Posted on 11/19/2019 9:14:03 PM PST by Morgana
An article published by a New York media outlet has indicated that a long standing abortion facility owner netted ten million dollars last year. Crains New York Business featured abortion facility operator Merle Hoffman, president of Choices Womens Medical Center in New York. Hoffmans facility commits abortions up to 24 weeks. A bio about Hoffman reveals that her 2016 revenue was about $10 million. A deeper look at Hoffmans past reveals how tens of thousands of abortions and her own abortion years ago have affected her.
Making a large profit from abortion is not new, however. Planned Parenthood, the nations largest tax-funded abortion chain, is known for having abortion quotas and throwing pizza parties after its staff commits extra abortions beyond the required number, thus raking in more money for the facility.
Recently analyzed data from Planned Parenthood (analysis conducted by American Life League, or ALL) reveals that the average salary of a CEO at one of Planned Parenthoods 56 affiliates rose 22 percent in the last two years. The top twelve employees at the mothership, Planned Parenthood Federation of America, have collectively seen their average salaries go up 13 percent in two years.
ALL found that with an average income of $237,999, these Planned Parenthood CEOs are in the top five percent of all workers in the United States. The group noted that Planned Parenthoods national spokesperson and president, Cecile Richards, has seen her income explode by a whopping 62 percent, making close to a million dollars a year ($957,952) at the so-called non-profit. Nearly 41% of Planned Parenthoods budget came from taxpayers in 2015, according to the abortion chains own 2015-2016 annual report.
While Planned Parenthood tries to weasel its way out of appearing like the well-funded and well-paying abortion chain it is, Merle Hoffman is honest. Even though it is relatively taboo for anyone in the abortion industry to admit that killing babies is profitable, Hoffman acknowledges that she makes millions.
In a book she published years ago called Intimate Wars, Hoffman admitted she was making money off the movement and explained that making money from abortion could be said of every abortion provider.
In fact, as Hoffman put it, I was quite pleasantly surprised when I made my first million dollars.
Choices for Women
A 2012 article in The Feminist Press described how Hoffmans facility, Choices, began, nearly 41 years ago.
The article details how Hoffman teamed up with Dr. Martin Gold to open the Choices abortion facility, writing:
As the cofounder of the Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York (HIP), the first not-for-profit health maintenance organization (HMO) on the east coast, Gold and a colleague approached HIPs board of directors and proposed to offer abortion services for their subscribers . A year later, in 1971, Flushing Womens Medical Center later renamed Choices Womens Medical Center opened its doors.
Although Hoffman opened her first facility in the 1970s just after New York legalized abortion, Choices shows it was licensed with the state as a corporation in 1985.
In the beginning stages, Hoffman said the abortion facility saw six or seven patients and charged $77.00 per procedure. In 2011, Hoffman admitted to Forbes that her clinic had performed almost 20,000 abortions a year . Now, she added, we see about 10,000.
Hoffman appears to enjoy promoting herself and her so-called accomplishments within the abortion movement on a blog operated in her name. She says she became politically active after passage of the Hyde Amendment, which prohibited most federal tax dollars from funding abortions.
As a result of Hyde, Merle Hoffman began publicly speaking out in favor of abortion.
Co-Founder of the National Abortion Federation
In 1977, Hoffman bragged that she co-founded the National Abortion Federation (NAF), formerly known as the National Abortion Council (NAC). She detailed the events in Intimate Wars, reminiscing about a 1976 invitation from the National Association of Abortion Facilities (NNAF) to attend a national meeting of providers.
Hoffman writes that within a few months of attending that meeting, she was nominated NNAFs vice president.
She credits her marketing style of promoting herself as an advocate for women, rather than as someone who does abortions as appealing to some NNAF members. After all, marketing is all in how one presents herself and her business, regardless of what one actually does.
In fact, Hoffman claims she received so much support that instead of VP, she threw her hat into a run for NNAF president, and to her surprise, she won. Within a few months, Hoffman claims, the NAC joined forces with NNAF to become the National Abortion Federation.
Women Did Know the Truth
Merle Hoffman has been criticized for openly admitting the humanity of the preborn child.
In Intimate Wars, she described the pro-choice movement of that day as choosing to depersonalize the fetus, claiming that women knew exactly what abortion was.
This admission that women were very much aware of what they were doing when paying for their abortion was the impetus for controversy because Hoffman contradicted the unscientific claims of the day that the fetus was a blob of tissue, a parasite, and not human. As the owner of her own abortion facility, Hoffman knew otherwise, and it conflicted her. However, she still inaccurately stated that the life inside the womb, while human, was merely potential.
She wrote:
But women did know the truth, just as I knew it, deep down, when I allowed myself to recognize it . At times this really would move me profoundly as I sat opposite the women I counseled prior to their abortions, acutely aware of the potential lives growing inside them that would soon cease to exist. I began to think critically, to come to terms with what was going on. Each time I did that I came out of the process more committed than before. I had no conception, either religious or philosophical that life was sacred.
If the women going to Hoffman were aware that she does not believe life is sacred i.e., that human life inherently has value perhaps they would be less likely to trust her with their own lives.
Abortion Stops a Beating Heart
Hoffman has been a controversial figure in the abortion movement for years, as Salon pointed out in 2012:
Interestingly, although the standard pro-choice line is essentially to let the woman define the embryo or fetus for herself, Hoffman has a more controversial stance: In the beginning they were calling it a baby. We were saying it was only blood and tissue. Lets agree this is a life form, a potential life; youre terminating it. You dont have to argue that abortion stops a beating heart. It does. She adds, I cant say its just like an appendectomy. It isnt. Its a very powerful and loaded decision.
Live Action News Sarah Terzo previously documented Merle Hoffmans honest observations about witnessing her first few abortions:
What I saw a running through those vacuum tubes when I first started my work was only blood and tissue, unformed and messy. It was easy to imagine the fetus as a bunch of cells that one could define as one wished.
But even in the beginning I had an inkling that this mentality was the easy way out, that it didnt go far enough to do justice to the experience of abortion.
In its 2012 interview with Hoffman, Forbes referred to the abortion clinic operator as a Millionaire Abortionist and a capitalist, and asked Hoffman why she was receiving criticism from other feminists for making a profit performing abortions:
There are many feminists who feeland not all, but manythat a real feminist has to be a socialist. I have been accused of making money off of the movement.
Im not apologetic that I have an entrepreneurial spirit. I have created Choices and have made a profit.
And people may say abortion is your business, but I say no. Womens lives are my business. If I do well, like any business, its because more people want to come to me.
In the video below, Merle Hoffman claims that her power and money are simply the result of the fact that so many people wanted to use my services, so I see no problem with that at all. She disagrees with abortionists and facility owners who want to downplay the money that goes hand-in-hand with ending the lives of children: Its always this apologetic, I dont deserve the money, I dont deserve the power.'
Exactly what does Hoffman do with all that money and power?
According to Intimate Wars:
Money has given me the power to support political campaigns and donate to worthy causes. In the nineties I spent half a million dollars every year publishing On the Issues and started a 501(c)3 called the Diana Foundation so that I could donate to feminist groups and individual radicals that had no access to institutional funds. I donated to the campaigns of pro-choice politicians like Schumer and Hevesi, and of course paid for political actions put on by the PCC.
Hoffman claimed that Senator Schumer was a very strong supporter of mine.
The Millionaire Has an Abortion:
Merle Hoffman once admitted in a speech before the Abortion Care Network that the act of abortion is about power where women were exercising the right of fetal existence.
Yet, of her own abortion, Hoffman explained how she referred to her baby as female with whom she had a shared connection. In a reading from her book, Hoffman admitted that she wrote in her diary, For one night, I am a mother, adding that her abortion gave her both relief and sadness.
She described to attendees at the Abortion Care Network conference how she felt as she made the decision, recounting holding her stomach and saying, Sorry little one, its just not time.
When I see Schumer's picture, I see nothing but evil in his face. No wonder he supports this woman, who is herself pure evil.
Two of a kind.
She looks like a zombie.
Not that it’s particularly relevant to the discussion, but I got to wonder who was putting it to that dog faced hag.
What does it profiteth a woman to gain the whole world but lose her own soul....?
“ Im not apologetic that I have an entrepreneurial spirit. I have created Choices and have made a profit. ”
She’s not an MD. She has a PhD in Social Psychology, and is a feminist (whatever that truly means). She’s essentially a business woman who used abortion to turn a profit. She’s also Jewish. How does someone whose people were killed in attempted genocide spend their professional life building and running an abortion business?
Good question sir. 😁👊
Too bad Hoffman wasn’t aborted.
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