Have to run - but.
Nov. 7th, 2008 07:03 amSome links -
Yes, they actually 'bury' the hatchet...it's a tradition in that part of the country.
Something I already knew. Unplanned pregnancy does not always equal unwanted pregnancy - and in the evangelical circles, that's more the case than not.
One way to stop abortions, say I - but there's obviously more to it than that.
Gotta run. Talk later.
One week to birthday weekend!
Yes, they actually 'bury' the hatchet...it's a tradition in that part of the country.
Something I already knew. Unplanned pregnancy does not always equal unwanted pregnancy - and in the evangelical circles, that's more the case than not.
One way to stop abortions, say I - but there's obviously more to it than that.
Gotta run. Talk later.
One week to birthday weekend!
no subject
Date: 2008-11-07 04:22 pm (UTC)bullshit.
The evangelicals backed Palin on the Bristol/pregnancy issue because Palin is their girl. If it had been Obama's child who was a pregnant teen, even if she kept the baby, the evangelicals would have gutted the family.
See, e.g., Bill O'Reilly's reaction to Jamie Lynn-Spears's pregnancy vs. his opinion on Palin's pregnancy. When it was JLS, O'Reilly said her pregnancy proved her parents were irresponsible and she was a pinhead. When it was Bristol Palin, O'Reilly said it was a private family matter.
We get kids of religious families on
Also, while girls in religious families may be pressured by their families into having their children (sometimes they're also pressured into abortion by those "religious" families, btw), I don't see that as a good thing because pressure is unacceptable. And they are often subjected to hate and guilt for having a baby that is now their family's problem.