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Despite “Transgender Outrage,” Squid Game Season 2 Takes the Cake for Its Unapologetic Pro-Life Message  

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Lydia Taylor Davis - 09 Jan 2025

WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD  

Hollywood overflows with anti-family, pro-abortion, and anti-moral messaging. From the media, TV shows, and movies – they’re consumed with pro-abortion ideals that mislead viewers into glorifying the idea of “choice,” “autonomy,” and “success” at the cost of killing preborn children. 

Remember the late-term abortion normalizing and incest themed film that was Poor Things?  

READ: Emma Stone Thanked Her Daughter for “Poor Things” Oscar Win: An Egregious Late-Term Abortion, Pedophilia, and Sexual Abuse Praising Movie 

So, it’s hard to believe that I would declare the second season of a popular dystopian Korean series the most pro-life streaming show of 2024.   

Photo credit: Netflix

Yes, I’m talking about Squid Game.  

When Squid Game exploded onto the global scene in 2021, its intense, unique, and—warning—extremely violent survival story captivated audiences worldwide. As one of the most-watched and Hunger Games-esque shows in Netflix history, the first season’s success paved the way for another.   

Despite the “transgender outrage,” Squid Game’s second season, released the day after Christmas, took the internet by storm, breaking Netflix’s record with 126 million views in 11 days.   


The game’s setup mirrors the situation many mothers and fathers find themselves in: they’re stuck in an unideal situation with financial burdens. Both seasons follow a group of financially struggling individuals who enter what they believe is a chance to win money through competitive games.   

But spoiler alert: these aren’t ordinary games where losers go to the sidelines. If a player loses a round, they are killed.   

Photo credit: Netflix

  
Season two brings the main character, Seong Gi-hun, also known as Player 456, back into these deadly games alongside various other players, including a young pregnant woman named Kim Jun-Hee, who is supposedly close to her due date.   

By chance, the baby’s father—her ex-boyfriend—also enters the games, and through their interactions, we learn he had pressured her to have an abortion and is shocked to discover that she chose life and kept her baby. Despite being alone and void of initial support, she remains determined to have her baby. 

But Squid Game’s unintentional claim to pro-life fame goes further than a pregnant woman who chose life. When the other players learn about her pregnancy, they immediately rally to protect her and ensure both she and her child survive.  


In one scene, the players discuss how her preborn baby is an additional player in the game and that if she has twins, there are two.  

This is a far cry from Hollywood’s routine and dehumanizing treatment of preborn children. Unlike the media’s portrayal of preborn babies as merely a “clump of cells,” Squid Game assigns preborn children the inherent value they deserve as equal persons – as “other players” in the game.   

Photo credit: Netflix

  
The story arc is even redemptive for Hee’s former boyfriend. As he watches the characters protect her and the baby, even sacrificing their food for Kim Jun-Hee, he eventually decides to support her and the child. The show does an excellent job of portraying a young woman who courageously chooses life and acknowledges her child as a life worth protecting—something that today’s television typically avoids for the sake of toxic feminism that erroneously claims that career and children cannot coincide.   


While the show leans pro-life, it also portrays hundreds of brutal deaths and unfortunately pushes transgender ideology, so be warned before watching. Overall, though, I was thrilled to see a pro-life message woven into popular media.   

Let’s hope Netflix continues this pro-life trend when season three of Squid Game drops later this year.  

READ NEXT: Screenwriter of “It Ends With Us” Starring Blake Lively Brags About Throwaway Pro-Abortion Line – But the Film is Actually PRO-LIFE 

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