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Archives for April 2010

Double standard or reality?

April 8, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

I like this ad, and I disagree with the criticism. We have way too many Hollywood starlets breaking up their families, for example, as if it works out hunky dory for everyone, when the reality is that wealth does smooth over some (not all) of the difficulties. Since personal trainers/make-up artists/nanny support etc. aren’t available to everyone, why shouldn’t we stare those facts in the face? Bristol Palin is in a unique situation. And it would be wrong not to acknowledge that.

That said, the next ad could address all the difficulties for a child, whether rich or poor, privileged or not, of growing up fatherless…

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Here’s the quick answer: Yes

April 8, 2010 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

Apparently, some people find time to wonder whether “chexting” is cheating. What a world.

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The insanity of “choice” – part 32938120 in a long series

April 8, 2010 by Brigitte Pellerin 4 Comments

A man is accused of causing his pregnant girlfriend to have a miscarriage. He is charged with “criminal homicide of an unborn child, first-degree murder of an unborn child, aggravated assault of an unborn child, aggravated assault, hindering apprehension or prosecution, and tampering with or fabricating physical evidence.” The charge that sticks out, here, as I’m sure you’ve all noticed, is the murder one.

The charges are based on the following events, according to police:

The victim, a 36-year-old woman from Sayre and a pharmacist at a Wegmans Market, said she had a two-year physical relationship with Tercero, also a Wegmans pharmacist.

Tercero was engaged to another woman at the time.

The victim, whose name is being withheld by this newspaper, told Tercero she was pregnant in mid-January.

Tercero told the woman he could use the drug misoprostol to induce a miscarriage. The victim told Tercero she would get an abortion instead.

The victim, however, made a Feb. 24 appointment for an abortion but changed her mind. She called Tercero to tell him she would keep the baby.

In late February, on the victim’s birthday, Tercero visited her at home and used misoprostol he allegedly stole from Wegmans pharmacy to cause the miscarriage.

Without her knowing it, Tercero put one pill in her vagina, one in her juice and one in her water. She was 13 weeks pregnant at the time.

When the victim began to miscarry, she found a partially dissolved misoprostol tablet among the discharge.

Tercero drove the victim to Robert Packer Hospital in Sayre, where she miscarried.

Where to begin?

One: I am terribly sorry for her loss. Two: I agree with the charge; if the accusations are proven in court, this man is guilty intentionally of ending the life of a human being. Three: I can’t help but note that had the woman voluntarily swallowed those pills, we would never have heard of her and nobody would have been charged with anything, yet that same unborn human being would still be dead.

That doesn’t make much sense to me.

[h/t]

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From the UK

April 8, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

David Cameron, Conservative leader in the upcoming election, says he would support a reduction in the abortion limit from 24 to 22 or 20 weeks.

The usual suspects chime in. It’s so rare! And it’s only for those who are really disadvantaged! And our position is so precarious, we can’t suffer the smallest change.

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It doesn’t take an expert to know this

April 7, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

I don’t think it takes a doctrinal expert to know that Catholics for Choice is a bit like Vegetarians for Meat. Come on. Really? You guys have been spending too much time with Nancy Pelosi. And on that note, I think it bears adding that this isn’t an active Canadian group, so far as I can tell.

Anyway, they are criticizing the maternal health mandate. I think it serves their purposes to do so, as part of the healthcare debate south of the border.

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The art of political compromise

April 7, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

This is a reasonable proposal on the maternal health initiative, sure. It’s like this: If someone wants to kill their spouse, but decides they don’t actually want to do the dirty deed, then it is reasonable to hire someone else to do it. You see? Reasonable.

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An interesting example

April 7, 2010 by Brigitte Pellerin 1 Comment

A reader sent a link to this story (in French) about the recent decision to ban strip clubs in Iceland. I’d vaguely heard about it, but didn’t pay it much mind – I always thought Iceland was a bit of a weirdo kinda place. Maybe I should have (my translation):

But isn’t dancing in legal clubs better than clandestine prostitution? Feminists disagree. ‘The presence of dancing bars increases prostitution instead of reducing it,’ says Katrin Anna Gudmundsdottir. ‘If we want to fight prostitution and the traffic of women, we cannot accept that women should be akin to something you can buy and sell.

‘Prostitution isn’t the world’s oldest profession, it’s probably the world’s oldest oppression,’ says Ms. Gudmundsdottir. ‘We can’t make it less dangerous by legalizing it. It is a form of violence, so we have no choice but to make it illegal. We may not succeed in eliminating all forms of prostitution right away, but one day, when we have more equality and liberty, prostitution will be inconceivable.'”

I’m not sure exactly how realistic this woman’s position is, but I don’t really care. Maybe she’s a touch too idealistic. But so what? Isn’t her ideal worth pursuing? Wouldn’t you rather live in a world where buying and selling sexual services from other humans would be virtually inconceivable?

I think so. And now I’m thinking: What lessons can those of us who would prefer to live in a world where the indiscriminate killing of “inconvenient” or “unwanted” unborn babies is virtually inconceivable learn from this example?

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“Womanliness first—afterwards what you will”

April 7, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

If you are even just the smallest bit interested in this idea called “feminism”–read this article. It identifies “social feminism” as contrasted with “egalitarian feminism.” Most to all of the totally wacked out (inside voice, Andrea!) feminists in today’s public square, in academia and in politics are “egalitarian feminists.” This means they downplay or don’t believe in gender differences. Those feminists are trying to erase social feminists from history, says the author Christina Hoff Sommers. Or they villify them, because they stood up in favour of women’s rights whilst expecting that women still could conduct themselves as ladies. Hence the post title from one such social feminist, Frances Willard, who said that “with the vote, women could protect the homes they dearly loved. Indeed, Willard referred to the vote as ‘the home protection ballot.'” Interesting.

Whereas social feminists ask for an even playing field–equality of opportunity–while allowing women and men to turn toward their natural inclinations.

This is where my moment of eureka came in. Because egalitarian feminists don’t appreciate women’s natural inclinations (or men’s, but that we already knew). They want me (and the rest of you, too) to be an engineer “just like my mom.” Where a woman’s inclination is more inclined toward hearth and home, where women’s inclination takes them out of the business/political (public) world, then an egalitarian feminist can’t support that, because this would perpetuate the idea that the world is “run by men.”

Exposés on feminist theory that are reasonable (as opposed to shrill or bitter) are hard to come by. I recommend this (long-ish) article.

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The $27,400 question

April 6, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek 4 Comments

Why did Status of Women Canada fund a pro-abortion group to do a disinformation campaign about crisis pregnancy centres?

Your tax dollars at work.

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Take a pill

April 6, 2010 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

This writer claims she is so very rational and logical and reasonable. Methinks she doth protest too much. 

She responds to someone who says she wants to broaden the discussion about The Pill, asking:

If you’re just asking questions and broadening the discussion, why is it so wrong to come to the conclusion that you want to be on the pill?  Why the self-flagellation, if this is about broadening the discussion?

The answer to that, I think, is pretty simple: A very high percentage of women are on The Pill and unaware of side effects of The Pill. They are unaware of any effective replacements for The Pill. I think statistics say 90 per cent of women will be on The Pill at some point in their lives. Therefore, any broadening of the discussion ain’t going to start with getting more women on it.

She’s allowed to rant and defend The Pill and call it natural and do whatever she wants… it’s her web site. I just somewhat resent her doing so as an ambassador of logic. She’s just as emotional as the rest of us.

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