OT Roe V Wade In Trouble

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Never said it didn't ...I'm never clicking on your links...you should know by now..I choose my own reading material. Sex is an addiction too...they talk about that? If you've read the article you should be able to say what you got from it.
 
Never said it didn't ...I'm never clicking on your links...you should know by now..I choose my own reading material. Sex is an addiction too...they talk about that? If you've read the article you should be able to say what you got from it.

"On July 15, the academic journal JAMA Pediatrics published a study that examines how drug abuse and the Opioid Epidemic have strained the foster care system in the United States. The researchers obtained their data from the Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System, a federal government information project. Almost 5 million children entered foster care between 2000 and 2017. There are many reasons why the authorities take children away from their parents, including neglect and child abuse. Drug addiction, especially addiction to opioids, is becoming an increasingly common reason. According to the study, 1,162,668 children entered the foster care system between 2000 and 2017 because of their parents’ drug addiction.

In many cases, state or local authorities determined that the parents were too addicted to drugs to adequately care for their children. Additionally, in other cases, the parents sometimes died from drug overdoses or went to prison for using or selling illegal drugs. In all of these situations, if the parents lacked relatives who could care for their children, their children entered the custody of the state.

In 2000, drug addiction was the cause of only about 15% of foster care entrances. By 2017, that percentage had grown to 36%."
 
"On July 15, the academic journal JAMA Pediatrics published a study that examines how drug abuse and the Opioid Epidemic have strained the foster care system in the United States. The researchers obtained their data from the Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System, a federal government information project. Almost 5 million children entered foster care between 2000 and 2017. There are many reasons why the authorities take children away from their parents, including neglect and child abuse. Drug addiction, especially addiction to opioids, is becoming an increasingly common reason. According to the study, 1,162,668 children entered the foster care system between 2000 and 2017 because of their parents’ drug addiction.

In many cases, state or local authorities determined that the parents were too addicted to drugs to adequately care for their children. Additionally, in other cases, the parents sometimes died from drug overdoses or went to prison for using or selling illegal drugs. In all of these situations, if the parents lacked relatives who could care for their children, their children entered the custody of the state.

In 2000, drug addiction was the cause of only about 15% of foster care entrances. By 2017, that percentage had grown to 36%."
15%-36% is a real minority...my post was more realistic...underaged pregnancy and sex addiction by the adult responsible...in many cases a pedophile or in some a relative, priest, teacher or irresponsible adult ......still not sure you read the article...you should try putting what you read into your own words instead of cutting and pasting. that would actually be a conversation...my mother and father were both orphaned in the Great Depression and it was because of poverty created by 3 years of drought. Mother reunited with her biological mom after she was 18 with her younger brother. Father went to the war as did his 3 brothers
 
15%-36% is a real minority...my post was more realistic...underaged pregnancy and sex addiction by the adult responsible...in many cases a pedophile or in some a relative, priest, teacher or irresponsible adult ......still not sure you read the article...you should try putting what you read into your own words instead of cutting and pasting. that would actually be a conversation...my mother and father were both orphaned in the Great Depression and it was because of poverty created by 3 years of drought. Mother reunited with her biological mom after she was 18 with her younger brother. Father went to the war as did his 3 brothers

So, you're claiming a big reason kids go to foster homes is because of "irresponsible sperm donors preying upon girls and women ....then going back to their wives and congregations"
 
So, you're claiming a big reason kids go to foster homes is because of "irresponsible sperm donors preying upon girls and women ....then going back to their wives and congregations"
sure, it's part of it...especially in our current culture .so is the loss of parents due to death , victims of war, refugees, etc.......but yes...unwanted pregnancies in the teen population that result in orphans is often due to irresponsible men in various positions of power or influence that impose their will on innocent children... my parents case it was the dust bowl and my mother's father died with her brother from pneumonia in the winter leaving her mom and the kids without ways and means. All of this adds to children without parents ...you don't want Planned Parenthood and abortion yet never adopted any of them...ok ..I consider the source
 
Just ABM trying to change the subject, again.
Women are not breeding cattle. There is no obligation for women to provide children for anyone who wants one, so long as the one is a healthy white baby.
 
Guest Host Chelsea Handler Has a Message for Men Everywhere

 
Naomi Klein: The US Is in the Midst of a 'Shock-and-Awe Judicial Coup'

"The rolling judicial coup coming from this court is by no means over," warned the author of "The Shock Doctrine."
 
Antiabortion lawmakers want to block patients from crossing state lines
Some advocacy groups and their allies are crafting legislative language that could be adopted in Republican-led state capitals.

Several national antiabortion groups and their allies in Republican-led state legislatures are advancing plans to stop people in states where abortion is banned from seeking the procedure elsewhere, according to people involved in the discussions.

The idea has gained momentum in some corners of the antiabortion movement in the days since the Supreme Court struck down its 49-year-old precedent protecting abortion rights nationwide, triggering abortion bans across much of the Southeast and Midwest.

The Thomas More Society, a conservative legal organization, is drafting model legislation for state lawmakers that would allow private citizens to sue anyone who helps a resident of a state that has banned abortion from terminating a pregnancy outside of that state. The draft language will borrow from the novel legal strategy behind a Texas abortion ban enacted last year in which private citizens were empowered to enforce the law through civil litigation.

The subject was much discussed at two national antiabortion conferences last weekend, with several lawmakers interested in introducing these kinds of bills in their own states.

The National Association of Christian Lawmakers, an antiabortion organization led by Republican state legislators, has begun working with the authors of the Texas abortion ban to explore model legislation that would restrict people from crossing state lines for abortions, said Texas state representative Tom Oliverson (R), the charter chair of the group’s national legislative council.

“Just because you jump across a state line doesn’t mean your home state doesn’t have jurisdiction,” said Peter Breen, vice president and senior counsel for the Thomas More Society. “It’s not a free abortion card when you drive across the state line.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/06/29/abortion-state-lines/
 
Child abuse victim, 10, who was six weeks pregnant is forced to travel from Ohio to Indiana for an abortion after home state outlaws it under Roe v Wade ruling
  • A child abuse victim, 10, travels out of state to get an abortion after her home state of Ohio barred the procedure following the Roe v. Wade ruling
  • Ohio enforced a six week ban on abortion following the overturn of the 1973 landmark Supreme Court case
  • The child was six weeks and three days pregnant, making her ineligible to get an abortion in Ohio
  • Dr. Caitlin Bernard, an OBGYN, assisted the minor after she traveled to Indiana for the procedure
  • Bernard has seen an increase of women coming from out of state to receive an abortion as restrictions in neighboring states are strongly enforced
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...six-weeks-pregnant-forced-abortion-state.html
 
Alabama is using this decision as the legal basis to block transgender health care.
 
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