How these Olympian moms challenged the pro-abortion narrative about having children
The awesome athletes at the Paris Games who defy negative stereotypes about choosing life
The Paris 2024 Olympic Games certainly started off with a big bang — and no small degree of blasphemy, as the world’s Christians were quick to note.
Yet the now-infamous and sacrilegious opening ceremonies were quickly undermined by the bold display of faith from many devout Christian athletes, as well as a few heartwarming narratives that fly in the face of contemporary progressive narratives about sex, procreation, and humanity. That is, everything the mock-Lord’s Supper drag queen tableau represented in its hardly subtle messaging.
There is no doubt that if you trace the lineage of today’s radical sexual values upstream far enough, you will arrive at the anti-birth narratives of the early 20th Century Progressives, who touted abortifacient birth control as the great liberator of womankind.
For decades since, pro-aborts have used the narrative that women need access to abortion to achieve their dreams, yet this is something that has only grown more glaringly false as women have continued to excel in athletics.
Yet Paris 2024 defied this narrative in a unique way — by featuring the first-ever nursery so athletes who are mothers of young children could more easily compete, according to the website Rappler.
As a number of athletes competed with young children in tow thanks to this addition to the games, others competed while pregnant! How cool is that?
Egyptian fencer Nada Hafez shared after finishing her event that she’d been competing for two in an emotional post on Instagram, as ABC News reported.
“What appears to you as two players on the podium, they were actually three!” Hafez wrote under a picture of her during a match. “It was me, my competitor, & my yet-to-come to our world, little baby!” Hafez finished ranked 16th in the event, her best Olympics yet.
And you’ve likely seen photos of Azerbaijani archer Yaylagul Ramazanova competing with a visibly pregnant belly — she later told reporters she felt her baby kick right before making a shot that secured a perfect 10!
Meanwhile, British rower Mathilda Hodgkins-Byrne worked hard to make it to Paris as a “full-time mom,” raising over $5,000 on GoFundMe to make it happen — and it paid off, as she went home with a bronze medal.
Britt Eerland, a Dutch table tennis player, did the same thing so she could defy negative stereotypes about motherhood.
"This campaign aims to show the world that motherhood and elite sports can coexist," Eerland wrote on her GoFundMepage. "By supporting me, we're championing the message that mothers can pursue their dreams and excel at the highest levels."
Hooray for these moms!! Although I hope in the future they, or anyone, goes with givesendgo instead. They are a faith-based crowdfunding site which actually calls and prays with their users and checks on them.
Why never any mention of who owns, runs the abortion (Population Control) industry? Who's at the very top of the chain?