Yeah. Video, extreme claims. There's no reason to even try to fact check.
I gave evidence for some of the most extreme claims - like the story of the abortion of a 37 week old. I guess you are just assuming that a lot of those claims are impossible and will ignore any evidence I give.
The issue here that you are going to run into (and it's a perfectly valid issue to have put in your way), is this:
If you wish to convince someone who is rational of a claim, the claim must be true, and supported by statistical evidence rather than mere case study.
I studied to be a
professional Christian. I went to camps and retreats and seminars and conventions for that shit.
Then AFTER that, I went to college to study to be a professional academic, then how to be a professional software engineer.
When I was learning to be a professional Christian, we were taught to use "case study" to make arguments, like you are now.
In college, I had that thoroughly lectured out of me, because it turns out NOBODY likes that shit; it gives bad results and leads to shit like anti-vaxxers and "Reefer Madness", "Satanic Panic", and other such bullshit purity movements designed to hide and perfect fascist populist messaging.
I won't say it doesn't happen.
In fact, I'm pretty sure that every time this thread gets reincarnated, it gets brought up that it does happen, and I know this because I'm usually the one that brings it up just so people stop fighting over red herrings:
Wealthy Republicans and other Conservative sorts are pretty infamous for the lengths they go to force abortions on their daughters and mistresses.
I'm sure that some folks intentionally cause the event that triggers medically necessary third trimester abortion through directing injury at a fetus (pushing pregnant people down stairs, punching them, etc). In fact, I see it happening more often due to "shitty men" rather than "selfish women" that late term abortions happen.
That said, it is vanishingly rare for such events to happen. There are handfuls of such events that have ever happened, mostly because the means to make them happen are already limited to 1% or less of society.
If truly elective events were frequent, these would be attached to statistics, and there would be something there that could convince the likes of me or Loren. Anything approaching it has been published only by sources which have bad track records for cooking statistics.