NFBW230121-
#6,817 • Addressing the Jesus Police regulating menstruation
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electra221006-
#92 elektra • “Viability? All babies are viable if you do not abort them”
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electra221006-
#100 “…. stop the barbaric procedure of removing life from where life grows, inside the womb, which deserves more protections than anything else in this world.”
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NFBW221006-
#101 So to have a Jesus police state protect the “life” inside every uterus where life grows / do you white Christian Jesus do-gooders with high tech innovations, implant chips in girls 10 and up to monitor menstrual cycles ? Then, if a fertile female misses a period, you get a search warrant to go in and inspect the uterus to see what is going on? •••• Or is what happens in a uterus a private matter / and we need to keep the Christian National state JESUS POLICE out
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HeyNorm230121-
#6,818 Hey, your the one putting a certain number of weeks on the viability question and want women to register the day they had intercourse as to not break the law. Right? •••• Why do you hate women?
NFBW: Do you, Mr, Masculinity Morality Police sans vagina
HeyNorm support and vote for Republican religious lawmakers and governors who pass and sign into laws forcing all women who become pregnant to have a mandatory government required invasive medical procedure called a
transvaginal ultrasound, which involves the insertion of an ultrasound wand into the vagina, that is being made mandatory by so-called "pro-life" activists I call Jesus Morality Policeeirj.
YES or No ?????
If you do, would you support an equally invasive procedure on the sperm donor such as inserting a probe up your ass to find out if your brain is directly connected to your ass.
NFBW: Do you, Mr, Masculinity Morality Police sans uterus
HeyNorm Do you support taxpayer funding of privacy invading clinics such as Prestonwood in Texas???????
NFBW|ultrasound NFBWprivacy “Ashley had gone to Prestonwood in hopes of getting an ultrasound and information about abortion. She has a medical condition that puts her at high risk of an ectopic pregnancy, in which a fertilized egg implants outside the uterus. An egg cannot survive the condition, which can also threaten the life of the pregnant person.
But Ashley says the
Prestonwood counselor told her, falsely, that she could carry an ectopic pregnancy to term if she was “careful,” and urged her to delay a decision to terminate the pregnancy. “I said, ‘OK, so you want me to wait until it becomes illegal for me to get an abortion?’” Ashley recalls, referring to a recent
Texas law that bans abortions after roughly six weeks of pregnancy. After leaving the center, Ashley broke down in tears in her car. A Prestonwood spokesperson told TIME that it “abides by all relevant laws and regulations,” respects client privacy, and prioritizes “the health of both mother and child.” •••• Ashley was later able to see a doctor and terminate her pregnancy within the time period that Texas law still allows. But her visit to Prestonwood haunted her. In her interactions with the center, both over the phone and in person, she had unknowingly provided a ream of personal information to a religious anti-abortion group. She began to wonder what they would do with that data. “They scanned my ID. They know where I live, they know my name, they have my f-cking license number. It felt like a completely different violation.” •••• Small, locally operated pregnancy centers first cropped up in the 1960s, as
mostly Catholic groups looked to prevent abortion by offering mothers counseling and social-service referrals. After the Supreme Court established a constitutional right to abortion in 1973,
larger groups, including evangelical activists, joined the so-called “pregnancy help movement,” according to the Charlotte Lozier Institute, an anti-abortion think tank associated with Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America.
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