They abort babies, because some may be to younge; some may not be able to afford a child. Other's will abort because they are not sure about their parenting skills.
Those are some basic reasons.
Yes the child inside is a real human but not completeley just a living organism before 4 months of age, and yes it does die when you abort it
Sorry but the way you worded the question makes no sense. Clearly your partner can not abort her partner.
no, keep the child. let your husband pay for his responsibilities.
as many times as u want. although everytime u abort a child it raises the risks of complications and difficulty if you ever decided to get pregnant.
I don't believe it's safe or nice to abort any child...but your first is no different than your 2nd...and so on. its your choice(:
He's exercising his right to abort his responsibility for a child he didn't want. The same rights mothers have without killing the child. But than, mothers are also allowed to abort their responsibility for the child even after the child is born. Shouldn't he be allowed the same right?
Magic
Humphrey 11 does not abort anything. Idk why people think this.
The surrogate cannot be forced to abort the child, nor can any woman. Not by another citizen. (It is unresolved whether the government inadvertantly gave themselves the right to force a woman to abort in a fuller reading of Roe v. Wade.)
A doctor have to determine how far along you are and what method to use but yes you can.
No, sex is even encouraged during pregnancy. If you want an abortion you have to see a doctor.
The word disabilities can be used very casual but the reasons when you are allowed to abort on those grounds are usually quite severe (when they find out late) and would mean a short, very limited or painful life for the child and the family might feel they can not care for a child like that. If the child would not be aware of what is going on around them and just be able to breath and swallow one can wonder what the quality of life is. Just surviving is not exactly a good life. It all depends on which disability you speak of of course.