How do you feel about women making decisions about their own reproductive health?
If you don’t think women should be allowed to have abortions, how do you reconcile that with the goal of “not ramming your religion down other people’s throats”?
If you do think women should be allowed to have abortions, are you really a Christian conservative?
I do feel that it’s a woman’s body and her choice however I do feel that going as far as having an abortion on demand at the moment up until birth is outrageous.
I PERSONALLY feel, that, (I’m gunna be Blunt here) guys should pull the fuck out. I think we need to be holding are men accountable just as much on this issue because the woman didn’t get her self pregnant. I just feel like guys get away Scott free on this and it isn’t right.
Honestly I think abortion altogether is really sad despite what the woman does But ultimately it should really be up to her. Yes there’s a lot of support for single mothers and stuff like that that the Republican Party talks about but what I don’t like is, well where are they actually going to be when the child is born?
Like let’s get real guys. Most women who go the single mother route are in poverty.
Good question. Idk, maybe I’m a 2023 type of conservative Christian. I believe that God forgives and understands. And that life isn’t like it was in 1700 BC
Fair answer. There’s no denying that men should have a lot of (and a lot more) accountability in pregnancy, but that’s kind of beside the point in the debate around abortion rights.
I don’t think most people would defend the right to an abortion once the fetus becomes viable, nor do I think many women get abortions so late. I don’t have the stats on that, but I’m pretty sure that’s all just extreme scare-mongering from the anti-abortion lobby. They’re trying to prevent any abortion and use extremely rare/non-existent scenarios to push that agenda.
There is also a huge range of scenarios under which a women might want an abortion. I have a personal example. A very close family member of mine had an abortion when she and her husband were actively trying to have a second child. The fetus was not growing and multiple doctors confirmed that the pregnancy was going to result in a miscarriage at some point, but it was unclear when that would happen. Instead of waiting potentially months for a surprise miscarriage to happen, she decided to have an at-home abortion using mifepristone. It was purely out of bodily autonomy. Now conservative Christians are trying to take that right away from her and thousands of women in the same position.
I guess my point is that the big debate is whether women should be able to get an abortion at all or not. I believe conservative Christian leaders are resolute in stating that any abortion is anti-Christian and anti-conservative, so you might be less of one that you think.
How do you feel about women making decisions about their own reproductive health?
If you don’t think women should be allowed to have abortions, how do you reconcile that with the goal of “not ramming your religion down other people’s throats”?
If you do think women should be allowed to have abortions, are you really a Christian conservative?
I do feel that it’s a woman’s body and her choice however I do feel that going as far as having an abortion on demand at the moment up until birth is outrageous.
I PERSONALLY feel, that, (I’m gunna be Blunt here) guys should pull the fuck out. I think we need to be holding are men accountable just as much on this issue because the woman didn’t get her self pregnant. I just feel like guys get away Scott free on this and it isn’t right.
Honestly I think abortion altogether is really sad despite what the woman does But ultimately it should really be up to her. Yes there’s a lot of support for single mothers and stuff like that that the Republican Party talks about but what I don’t like is, well where are they actually going to be when the child is born?
Like let’s get real guys. Most women who go the single mother route are in poverty.
Good question. Idk, maybe I’m a 2023 type of conservative Christian. I believe that God forgives and understands. And that life isn’t like it was in 1700 BC
Fair answer. There’s no denying that men should have a lot of (and a lot more) accountability in pregnancy, but that’s kind of beside the point in the debate around abortion rights.
I don’t think most people would defend the right to an abortion once the fetus becomes viable, nor do I think many women get abortions so late. I don’t have the stats on that, but I’m pretty sure that’s all just extreme scare-mongering from the anti-abortion lobby. They’re trying to prevent any abortion and use extremely rare/non-existent scenarios to push that agenda.
There is also a huge range of scenarios under which a women might want an abortion. I have a personal example. A very close family member of mine had an abortion when she and her husband were actively trying to have a second child. The fetus was not growing and multiple doctors confirmed that the pregnancy was going to result in a miscarriage at some point, but it was unclear when that would happen. Instead of waiting potentially months for a surprise miscarriage to happen, she decided to have an at-home abortion using mifepristone. It was purely out of bodily autonomy. Now conservative Christians are trying to take that right away from her and thousands of women in the same position.
I guess my point is that the big debate is whether women should be able to get an abortion at all or not. I believe conservative Christian leaders are resolute in stating that any abortion is anti-Christian and anti-conservative, so you might be less of one that you think.
Why did you change accounts?