The Rights of the Unborn: Where I Stand on Abortion
I'm not going to dance around this issue. Abortion is one of the most personal and emotional topics in American politics, and I think the American people deserve honesty — not talking points.
So here's where I stand.
What science tells us
According to biology, life begins at conception. That's not a political opinion — it's what the science says. At the moment of fertilization, a unique human DNA sequence is formed. From that point forward, the developmental process of a distinct human being is underway.
I believe we should follow the science, even when it leads us to uncomfortable conversations.
Conception is a scientific miracle
I believe the conception of life is a scientific miracle — and the math backs it up.
Think about the odds of you being you. The specific combination of DNA that makes you who you are — your personality, your appearance, your strengths, your quirks — required one particular sperm out of roughly 250 million to meet one particular egg at one particular moment in time. And that's just one generation. Multiply those odds across every generation of your ancestors, each of whom had to survive, meet, and conceive at exactly the right time, and the probability of you existing as you are is essentially zero.
Scientists have estimated the odds of any specific person being born — with your exact genetic makeup — at roughly 1 in 400 trillion. Some calculations put it even further beyond comprehension. The point is simple: every single human life is mathematically extraordinary. There has never been another you, and there never will be.
That's not a talking point. That's science. And when you understand the sheer improbability of any one life coming into existence, it's hard not to see conception as something worth protecting.
I believe in women's rights
Let me be clear: I believe women have rights over their own bodies. Women deserve access to healthcare, autonomy in their decisions, and respect in every aspect of their lives.
But here's the question that keeps me up at night — who stands up for the rights of the unborn baby?
If science tells us that life begins at conception, then we have to ask a hard question: does that life have rights too?
I believe the answer is yes.
Two sets of rights, one honest conversation
This is where most politicians fail you. They pick a side and pretend the other side doesn't exist. They either dismiss women's rights or they dismiss the rights of the unborn. I'm not willing to do either.
A woman's rights matter. And the rights of an unborn child matter. Pretending one doesn't exist to make the other easier to defend isn't leadership — it's cowardice.
What this means in practice
I support policies that protect life while also supporting women. That means:
- Better access to healthcare for women across our district, especially in smaller communities that are already underserved.
- Support for mothers and families — because being pro-life doesn't end at birth.
- Honest education grounded in science, so people can make informed decisions.
- Compassion, not judgment. Every situation is different, and I'm not here to look down on anyone.
The bottom line
I'm pro-life.
I believe life begins at conception, and the unborn child has rights worth defending. The mathematical odds of any one person existing are so staggeringly small that every conception is, in my view, a scientific miracle.
And I'm pro-woman.
Women deserve respect, real healthcare, and real support — not slogans and not shame.
Two lives are involved. I won't ignore either one.
That's where I stand.
If you agree, I need your help.
Sign the petition, volunteer, and spread the word in your community.