I don't see why everyone's ripping on Zack, she has more to worry about this than any of you. She isn't inhuman, and if I'm interpreting her views right, she has a very big-picture view.
Many of these unwanted children that could've/would've been aborted will become criminal or at least less-savory due to the lack of a stable mother/father/family/role-model. They will drain on the funding of the state due to prison/police/legal funding, as well as the hospitals with more dangerous behavior. If all of this were to disappear, there would be more money and less people, more money per-person and better quality of life. Higher overall education and standards of living, more money to health care and other services, and less (fewer?) unwanted, unhappy people.
Think of another point. "
One death is a tragedy; one million is a statistic. " - Good Ol' Joe Stalin.
These (anti-abortion) organizations, much like the organizations against African poverty (noble causes), PETA (debatable, not big-picture IMO) and others, try to appeal to your empathy and compassion rather than your judgment. They show you these shocking images and personalized tragedies, all the while subversively convincing you not to think. You don't look at the big picture such as I outlined above, you think of the poor little Afghani/Indian/whatever girl with no meat on her bones. The big picture is that
people need to die. Call me cruel, call me inhuman, call me heartless;
death is a part of life. In today's world (and most likely well into the future) many people will die, many at an "unfairly" young age. If it saves them from a probable life of hardship and goes towards the greater good, I deem it an acceptable loss. It wouldn't be unfair to them as one can't miss what one has never had, and if they go to "heaven" and meet "god", will he not welcome them the same? Are babies (and by extension fetuses) not sinless?
2) An unborn child qualifies as a) innocent; and b) a person.
This is debatable.
Hence 2a.
That's part of my point, we have a good month of solid leeway. Course, you did post a good 10 minutes before I finished editing my post. 
There is a doubt, true, but as Herra stated, scans and testing have solidly indicated that at about week 20 there is a chance of survival, being very conservative. Before this, terminating a pregnancy is not ending a "life" as the life never had a chance to occur in the first place.