In an upcoming documentary, former employees of abortion facilities will speak out about the medical malpractice, Medicaid fraud, and coverup of abuse that are rampant in the abortion industry.
The movie “Unthinkable” is directed by Abby Johnson, a former Planned Parenthood facility director who left the industry in 2009 and now works to help other abortion workers leave the industry.
"No one knows the abortion industry like those who have worked in it,” Johnson told Zeale News in a Feb. 10 statement. “Unthinkable will challenge everything the public thinks they know about abortion, about those who work in the industry, and those who have abortions. It's long past time that abortion cease, and I hope people who see the film walk away with an urgency that abortion should no longer exist and seek ways to help end it."
In the trailer, former workers explained that they began working at the facilities without realizing what they had signed up to do. In the trailer, Johnson said that workers are told they will only have to work in the front of the facility, handling phone calls, though eventually they have to participate in abortions. Another woman said when she was hired, there was no mention of abortion.
The former employees also speak about the first time they witnessed an abortion.
One woman described looking at a baby who had just been killed by abortion.”
“I remember talking to him and just telling him I’m sorry,” she said through tears.
In another trailer, one of the former employees said her job was to edit magazines that they left in the waiting room — she had to cut out any images or material that could prompt a maternal instinct.
The movie does not yet have a release date.
Johnson is the author of the bestselling book Unplanned, which outlined her own story leaving the abortion industry. The book was made into a 2019 movie, which grossed $21 million worldwide on a $6 million budget.
Johnson explained on her website that she worked with Planned Parenthood for eight years, rapidly rising through the ranks and becoming a clinic director. When she was asked to assist with an ultrasound abortion, she saw a 13-week-old unborn child fighting for life before being murdered by the abortionist. She knew then she had to leave the industry.
Johnson later founded And Then There Were None, a nonprofit that helps abortion workers leave the industry. It provides career counseling and financial help as well as spiritual, psychological, and emotional support.