@mcjuggernuggets / Instagram

Popular YouTuber Jesse Ridgway is facing intense backlash after revealing that he and his wife terminated their pregnancy following a prenatal diagnosis of Down syndrome, sparking a heated national conversation about disability, abortion, and the value of human life.

Ridgway, whose YouTube channel McJuggerNuggets has more than 4 million subscribers, first shared the news in a post on X, saying, “This week, my wife and I made the very difficult decision to terminate the pregnancy due to Trisomy 21.”

“The choice was not made lightly,” he added. “We are devastated. This has been extremely traumatic for both of us.”

The influencer couple later defended their decision during interviews with TMZ Live and Page Six, saying they hoped to normalize conversations surrounding prenatal diagnoses and abortion.

Ashley Ridgway said she wants to be a “voice” for women facing similar situations and show them “that this is a normal thing.”

Jesse Ridgway said he initially felt optimistic after learning about the diagnosis but changed his perspective after researching the condition.

“I signed on to be a parent, come what may … but I just didn’t fully understand what Down syndrome entailed,” he said.

He later added, “That more than likely, I will have to bury my son. That is not what I wanted to sign up for.”

Ridgway also described Down syndrome as “objectively sh— from a health perspective,” pointing to medical complications often associated with the condition, including heart defects, developmental delays, and hearing or vision problems.

The announcement quickly went viral online, drawing strong reactions from pro-life advocates, Christian leaders, and parents of children with Down syndrome.

House Speaker Mike Johnson responded on X by emphasizing the biblical belief that every person is made in the image of God.

“Our value is inherent, because it is given to us by our loving Heavenly Father,” Johnson wrote. “When a culture devolves to the point of depravity where ‘influencers’ can go online and so casually dismiss the deliberate murder of their own precious child, the survival of that culture itself is at risk.”

Former Planned Parenthood clinic director turned pro-life advocate Abby Johnson also condemned the decision, writing, “Your baby was brutally and torturously murdered in his mother’s womb… the place that should have been the safest.”

Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life of America, stressed that disability does not lessen a person’s value.

“To every person who is reading and has Down syndrome, cystic fibrosis or another potentially fatal genetic disability, I hope you know your life has just as much value as anyone else,” Hawkins wrote. “Yes, your life will be physically harder, but life is always worth living.”

Many parents of children with Down syndrome also shared emotional responses online.

“My son has Down syndrome and he’s one of the best things that ever happened to me,” one user wrote. “Modern medicine can do so much for them.”

Sarah St. Onge, a mother who carried her daughter to term after receiving a severe fetal diagnosis, told The Christian Post she was “sickened” by the celebration surrounding the abortion.

“Children rely on their parents to protect them,” she said. “When something like this becomes socially acceptable, it often evolves into a social obligation.”

Despite the backlash, Ridgway defended his decision and said he and his wife have received death threats and hateful messages from critics.

“I’ve never seen such hate and vitriol for two people grieving the loss of their unborn child and making an impossible decision,” he wrote. “The last 24 hours have exposed a side of humanity that is deeply disturbing.”

The controversy has reignited debate over selective abortions tied to prenatal diagnoses. A 2012 study published in Prenatal Diagnosis estimated that 60% to 90% of babies diagnosed with Down syndrome in the United States are aborted before birth.

For many Christians responding online, the issue ultimately comes back to one core belief: every life, regardless of disability or hardship, carries God-given dignity and worth.

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