
The abortion industry’s extremism rarely shocks me, or anyone else entrenched in the pro-life movement, anymore. After all, it’s the business of killing innocent human beings in the womb for profit. Thankfully, the 2024 election between former Vice President Kamala Harris and President Donald Trump brought abortion extremism, preborn death up to nine months gestation, to the forefront of Americans’ minds, but also the unethical business practice of in vitro fertilization (IVF).
And, it seems the public is starting to catch on to the ethical issues of the IVF industry and how it’s not as “pro-life” as some have been led to believe.
While scrolling through Instagram, I came across a jewelry business, Blossom Keepsake, advertising jewelry made from unwanted embryonic children.

Yes, you read that right.
The pro-abortion movement has now reduced human life to necklaces and rings—pieces of jewelry designed to adorn the parents who ended their children’s lives.
When a couple undergoes IVF, they’re aiming to build a family. Not necessarily bad, right? But there are deadly consequences. In the process, multiple human embryos are often created and stored. In fact, “the vast majority of embryos (80%) produced during IVF and chosen for transfer still fail to implant or to result in a liveborn infant,” according to the National Library of Health (NIH).
READ MORE: What to Expect When You’re Expecting to Talk about Invitro Fertilization (IVF)
In a recent article, we estimated that “383,000 embryonic children are sitting abandoned in storage at fertility clinics in the United States.”
But not all these embryos are implanted, leading to them being “discarded or donated, either to others wanting to have children or to medical science,” reports the Washington Post.
Enter this pro-abortion jewelry business. By offering to turn these tiny humans into keepsakes, the company preys on the emotional desire of parents to hold onto a “piece” of their children.
But here’s the kicker: these embryos are not just biological material; they are reportedly living human beings who are being killed and turned into accessories, not treated with dignity.

See its Instagram post for yourself.
And while the company may claim good intentions, turning them into jewelry raises a major ethical question:
Are we reducing human life to a product—a commodity to be packaged, sold, and worn?
The short answer is yes. Many Instagram users thought the same, as the business experienced swift and intense backlash. When I commented on how this jewelry business profits from the termination of innocent human life, the business blocked me.
Other commenters argued that turning embryos into jewelry isn’t just disrespectful—it’s dangerous. In the pursuit of “celebrating life,” as this business claims to do, we risk normalizing the idea that some human lives are less valuable than others based solely on their potential for profit or utility.
Of course, the Instagram account deleted these comments and disabled further ones on the post. In another attempt to justify their actions, they tried to defend their life-ending jewelry with this comment on another post (pictured below):

At its core, this practice is a glaring example of the growing trend of commodifying human life. For decades, pro-life advocates have warned about the evident slippery slope when we start treating human beings not as sacred lives but as disposable objects. Whether it’s selling embryonic tissue, crafting jewelry from leftover embryonic children, or commercially exploiting stem cells, the pro-abortion movement consistently dehumanizes living human beings.
By turning embryos—tiny but undeniably, humans—into accessories, we’re inadvertently sending a chilling message: human life, even at its earliest stage, is disposable and can be commodified.
Watch what Students for Life of America (SFLA) President Kristan Hawkins had to say in a recent react video.
Sadly, celebrities like JoJo Siwa and Paris Hilton normalize IVF. Do we really want to head into a future where human life is divided into what’s “useful” and “wanted,” where a person’s worth is determined by how convenient they are? It seems some people are pushing us that way.
However, the pro-life movement stands firm, and even those commenting on this business get the idea: Every human being, from the moment of conception, should be treated with inherent value and given the right to life.
The culture continues to move, and we will continue to stand against the pro-abortion movement—including abortion facilities and even businesses profiting from life-ending jewelry.
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