The insanity known as free-birthing and the cultlike behavior of free-birthing groups have fortunately received some long-needed attention and exposure recently, but it has been around and caused tragedies for a while. The Nebraska Birth Keepers (NBK), for instance, was one group affiliated with the radical free birth movement, espousing the idea that women do not need medical intervention to deliver babies. Of course, Birth Keepers do not have medical training nor do they hold licenses to practice midwifery; they nevertheless attempted to help women have a “natural” birth experience with as limited assistance as possible. Their services were not cheap.
According to Angela Hock, founder of the NBK, “[t]hough I possess knowledge in many birthing techniques, I am a natural undisturbed home birth advocate. I believe that we were created to birth without invention and that women possess the God-given wisdom and intuition to birth their babies free from regulation.” After all, women have given birth without medical assistance for thousands of years, so why start now? Given the deranged delusional fantasies of its members, it is perhaps little surprise that NBK was also a member of the Private Membership Association, a group that thinks any government regulations and laws do not bind them – Hock herself encouraged potential clients to join the association (for a fee) because it promised members “immunity from the law.”
Well, it didn’t. Hock herself got in trouble in 2019 when she was charged with negligent child abuse resulting in death after an infant died during a home birth where she served as “midwife”: Hock apparently knew for several hours that the baby was in a breech position but continued with the home birth and did not call for medical help. Predictably, Hock tried to cast herself (rather than e.g. the dead infant) as the victim in her GoFundMe to raise legal funds for her case: “The state of Nebraska is waging a war on the birthing women’s right to choose,” said Hock, citing a putative “relentless move to harass [crazy conspiracy theorists who want to provide midwife services but who are not Certified Nurse Midwifes], prosecute them and drive them out of existence”. After all, “Death of babies happens in the hospitals”, too, “and when it does, nobody is criminally charged” – which is false while also omitting the rather relevant fact that deaths of babies in hospitals tend to be the result of doctors doing everything they can to save a baby and mother rather than refusing to call for help when it is obviously needed and would have saved the baby if it had arrived in time. Following the legal proceedings, Hock was apparently acquitted of the charges but was at least restricted from practicing midwifery.
Diagnosis: Yes, parents may have the legal right to choose her services rather than safe and effective procedures, but do not suggest that there isn’t deception involved in how Hock and her fellow dingbat New Age fundies market their services: deception born of wild-eyed self-deception but deception nonetheless. Although barred from practicing midwifery, we have no doubt that the rank lunacy of Angela Hock continues to pose a major threat to the health and well-being of her surroundings.



