Abortion Clinic Pushes Puberty Blockers And Abortion With American Girl Dolls
By PNW StaffAugust 09, 2025
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"Every girl deserves to love herself." That's the opening ethos of American Girl's body image guidebook for girls. But a darker message seems to be emerging--one that undermines childhood innocence and parental authority in favor of radical ideology. And now, that message has taken a deeply disturbing turn.
A New Hampshire abortion clinic recently posted a meme online that left many Americans--especially parents--outraged. The clinic, using mock versions of American Girl dolls, created images of these childlike figures holding abortion pills, hormone blockers, birth control, and waving transgender pride flags. Each image was captioned to reflect what the doll "was on" or "was doing": "This American Girl Doll is having a medication abortion," "This American Girl Doll is on HRT," "This American Girl Doll uses birth control," and more.
What makes this so grotesque is not merely the political edge or even the offensive attempt at dark humor--it's the fact that these dolls, known and loved by generations of girls, are meant to represent children. These aren't caricatures of adult women making adult choices. These are childlike figures being used to promote the destruction of unborn life and irreversible medical treatments for gender dysphoria.
Some defenders of the post have insisted it wasn't meant to target children. But that's irrelevant. The symbolism is clear. Using dolls that represent innocent young girls to advertise abortion and gender therapy is not edgy--it's evil. Even if the creators of the meme believed they were being clever, their choice of imagery betrays a far more sinister truth: the push to normalize these ideas for younger and younger audiences is not slowing down. It's accelerating.
And here's where it gets worse.
While the dolls in the meme were not officially licensed American Girl dolls, the silence from American Girl and their parent company, Mattel, is deafening. You might expect them to issue a swift statement distancing themselves from the grotesque misuse of their brand. But there's been nothing.
Why? Perhaps because they're not all that opposed to the ideology being pushed.
Consider this: American Girl is still selling a book titled A Smart Girl's Guide: Body Image, aimed at girls as young as ten. The book has rightly come under fire for suggesting puberty blockers as a solution for girls who are uncomfortable in their own bodies. It implies that if a young girl doesn't "feel right," she can consider gender transition--and even points her toward resources to do so without parental support.
This isn't just troubling--it's a betrayal of childhood.
Rather than encouraging girls to grow into the beauty of womanhood, to navigate the storms of puberty with grace and support, this book offers them an escape hatch. But it's an escape that leads straight into lifelong dependency on medical interventions, infertility, and irreversible harm. Puberty blockers, far from being harmless "pauses," carry the risk of serious side effects: cognitive impairment, bone damage, mood disorders, and permanent sterility.
As if body image wasn't already a battlefield for young girls bombarded by social media, now they're told that if they feel uncomfortable in their skin, maybe they were born in the wrong one altogether. Rather than equipping them with truth and resilience, we're feeding them confusion and irreversible options.
And it's not just happening in fringe clinics or on activist social media pages. It's happening in the heart of America's toy aisle.
This culture is waging war on childhood innocence. It is twisting what once stood for imagination and self-discovery--like American Girl dolls--into tools of propaganda and confusion. And worse, it's selling it to our daughters in shiny, pastel-colored books under the guise of empowerment.
We must draw the line.
Parents, grandparents, pastors, and concerned citizens must speak out--not just against the grotesque misuse of these dolls, but against the worldview that seeks to distort and destroy girlhood altogether. There is nothing progressive about celebrating the medication of confused children, the sterilization of pre-teens, or the casual destruction of life in the womb.
What we're seeing is a spiritual crisis cloaked in progressive packaging. And it demands more than outrage. It demands action.
Don't just tweet your disapproval. Boycott companies that push this agenda. Write letters. Support organizations that speak truth in love. Protect your daughters and sons from the cultural lies that say their bodies are problems to be fixed instead of gifts to be cherished.
Our daughters are not pawns in a social experiment. They are fearfully and wonderfully made.
And that's a truth no doll, no meme, and no misguided book can ever take away.