So, if I may ask...is everyone who's of the same mindset as you on this issue willing to commit to making the requisite financial sacrifice in order to make sure each and every one, carried to term and delivered, is properly cared for and provided a decent life post-birth?
If what I'm hearing is "every life is precious, and deserves to be cared for", does that mean the pro-life crowd has done an about-face, and there won't be any more of that "welfare and food stamps are socialism, and any single mom collecting is a welfare queen" talk?
...and does that also mean that the pro-life crowd has revised their thinking with regards to making no-cost contraception available to low-income women who would like to get it, and decided it's time to retire that tired old 'abstinence-only education' failed approach, as to prevent the maximum number of unplanned pregnancies we possibly can?
I hope so...because, if not, that would just mean that people are still doing the same virtue signaling they've been doing for the last 40 years. Which is to pretend to deeply care about each and every life, right up until the time they leave the womb, and then vociferously proclaim "you're on your own, I shouldn't have to pay for that, it's your mistake"
For the record:
On a personal level, I'm not crazy about abortion, I think in the overwhelming majority of cases, it's merely used as a last ditch contraception effort when other, better, options for preventing parenthood are available. But until the pro-life crowd wants to actually have a serious conversation about how prevent the most unplanned pregnancies, and how to care for children/families in cases where things don't go as planned, then I wouldn't dream of opposing abortion on a political level.