Saturday, June 25, 2022

The arrogance is simply disgusting.

Yesterday, I thought if my 87 year old mother calls about this she will be overjoyed. That is what I sincerely thought simply because she is a woman that is a Catholic that attends mass daily and has since she retired in her early sixties. She takes a few plastic baby bottles every year during the annual fundraising for underpriviledged youth and fills them with loose change.

So, when the phone rang and it was her shortly after the VERDICT was announced I simply listened and she said, "What do they think they are doing to women and children?"

It turned out to be a rather interesting conversation from a woman I never expected to be that open minded about abortion. So, basically, with a very clear mind at that age, she stated, "They are judging people and not the law." I explained to her it is a political ambition and nothing more and she stated clearly to me again, "But, sweetheart, they are judging people. Even in the strickest terms of religion and politics it isn't anyone's place to judge others. No one has to endear every person to themselves as if their best friends, but, as Americans we do have to accept each other and elevate each other to live a good and decent life."

So, there you have it. My family is rather incredible. We are a large Irish-American family that values life and the comforts of liberty. We are educated folks. Yesterday's VERDICT by the Supreme Court was complete and absolute arrogance for personal and political directives and has absolutely nothing to do with quality of life.

Yesterday the United States Supreme Court passed judgement on the women of this country. As a result there will be mental health problems with women and with children. Adoption is not a substitute for abortion. There are lingering shadows to adoption and those shadows plague women and children all their lives. We are also not short on citizens. We have a healthy population and growing. Sometimes it grows more than other times, but, there is no reason to believe abortion was hindering the country, quite the contrary, it was allowing the people of this country to be fulfilled and prosperous.

There will be more government spending now. More women and men will be impoverished. There will be need for more government services and the Foster Care system will be over populated. Women will have babies and convince themselves and/or their families they can do a good job raising them, but, ultimately they will end up in poverty collecting welfare and food stamps and then when the children finally start to go to school an arrogant teacher will make a referral to social work and the circus of the Foster Care system will begin.

The Robert's Court is arrogant, lives in a world separate from mainstream America and is grossly affording themselves the highest form of malpractice of the laws of this country.

May 3, 2022
By Katheryn Joyce

Less abortion, more adoption. Why is that controversial?" (click here)

That was the response of Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, to Politico's bombshell revelation Monday night: a leaked Supreme Court majority opinion suggesting that we face the imminent reversal of Roe v. Wade.

About halfway through the 98-page opinion, which was authored by conservative Justice Samuel Alito — and which Chief Justice John Roberts acknowledged on Tuesday as genuine — came a familiar argument: that "modern developments," including the availability of "safe-haven" laws, which allow parents to anonymously relinquish babies without legal repercussions, have rendered abortion unnecessary. The opinion noted that "a woman who puts her newborn up for adoption today has little reason to fear that the baby will not find a suitable home."...

The the demonstrating begin, it is as it should be.
 
June 24, 2022
By Jason Green

San Francisco - Chanting for “legal abortion on demand,” (click here) thousands of people took to Bay Area streets Friday night to protest the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision overturning the landmark abortion rights case Roe v. Wade.

Across San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose, protesters decried an end to nearly fifty years of legal precedent that had allowed women to safely seek an abortion across the United States since 1973. In doing so, they joined abortion rights advocates across the nation in grieving the end of one era in American life, while vowing to win back those rights in the years to come.

As many as 3,000 people participated in a two-mile march across San Francisco on Friday evening, chanting “not the church, not the state — women will decide our fate,” while holding signs declaring “I dissent,” and “keep your rosaries off my ovaries.” At least two other protests against the Supreme Court’s decision also sprung up in the city — a show of solidary that stifled traffic as marchers crisscrossed downtown.

Honey Mahogany, a candidate for the San Francisco District 6 supervisor’s seat, vowed “we will not stand for it” before a crowd at the Phillips Burton Federal Building....