Delmar
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2011
- Messages
- 6,766
- Likes
- 13,757
Just because a baby is viable or not shouldn't be a decision whether it should be killed. Frankly I'd be amazed if a woman carried a child to 20 weeks and then decided to kill it.I've stated on numerous occasions that I agree with the medical concensus of 20 weeks as being viable outside of the womb and disagreed with abortion past that point. Had you bothered to ask, I'd have gladly told you.
Before you cast judgment from your ivory tower of moral truth, don't forget to chime in on what gives your opinion on the matter more weight than the medical decisions of people that aren't you.
I've painted the tower Orange for obvious reasons. Please dont miscolor my tower, thanks.I've stated on numerous occasions that I agree with the medical concensus of 20 weeks as being viable outside of the womb and disagreed with abortion past that point. Had you bothered to ask, I'd have gladly told you.
Before you cast judgment from your ivory tower of moral truth, don't forget to chime in on what gives your opinion on the matter more weight than the medical decisions of people that aren't you.
Who cares? Are they taking a knee and flipping off the flag before they collect a few hundred thou for hating the USA?
What are you going to do when he wins re-election? Please post a picture of your head exploding.It pisses Trump off almost as much as being forced to cancel the Jax convention and having to pretend its because he cares about safety and battling the virus.
You know, he reads those comments.
And the moment he speaks for himself he just flat contradicts himself and proves himself the fool for the 1000th time.
Millions of Americans have health problems that increase their risk for COVID-19 complications
About 40 percent of adults in the U.S. have at least one underlying health condition that would put them at risk for severe complications of COVID-19
When the study authors looked at each county, they found wide health disparities in the rates of five chronic conditions: obesity, Type 2 diabetes, kidney disease, heart disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. In some counties, about 1 in 4 people had at least one of those chronic conditions. That number rose to about 2 in 3 in other counties.
"Counties with the highest prevalences of any condition were concentrated in Southeastern states, particularly in Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee and West Virginia, as well as some counties in Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas and northern Michigan," the study authors wrote.
The problem pretty much is rectifying itself. As things get worse, businesses are starting to mandate masks. Hopefully they won't have to put attendants in the bathrooms to make sure you wash your hands.
Too many people take it personal, like a judge telling you to go put on a collared shirt, or a tie or something. You won't see me shaming anyone for not having one, but that doesn't mean that peer pressure won't eventually wear people down.