What happens when abortion pills move from clinics into college health centers? On Morning Air, John Morales spoke with Students for Life of America President Kristin Hawkins about a growing trend on campuses across the country — and the consequences she says many students are not being told to expect.
Hawkins pointed to universities in states such as California, Illinois, New York, and Oregon that are now dispensing abortion pills through student health centers. What is often presented as convenience, she argued, can leave young women facing serious physical and emotional suffering with little real support.
She described the pills not as a private, simple solution, but as an experience that can be painful, prolonged, and traumatic. In many cases, she said, women are left to endure heavy bleeding and complications alone, often in dorms or shared bathrooms, far from the kind of medical care they may need.
That is part of what makes this moment so urgent. As chemical abortions become more common, Hawkins warned that the last line of defense may no longer be a sidewalk counselor outside a clinic, but a friend, roommate, or fellow student willing to speak the truth with compassion. She shared that pro-life advocates are trying to equip students with practical resources that make clear the realities too often hidden behind sterile slogans.
The conversation also turned to public policy, with Hawkins criticizing federal inaction on the mailing and regulation of abortion pills. But beneath the legal and political questions was a more human one: who is really caring for these women when the promises fail and the consequences become real?
This interview was a sober reminder that behind every euphemism is a human life, and behind every abortion is a woman who deserves better than abandonment, silence, and suffering.
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