Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harris said no religious exceptions. She wants to force Catholic doctors and hospitals to perform abortions.
Good. In some places, the only hospital is unfortunately a Catholic hospital. And now that the conservatives have gotten rid of any abortion clinics, it is what it is.
Just because you are Catholic, doesn't mean the rest of us are. Leave us alone, give us a choice, and you can do what you want.
You say we can do what we want, but we do not want to kill babies.
Anonymous wrote:I’m pro choice and will be voting blue regardless, but am I the only woman who has never worried about getting pregnant?
I remember a high school health class (in the early 90s, amid nonstop AIDS hysteria, in an urban liberal secular area) when we were asked what we feared more: pregnancy or HIV. I was the only girl out of dozens who was more concerned about the thing that could kill me.
Obviously there were points in my life when I would not have welcomed a pregnancy, but so many women seem to be in a constant state of terror over it, and I’ve simply never understood it. There are so many ways to avoid pregnancy (I remember being 23, horny but a student with big plans, and I was on birth control, used a condom, made him pull out, AND made sure it wasn’t during my ovulation window; iuds weren’t even a thing back then), and yes, of course shit sometimes happens and it’s necessary or a good idea to abort, and I think it should be accessible and safe to do so, but there’s no reason to fret over it 24/7. I feel like I missed some fundamental part of being a woman in that I didn’t spend thirty years obsessing over possibly getting pregnant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m pro choice and will be voting blue regardless, but am I the only woman who has never worried about getting pregnant?
I remember a high school health class (in the early 90s, amid nonstop AIDS hysteria, in an urban liberal secular area) when we were asked what we feared more: pregnancy or HIV. I was the only girl out of dozens who was more concerned about the thing that could kill me.
Obviously there were points in my life when I would not have welcomed a pregnancy, but so many women seem to be in a constant state of terror over it, and I’ve simply never understood it. There are so many ways to avoid pregnancy (I remember being 23, horny but a student with big plans, and I was on birth control, used a condom, made him pull out, AND made sure it wasn’t during my ovulation window; iuds weren’t even a thing back then), and yes, of course shit sometimes happens and it’s necessary or a good idea to abort, and I think it should be accessible and safe to do so, but there’s no reason to fret over it 24/7. I feel like I missed some fundamental part of being a woman in that I didn’t spend thirty years obsessing over possibly getting pregnant.
I have a friend who died immediately after giving birth. Like 5 minutes after they put the baby on her chest.
I’m sorry for your loss. I too know someone who died in childbirth. However I don’t think the large number of women in a constant state of panic over potentially getting pregnant are thinking about the possibility of dying.
Well given the way maternal health care is in this country, especially for black women, maybe they should start caring about it. Especially with the onset of abortion bans.
Anyone who studies history knows that pregnancy and childbirth were the leading cause of death among women of childbearing age in the 19th and well into the 20th century.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think this whole abortion ban will back fire. The minorities have higher birth rate, and eventually this will not be a white christian nation.
Until 2022, Republicans got votes from pro-lifers for pretending to be pro-life, while Democrats killed off their future voters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m pro choice and will be voting blue regardless, but am I the only woman who has never worried about getting pregnant?
I remember a high school health class (in the early 90s, amid nonstop AIDS hysteria, in an urban liberal secular area) when we were asked what we feared more: pregnancy or HIV. I was the only girl out of dozens who was more concerned about the thing that could kill me.
Obviously there were points in my life when I would not have welcomed a pregnancy, but so many women seem to be in a constant state of terror over it, and I’ve simply never understood it. There are so many ways to avoid pregnancy (I remember being 23, horny but a student with big plans, and I was on birth control, used a condom, made him pull out, AND made sure it wasn’t during my ovulation window; iuds weren’t even a thing back then), and yes, of course shit sometimes happens and it’s necessary or a good idea to abort, and I think it should be accessible and safe to do so, but there’s no reason to fret over it 24/7. I feel like I missed some fundamental part of being a woman in that I didn’t spend thirty years obsessing over possibly getting pregnant.
I have a friend who died immediately after giving birth. Like 5 minutes after they put the baby on her chest.
I’m sorry for your loss. I too know someone who died in childbirth. However I don’t think the large number of women in a constant state of panic over potentially getting pregnant are thinking about the possibility of dying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m pro choice and will be voting blue regardless, but am I the only woman who has never worried about getting pregnant?
I remember a high school health class (in the early 90s, amid nonstop AIDS hysteria, in an urban liberal secular area) when we were asked what we feared more: pregnancy or HIV. I was the only girl out of dozens who was more concerned about the thing that could kill me.
Obviously there were points in my life when I would not have welcomed a pregnancy, but so many women seem to be in a constant state of terror over it, and I’ve simply never understood it. There are so many ways to avoid pregnancy (I remember being 23, horny but a student with big plans, and I was on birth control, used a condom, made him pull out, AND made sure it wasn’t during my ovulation window; iuds weren’t even a thing back then), and yes, of course shit sometimes happens and it’s necessary or a good idea to abort, and I think it should be accessible and safe to do so, but there’s no reason to fret over it 24/7. I feel like I missed some fundamental part of being a woman in that I didn’t spend thirty years obsessing over possibly getting pregnant.
Both things can kill you. For most of human history, women dying in childbirth was commonplace. It makes sense that girls feared pregnancy and childbirth more than HIV. Most of them didn’t anticipate contracting HIV, but expected to have biological children someday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harris said no religious exceptions. She wants to force Catholic doctors and hospitals to perform abortions.
Good. In some places, the only hospital is unfortunately a Catholic hospital. And now that the conservatives have gotten rid of any abortion clinics, it is what it is.
Just because you are Catholic, doesn't mean the rest of us are. Leave us alone, give us a choice, and you can do what you want.
You say we can do what we want, but we do not want to kill babies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Harris said no religious exceptions. She wants to force Catholic doctors and hospitals to perform abortions.
Good. In some places, the only hospital is unfortunately a Catholic hospital. And now that the conservatives have gotten rid of any abortion clinics, it is what it is.
Just because you are Catholic, doesn't mean the rest of us are. Leave us alone, give us a choice, and you can do what you want.
You say we can do what we want, but we do not want to kill babies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m pro choice and will be voting blue regardless, but am I the only woman who has never worried about getting pregnant?
I remember a high school health class (in the early 90s, amid nonstop AIDS hysteria, in an urban liberal secular area) when we were asked what we feared more: pregnancy or HIV. I was the only girl out of dozens who was more concerned about the thing that could kill me.
Obviously there were points in my life when I would not have welcomed a pregnancy, but so many women seem to be in a constant state of terror over it, and I’ve simply never understood it. There are so many ways to avoid pregnancy (I remember being 23, horny but a student with big plans, and I was on birth control, used a condom, made him pull out, AND made sure it wasn’t during my ovulation window; iuds weren’t even a thing back then), and yes, of course shit sometimes happens and it’s necessary or a good idea to abort, and I think it should be accessible and safe to do so, but there’s no reason to fret over it 24/7. I feel like I missed some fundamental part of being a woman in that I didn’t spend thirty years obsessing over possibly getting pregnant.
I have a friend who died immediately after giving birth. Like 5 minutes after they put the baby on her chest.
Anonymous wrote:I’m pro choice and will be voting blue regardless, but am I the only woman who has never worried about getting pregnant?
I remember a high school health class (in the early 90s, amid nonstop AIDS hysteria, in an urban liberal secular area) when we were asked what we feared more: pregnancy or HIV. I was the only girl out of dozens who was more concerned about the thing that could kill me.
Obviously there were points in my life when I would not have welcomed a pregnancy, but so many women seem to be in a constant state of terror over it, and I’ve simply never understood it. There are so many ways to avoid pregnancy (I remember being 23, horny but a student with big plans, and I was on birth control, used a condom, made him pull out, AND made sure it wasn’t during my ovulation window; iuds weren’t even a thing back then), and yes, of course shit sometimes happens and it’s necessary or a good idea to abort, and I think it should be accessible and safe to do so, but there’s no reason to fret over it 24/7. I feel like I missed some fundamental part of being a woman in that I didn’t spend thirty years obsessing over possibly getting pregnant.
A number of Republicans added to this by supporting a national abortion ban. McConnell doesn't want MAGA people winning House and Senate seats.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you not have daughters? Sisters? Nieces? What will you say to them when they need a D&C because they had a miscarriage and aren't able to get one and go into septic shock? What happens when their fallopian tube ruptures due to an ectopic pregnancy and they start bleeding internally? Does nobody think about the ramifications of their actions until it affects them individually? Southern states are trying to ban abortions in all instances - rape, incest, health of the mother. Why would you let your daughters, yourself, your nieces, your sisters, go through such pain? HOW IS THIS NOT IMPORTANT TO YOU!?! Why is your money more important than your health?
A D&C is not abortion. Managing an etopic pregnancy is not abortion.
Abortion isn't healthcare, despite the new spin.
Hello low-information non-medical professional making false statements about medical terms. This is just to inform you that just because you don’t like the actual medical category for a procedure does not mean you get to change the name of it.
Abortion means the early termination of a pregnancy before a fetus can live outside the womb - whether spontaneous or medically induced by pill or surgery. Even if that pregnancy was doomed. It is an abortion. This is why miscarriages are labeled abortion in a patient’s file. Ask me how I know.
I am a medical professional. You know exactly what she meant here. Removing a dead fetus is not an elective abortion.
I see women who have had more than 10 elective abortions. I see women who refuse to start prenatal vitamins because "I'm not sure if I'm keeping it. Depends on if the father steps up." This procedure is treated glibly and without the required seriousness. I started my career fully pro-choice but I've seen too much now.
I try not to judge, I really do but back in highschool I had a friend who had 7 yes 7 elective abortions. I faded out of her life. I understand where you are coming from pp I get it.
How many pregnancies and births have you endured? You think the stork brings you a nice big bouncing healthy baby? Pregnancy and birth is difficult and bloody and things can go sideways very quickly and they do. Mind your own damn business is very good advice.
Your comment makes zero sense. They had a choice of something called "birth control" instead of 8 abortions.
If you think birth control is important then do not vote for Donald Trump. Do you have a brain or is it just like a pile of mush inside your skull?.
Do you have a brain? He hasn’t proposed banning birth control. He hasn’t proposed banning IVF either. He hasn’t even proposed a nationwide abortion ban. Harris and Democrats are saying those things to frighten women into voting for them. You are too dumb to see it. Harris knows she won’t be able to do anything for abortion rights as President, but she will use it as a wedge issue to scare dumb women like you into voting for her.
Anonymous wrote:I’m pro choice and will be voting blue regardless, but am I the only woman who has never worried about getting pregnant?
I remember a high school health class (in the early 90s, amid nonstop AIDS hysteria, in an urban liberal secular area) when we were asked what we feared more: pregnancy or HIV. I was the only girl out of dozens who was more concerned about the thing that could kill me.
Obviously there were points in my life when I would not have welcomed a pregnancy, but so many women seem to be in a constant state of terror over it, and I’ve simply never understood it. There are so many ways to avoid pregnancy (I remember being 23, horny but a student with big plans, and I was on birth control, used a condom, made him pull out, AND made sure it wasn’t during my ovulation window; iuds weren’t even a thing back then), and yes, of course shit sometimes happens and it’s necessary or a good idea to abort, and I think it should be accessible and safe to do so, but there’s no reason to fret over it 24/7. I feel like I missed some fundamental part of being a woman in that I didn’t spend thirty years obsessing over possibly getting pregnant.
Anonymous wrote:
I think this whole abortion ban will back fire. The minorities have higher birth rate, and eventually this will not be a white christian nation.