Spartacus
Daily Stormer
May 15, 2017
Woman from the article, with her children
Apparently, there’s a company in Australia that makes keepsake jewelry out of, among other things, embryos. Is it just me, or is this a little… you know, creepy?
After a six-year IVF journey to receive miracles Lachlan, 4, and 21-month-old twins Charlotte and William, Belinda and Shaun Stafford didn’t know what to do with their remaining embryos. Their babies.
Donation wasn’t an option, the annual storage fee was an added financial strain, and disposing of them unimaginable.
So when the NSW couple heard about Baby Bee Hummingbirds, an Australian company turning embryos into keepsake jewelley, they jumped at the chance.
Now Ms Stafford has all of her babies with her every day – including seven embryos in her heart-shaped pendant worn close to her heart, always.
Here we see a clear example of female privilege. If I walked around with bits of dead babies around my neck, people would look at me weird. They’d give me ugly stares, point fingers, call me “weird” and other microaggressions like that. But because she’s a woman, she can get away with it.
“Shaun and I started thinking of having kids fairly early and realised quite quickly something was a miss, so we went to see doctors and had genetics testing to find we couldn’t have children without IVF,” the 31-year-old told Kidspot.
Wait… White people wanting children ??? I guess they must be Nazis or something.
“Our journey took a lot longer than most, but after seven cycles we had our first son Lachlan.
“Then we started trying for a second, it took another seven cycles only to be surprised with two little miracles, Charlotte and William.
“After completing our family, we looked into the donation of our remaining embryos.
“I wanted to keep having more babies but the emotional toll, plus financially it was too much.
“Donating our embryos wasn’t an option for us and I couldn’t justify the yearly storage fee.
“I’d heard others had planted them in the garden but we move a lot, so I couldn’t do this.
I think I know what those people were trying to do…
Yummy!
Amy McGlade, founder of Baby Bee Hummingbird, said since starting in 2014, they have crafted over 4000 pieces of jewellery using breastmilk, placenta, hair, ashes, or cord stumps – including 50 made with embryos.
They cost anywhere from $80 to $600, depending on the piece, and can be sent worldwide.
“I don’t believe there is any other business in the world that creates jewellery from human embryos, and I firmly believe that we are pioneering the way in this sacred art, and opening the possibilities to families around the world.”
Ms McGlade, who has been a midwife for 10 years, said families send them ‘embryo straws’ which the company expertly preserves and cremates, creating a type of ‘embryo ash’.
Christians are launching a campaign against this now.
I don’t blame them.
This is weird, weird, weird.