Yep, you read that correctly. Samuel Alito’s Mom’s Satanic Abortion Clinic is real. Nope, don’t go rolling your eyes over what you may think is total BS and silliness. These people are very serious.
And just because Cosmopolitan did up an article about the satanic group, it is not new.
.@Cosmopolitan who claim to be the “largest young women’s media brand in the world” promoted a “satanic abortion” ritual to empower women getting abortions. This is demonic. pic.twitter.com/1CJPXuFcxY
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) November 30, 2023
I wonder if this is what Helen Gurley Brown had in mind when, in the mid-1960s, she was the editor of Cosmopolitan and an advocate for the sexual liberation of women?
Cosmopolitan magazine has always been “out there” regarding liberation issues for women. I guess. The publication likes to force a ridiculous ideology on the press in order to get its name in the news because, let’s face it: Who reads Cosmo anymore?
Well, according to Cosmopolitan’s media kit, a lot. With an audience size of 62 million on all platforms, with Gen Z and Millennials making up 64% of its readership. So yes, it’s time to sit up and pay attention.
As I said earlier, though, this is nothing new. The Victory Girls have been covering this type of messaging for a long time.
In an Associated Press article dated back to 2019, The Satanic Temple (TST) says it is the only satanic religious group designated by the IRS.
And from their own website –
The Satanic Temple is the only Satanic religious organization recognized as a church by the IRS and the Federal Court System.
But here we are, talking about them because of their latest article about a satanic abortion clinic titled Samuel Alito’s Mom’s Abortion Clinic. It’s disgusting. And it is very real.
Samuel Alito’s Mom’s Satanic Abortion Clinic. Does it sound like pure clickbait? Sure. But beneath the outlandish branding lies a sincere mission: The New Mexico–based telehealth practice, a legitimate medical entity run by an accredited clinical team, offers abortion care to patients within state lines. The staff prescribes abortion pills (at $91 per set, a competitive price) up until the eleventh week of pregnancy and offers 24/7 phone access to licensed medical personnel to anyone in need. It’s just that they’re also Satanists, members of a religious organization called The Satanic Temple. – Cosmopolitan
The article goes on to convince its readers that Satanists don’t worship the devil and there are no sacrificial rituals. Killing your baby isn’t one?
Members of the TST, which are just over 1 million, simply view satan as their mascot, the Cosmopolitan article tells us. He’s just a symbol of rebellion and activism.
As much as I hate to put up this video from The Satanic Temple’s YouTube channel, I feel like we all need to know who and what we are dealing with. Here’s their little jingle for their passion for killing babies.
Game changer? Yes, mask it and disguise it with religious rituals for legal purposes. We can expect these types of clinics to start popping up nationwide.
Samuel Alito’s Mom’s Satanic Abortion Clinic marks an audacious step, from abortion activism to abortion care. By TST’s accounting, no other faith-based group in the U.S. has ever launched an abortion clinic. And that’s the game-changing twist here: Unlike other abortion-pill-by-mail providers like Hey Jane or Abuzz, TST is a religion. Meaning its patients, who don’t have to be Satanists themselves, are participating in a religious ritual. That’s a key legal distinction TST hopes to leverage in its historic push to expand its clinic model beyond New Mexico—into states where abortion is otherwise banned. – Cosmopolitan
And with the likes of social media, Instagram to be exact, helping to promote satan and abortions, we have the Cosmopolitan Instagram account telling us about Jessica and her experience.
“What’s it like to have a Satanic abortion? For Jessica* [a fake name to keep the woman anonymous], a 37-year-old mother of three who received abortion medication via Samuel Alito’s Mom’s Satanic Clinic, ‘the experience was just very supportive,’” Cosmopolitan wrote in an Instagram post. “While she’s not a Satanist, Jessica decided to incorporate a few ceremonial elements into her solo abortion experience. ‘Why not?’ she thought. The overall messaging just clicked with her.”
Name changed, indeed. And a mother of three already. But the message just clicked with her, she said! Do you see how they are making abortion sound? Their messaging makes it sound like you are going to get Botox injections or get your eyebrows temporarily tattooed on. Abortion is elective, alright, but it’s not like waking up one morning to decide to get a pedicure.
What are we, on the right, as conservatives, doing to combat this messaging? Can anyone tell me?
Feature Image: Malcolm Lidbury, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
What kind of messaging would resonate with them? A lot of people buy into the “clump of cells” myth, trying to discourage them from getting an abortion leads to the “YOU DON’T CARE ABOUT THE BABY AFTER IT’S BORN!” screeching.
All you can do is present the opposing viewpoint rationally and be there for them when they make a bad choice and are grieving the consequences. I knew of one man who volunteered with this church for this. His attitude was “Satan got them once, we’re not letting it happen a second time.”
A little more to it than that.
You can connect them with a crisis pregnancy center. Ours locally provide post-partum support, as well as post-abortion counseling. They provide evidence it’s more than “a clump of cells” by providing free sonograms. They provide counseling in terms of whatever fear is driving the felt need for an abortion. They have even started provide counseling for fathers.
Obviously, there’s not much more you can do for someone you barely know. But if you know a woman in distress and considering abortion, stepping up and being there (and offering them options) before they make that decision can have very positive consequences. (We helped a friend a number of years ago. One of the big things we did was say, “We will adopt the child, and we will not hold it against you in any way.” She decided to give birth, and got a beautiful boy out of it. He’s a teen, now.)
I wonder if this is what Helen Gurley Brown had in mind when, in the mid-1960s, she was the editor of Cosmopolitan and an advocate for the sexual liberation of women?
She wouldn’t have thought so. But any reasonable person could have seen where it would end up.
It’s just that they’re also Satanists
Actually, all of the abortion providers are. Every single one. They worship Molech, and thereby, Satan. And, since Satan is “the father of lies” and almost everything stated in support of abortion is a lie, they also glorify him.
disguise it with religious rituals for legal purposes
Which is a reverse for them since Progressives love to insist they’re not a religion. Which is another lie.
no other faith-based group in the U.S. has ever launched an abortion clinic
Not true. Progressives have launched almost all of them. But one of the Progressive lies is that they are not a religion.
who don’t have to be Satanists themselves, are participating in a religious ritual
That’s not going to work in any jurisdiction with rational people in charge of the law. You must be a “sincere believer” to participate in a religious ritual that would otherwise be banned.
The overall messaging just clicked with her.
Well, duh. She’s committing child sacrifice with her abortion, so naturally Satanism resonated with her.
I sincerely hope this “clinic” actually causes some women to sit up and take notice. “Hey, it’s some really sick people supporting abortion. And the people opposed to it are all over here wanting to give me and the baby medical care and free nappies. Maybe there’s something about abortion, itself…”.
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