Angle Says Pregnant Rape Victims Should Turn a “Lemon Situation Into Lemonade”

Republican endorsed candidate for Nevada senate offers more reasons why rape victims should not be allowed access to abortion.

Nevada Republican Senate candidate Sharron Angle has been pretty vocal on her views on opposing abortion even in cases of rape and incest.  Earlier she spoke that babies conceived out of rape needed to be birthed as we couldn’t understand God’s plan for them.

Now she has gotten even quainter, telling rape victims they should “make lemons out of lemonade,” in a recent interview with conservative host Alan Stock.

Via Huffington Post:

Stock: Let me bring up one other topic that I rarely talk about here, because it’s one of those topics that’s a lose-lose, but we’ve got to talk about it because it was brought up in your TV interview and that has to do with the issue of abortion, and whether or not abortion should be available in the case of rape or incest. The question to you at the time by the interviewer was that do you want the government to go and tell a 13 year-old child who has been raped by her father that she has to have that baby. And of course you responded ‘I didn’t say that I always say that I value life.’ Where do you stand on the issue of abortion, a consensual abortion, from a person who is raped or is pregnant as a result of incest?

Angle: Well right now our law permits that. My own personal feelings and that is always what I express, my personal feeling is that we need to err on the side of life. There is a plan and a purpose, a value to every life no matter what it’s location, age, gender or disability. So whenever we talk about government and government’s role, government’s role is to protect life and that’s what our Founding Father said, that we have the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

Stock: What do you say then to a young girl, I am going to place it as he said it, when a young girl is raped by her father, let’s say, and she is pregnant. How do you explain this to her in terms of wanting her to go through the process of having the baby?

Angle: I think that two wrongs don’t make a right. And I have been in the situation of counseling young girls, not 13 but 15, who have had very at risk, difficult pregnancies. And my counsel was to look for some alternatives, which they did. And they found that they had made what was really a lemon situation into lemonade.