We have the so called war on women yet this real war with real lives on the line is largely ignored.
Some can ignore that 3,561 unborn Americans die every day in abortion clinics and hospitals, where care cannot be denied due to the laws that were created to accommodate the Roe v. Wade decision.
It was a court and medical issue, determining that adults have rights and unborn infants who cannot strike back or defend themselves have none.
The Congress would have to have 2/3rds majorities in both houses willing to vote against it.
The unborn are screwed. When the mothers realize what they have agreed to to eliminate their inconvenience, it's too late to put the baby back in the womb.
All we can do as human beings is pray for a broken world.
Thanks, Grandpa Murked U, for addressing a heart and soul-wrenching problem that seems to have no end in sight, except to make room for foreign invasion in place of the 1.3 million American deaths per annum.
Maybe we didn't do too good of a job of caring for children being born in the century leading up to the decision of the Supreme Court, and maybe the jurists (as I understood it at the time) were under the impression at the time that a medical necessity would result in no more than 10,000 abortions for women who would die if they continued a pregnancy.
Arguing it only weighs down the person who was guided to get an abortion and later regretted it. It's a sorry debate, and if people could be convinced family values are necessary for the future, it would be winnable. I've tried, and I know I haven't the debate skills to change anyone's mind on this issue.
Some men love it, because it removes their responsibility of paying child support for 18 years to someone they considered a toy object at the time they were helping create it. Some women really don't want to have children, and are willing to do anything to not be weighed down with what they think is a burden of having to raise the child of someone who raped them, was too forceful, and who doesn't love them enough to want to share in parental obligations for one night of ecstasy.
The issue has rended families and wrought a lack of reconciliation.
It's like the person who encounters a small leak in a dike, only to be washed away into the ocean at midnight if he didn't think it was all that important.