombre tales were making the rounds in the bar over the past week, so I decided to look into them. Nothing quite like 'official' stats to get a perspective on a subject.

The usual charity collectors were around seeking customer small change as contributions to this worthy cause and that. Most had to do with 'helping' the poor and stopping disease. Quite expected. And not at all unreasonable.

But what is unreasonable is the tugging on the compassion strings for some things and totally ignoring others of greater consequence.

Death is uppermost in the minds of such 'collectors'.  Staving it off or blaming the taxpayer for not 'doing more'. So the question arose regarding just what are the BIG killers of folk in Oz? 

Let's have a look.

Homicides   250

The police take this as their business. Governments take part of our income directly to pay. Thankfully we don't get all that many. We employ tens of thousands of police.

Drowning   300

Considering we are a 'littoral' nation living around the edges of a huge island continent, it is quite a small number too.

Motor vehicle accidents 1,193

Number rising. Vast amounts are spent on this. TV adverts harangue drivers every week. Every holiday sees some Inspector or Sergeant fronting the cameras telling us what lousy drivers we are.  Monies are spent on 'speed cameras' and 'breath tests'.

Frankly, considering that we in Oz do some 2 Billion kilometers a year driving, we have remarkably few deaths on the road. But that does not stop the lecturing and expenditures of public monies and collection of Fines. Even the jailing of some people.

Suicide  2,535

Oddly, we don't hear much about this at all, probably because the dead are mostly male and most of those are recently divorced.  Four times as many men suicide than do women. I have never seen any mention of that on adverts and no collectors ever come with a tin.

Cancer 42,844

This is a large number. We are inundated with cancer adverts. We get a cancer research collector pretty well every week, usually dressed in pink. 

None of them seem to know that more men die from prostate cancer than women do from breast cancer. Odd that. But men don't have breasts. Prostates are tucked away inside and don't have pretty support garments. I have never seen a prostate cancer collection tin.

Cancer is often described as our #1 killer. 

It isn't. We also have .....

Heart disease 45,600

Again a big number. We get collectors for hearts but they don't dress in pink and they only come around a few times a year.


The Grand Total ? 92,722

That is a lot for a small population. But, wait.
The biggest killer is as big as all of those combined and we NEVER hear about it

Abortion claims the lives of more Australians than the combined total of deaths from cancer, heart disease, drowning, suicide, homicide and motor vehicle accidents.

Each year in Australia, an estimated 96,000 children are lost as a result of surgical and chemical abortions. 

That's 263 Aussie kids every day; an average-sized primary school.

Lost. 

Killed.

Deliberately.

Chemical abortions are those as a result of RU 486 which is now readily available in Australia and subsidised by the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. The chemical cocktail is used to end pregnancies up to seven weeks gestation.

Unlike homicides, suicide, drowning, heart disease, the road toll and cancer deaths, 
we don't think it important as a nation to bother keeping an accurate count of abortions. 

Not like counting motor vehicle accidents.

The surgical abortion figures are drawn from the only jurisdictions that count abortions: South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory, together with Medicare claims for first and second trimester abortions, and hospital records.

Tasmania's Chief Medical Officer, Dr Craig White, told last year's parliamentary hearings into abortion law reform that 
counting abortions did not help 
"normalise the procedure".

And of course our Government and society wants it to be normal to kill babies.




The Australian taxpayer subsidises abortion at the rate of $25 million a year in rebates on first and second trimester surgical abortions based on an average rebate of $415 for each of 60,000 (75% of all surgical abortions). The rebate varies according to the gestational age of the baby being terminated.

An Australian doctor, specialist Roland von Marburg, estimates the total annual cost of abortion at closer to $2.5 billion, based on Medicare rebates, public hospital related-costs, medicines, and the mental health costs associated with post-abortion grief and trauma.

Abortion researcher, Dr Priscilla Coleman's 2011 report in the British Journal of Psychiatry estimates 10 per cent of all mental health issues affecting women can be attributed to abortion.

Abortion represents one-in-four pregnancies and affects one-in-three women.


 Women who have had an abortion are SIX times more likely to commit suicide than women who have not had an abortion. 

No-one mentions that either.

Now consider the vast amounts of money spent on combatting our other greatest killers.

Hundreds of millions of dollars are spent annually on road safety and anti-smoking campaigns, heart disease prevention and cancer research. 

Surely as a nation we can support much-needed research into cancer and heart disease, and encourage women to continue their pregnancies through independent counselling, making adoption easier, and social marketing campaigns promoting motherhood?

But no. 


We don't want to.

But I DO.



Sources: 
Australian Bureau of Statistics, 
Kidsafe, 
Cancer Council, 
Australian Institute of Criminology, 
Australian Government Department of Health: 
National Tobacco Campaign; 
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Reporting of Induced Abortion in Australia; 
2005 Federal Parliamentary research report: How Many Abortions Are There in Australia? Buckmaster, Pratt and Briggs; 

Children by Choice, How Much will an Abortion Cost? Dr Priscialla Coleman, Abortion and Mental Health: Quantitative Synthesis and Analysis of Research Published 1995-2009, The British Journal of Psychiatry, 2011.



Pax.

For some.




8 comments:

  1. Ah, wondered if you were going to get to that biggy by the end.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And what a biggy it is. Context shows it up.

      Delete
  2. Gee...when it comes to the numbers, it's chilling.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Not chilling only because of the high number but also because it is DELIBERATE killing.

      Delete
  3. Tragic loss of lives and harm done to women so needlessly.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In a world which sometimes becomes a Vale of Tears, we have to take our tragedies and work our way through them. But we see tragedy as an accident of life. With abortion we see a deliberate, engineered tragedy, passed off as 'women's rights'.

      Delete
  4. A very good article. Really highlighting the appalling gap in conscious thought in our Nation. Actually, what your article highlights is the conscious decisions made to hide this from conscious thought. A National disgrace.
    As someone who considers himself a free thinking person, who espouses libertarian values I do respect the rights on women to control their own bodies - men don't have to bring a baby to term, women do. I do however believe it's an issue of ethics and societal values to support and promote motherhood and promote the valuing of life, widely in public media. Something that I don't see being done with regard to this topic.

    ReplyDelete
  5. A libertarian recognises the right of the baby too. And a father's. A person's rights over their own body is a mantra with limits, but those limits are not recognised by the mantra thinkers. Of course a woman has rights over her own body but it takes two people to make a baby. The father in our society has no rights at all over whether the baby lives or dies, but he is loaded with the responsibility for its upkeep if it lives. His rights are trodden on. The baby also has rights. Nature has given a responsibility to women to carry a baby to term. It is a privilege. It is not simply wiped away by her 'rights' to kill it. Her 'rights' do not overcome her responsibilities.

    But the primary concern here is for the baby. It is about the baby. The baby is dependent on the adults being responsible. Not on their 'rights'.

    A woman's 'rights'. 10. A fathers rights. 0. A baby's rights 0.

    ReplyDelete

Ne meias in stragulo aut pueros circummittam.

Our Bouncer is a gentleman of muscle and guile. His patience has limits. He will check you at the door.

The Tavern gets rowdy visitors from time to time. Some are brain dead and some soul dead. They attack customers and the bar staff and piss on the carpets. Those people will not be allowed in anymore. So... Be Nice..