Twitter users were not happy with a tweet posted by Planned Parenthood about abortion. "Self Care comes in MANY forms. How do you practice self care?" the organization wrote. The tweet included a photo of the statement, "Abortion is self care." https://twitter.com/PPact/status/1608482484622172161 One user replied, "Self-idolatry. Literal child sacrifice." https://twitter.com/TrueBlackTea/status/1608854865551429632 Another responded, "Someone dislocated a joint with this reach." https://twitter.com/edenmccourt/status/1608783545094537220 One tweet stated, "A principle of good self-care is that it does not harm others. Abortion does not just harm another human but kills that tiny human being." https://twitter.com/FrMatthewLC/status/1608673281460310019 Writer Chadwick Moore wrote, "I don’t understand these irresponsible women who still need abortions. As a gay, before PrEp, if we had reckless sex, we died! Gays learned to wrap it up, or take a pill every day. At least with our bad choices, we only put our own lives at risk—not some poor baby." https://twitter.com/Chadwick_Moore/status/1608609485576339459 Read more replies below: https://twitter.com/PatrickKMiller_/status/1608580498376503296 https://twitter.com/griffingulledge/status/1608575972202381313 https://twitter.com/chrisclark503/status/1608596514871595009 https://twitter.com/CasuallyGreg/status/1608569936829648897 https://twitter.com/kjschmidbauer/status/1608682484442750978 https://twitter.com/gov_fails/status/1608652123323105281 https://twitter.com/BehaviorReturns/status/1608543665118646279 On Friday, Fox News noted pro-choice activists nationwide have filed lawsuits against states that have restrictions on abortion following the reversal of Roe v. Wade. Republicans appear to be shifting their approach to the issue of abortion following the midterm elections. "It was probably a bigger factor than a lot of people thought,” Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel said during an interview earlier this month. She added, "We’ve got to get conversant on that." McDaniel explained, "We can’t just do an ostrich method and pretend that it doesn’t exist when Democrats are spending $30 million on that message." Jeanne Mancini, the president of March for Life, commented on how the issue could impact the 2024 election. "Heading into 2024, it is essential for any pro-life candidate to embrace the issue head-on, clearly defining their own position and contrasting it with the unpopular, extreme, abortion up-until-birth position of their opponent,” Mancini said, as The Hill reported. According to Politico, conservative groups that poured money into opponents of abortion for the midterms are prepared to spend more for the 2024 election.