When the Truth Becomes Unthinkable
Abby Johnson wants you uncomfortable. She wants pro-choice advocates squirming in their seats. And here’s the kicker: she wants the pro-life movement feeling just as uneasy.
Her new documentary, “Unthinkable,” promises to be what she calls the biggest exposé of the abortion industry ever filmed. That’s a bold claim from someone who used to run a Planned Parenthood clinic in Texas. But Johnson isn’t exactly known for pulling punches.
“I hope this will shake the foundation of the pro-abortion movement, and honestly, the pro-life movement, as well,” Johnson told Fox News Digital. “I think we can, at times, begin to forget what it is that we are fighting for.”
You know what’s interesting? She’s aiming at both camps. That takes guts.
Johnson’s story isn’t new to those who’ve been paying attention. She’s the author of “Unplanned” and runs two organizations now: And Then There Were None and ProLove Ministries. Both exist to help abortion workers leave the industry. She’s been doing this for years, quietly pulling back the curtain on what happens inside those clinics.
But this documentary? This is different.
The Moment Everything Changed
September 26th changed everything for Johnson. The source material cuts off there, but anyone familiar with her story knows what happened that day. She assisted with an ultrasound-guided abortion. She saw what she’d been facilitating all those years. And she couldn’t unsee it.
That’s the thing about conviction. It doesn’t always arrive through careful deliberation and thoughtful consideration. Sometimes it hits you like a freight train on a random Tuesday. Or in Johnson’s case, a late September afternoon that rewired her entire worldview.
She walked away from her job. Not gradually. Not after months of soul-searching. She just left.
The conservative movement has embraced Johnson’s story because it confirms what many have argued for decades: that abortion isn’t just a medical procedure divorced from moral consequence. It’s the deliberate ending of human life. And the people performing these procedures know it, even if they’ve built elaborate psychological frameworks to avoid confronting that reality.
What Nobody Wants to Hear
Johnson’s documentary promises to expose the abortion industry’s “dirtiest secrets.” That language matters. She’s not talking about regulatory violations or sloppy bookkeeping. She’s talking about the things that even some pro-life activists might find difficult to process.
The abortion debate in America has become so sanitized, so abstract. We talk about rights and bodily autonomy and healthcare access. Meanwhile, actual procedures happen in actual rooms with actual consequences. Johnson lived in that world. She managed it. She scheduled it.
And now she’s telling.
Pro-life groups are already ramping up pressure on the Trump administration regarding abortion pill safety. The Senate is being urged to press Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on safeguards that were removed in recent years. The conversation is shifting from whether abortion should be legal to what happens when it is. That’s significant.
Johnson’s timing couldn’t be better. Or worse, depending on where you stand.
Why This Matters Beyond Politics
Here’s what makes Johnson’s story compelling beyond the usual political tribalism: she gave up a career. She didn’t switch from one think tank to another. She didn’t pivot from one media outlet to its competitor. She walked away from her livelihood because she couldn’t reconcile what she believed with what she was doing.
That’s rare. Genuinely rare.
Most people don’t change their minds about fundamental moral questions. We dig in. We defend our positions with increasing fervor. We surround ourselves with people who think like us and consume media that confirms what we already believe.
Johnson did the opposite. She let reality challenge her assumptions, and she followed where that led, even when it cost her everything familiar.
The documentary will likely be dismissed by abortion rights advocates as propaganda. That’s predictable. But dismissal isn’t engagement. And Johnson isn’t going away. She’s building a movement of former abortion workers who’ve made the same choice she did.
That should concern anyone who believes the abortion industry operates with complete moral clarity. Because the people leaving aren’t protesters who never understood the work. They’re insiders who understood it perfectly.
And they walked away anyway.
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