Posted on 12/02/2019 5:20:56 PM PST by Morgana
FULL TITLE: Military women are expected to be good soldiers and have abortions. Pete Buttigiegs plan would make it worse for them.
On November 11, presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg revealed his plan to help veterans, including by eliminating what he calls barriers to womens success in the armed forces. According to his campaign, the plan states that as president, Buttigieg would ensure womens health needs, including reproductive care, are accessible while they serve.
Abortion advocates have long been pushing for easier access to abortion for women in the military, claiming that women facing unplanned pregnancies need access to abortion in order to succeed. Buttigiegs comments prove that this thought process is alive and well. But is it true?
The rate of unplanned pregnancy in the military is actually higher much higher than the rate of unplanned pregnancy among civilians. According to the pro-abortion group Ibis Reproductive Health, there are about 72 unplanned pregnancies per 1,000 women of reproductive age in the military vs. 45 unplanned pregnancies per 1,000 civilian women.
Although both planned and unplanned pregnancy can be compatible with a successful military career, each has the potential to lead to a host of negative career impacts including a womans voluntary separation from military service or involuntary separation, said Ibis. [ ] Unintended pregnancy may compromise a womans career trajectory in a number of other ways [ and] may also force a woman to leave her military tour early, making career advancement more difficult.
Basically, the pro-abortion argument is that military women need abortion so that they can advance their careers. Once again, abortion and society pit women against their own children. The abortion industry forces women to choose between their career and their child and call it freedom.
Bethany Saros became pregnant while she was stationed in Iraq. Her relationship with the babys father did not last, and she knew she would have to choose her career or her baby with no support.
One of the stigmas attached to a female getting pregnant on a deployment is the assumption that she did it on purpose, Saros wrote in an essay for Salon. Its whispered about any time the word pregnancy comes up right before or during a combat tour. The unspoken code is that a good soldier will have an abortion, continue the mission, and get some sympathy because she chose duty over motherhood. But for the woman who chooses motherhood over duty, well, she must have been trying to get out of deployment.
When her military boyfriend broke up with her the day she told him she was pregnant, she said, I cant do an abortion. I just cant. So she didnt. With the blessing of her command sergeant major, she left the Army, despite all of the gossip that surrounded her decision. After all of her efforts to succeed in the military were undone because of a lack of support for single mothers, not because of a lack of abortion access.
But what about the other women the ones who feel they have to be good soldiers and have abortions? According to Jody Duffy, RN, a former Army officer and military spouse of 35 years, there are no concrete numbers of how many abortions occur among military women. A large number of them visit the military medical facility to verify they are pregnant, she explained, but they never go back. Instead, they likely visit a local abortion facility, or wait until they are on leave to have an abortion near home, making it impossible to determine how many abortions are occurring among military women. That decision to abort in order to protect their careers can lead to unforeseen problems down the road.
Duffy added:
The pain and grief of abortion only adds more stress and conflict to their lives. Whether it is the female soldier not wanting to sacrifice her military career or feeling pressured to fulfill her duty, or the male soldier feeling fatherhood may stand in the way of his mission, sacrificing our unborn children to abortion is an unfortunate and frequent reality of military life. Abortion decisions often involve varying degrees of pressure and conflict. This predisposes them to have more intense post abortion reactions and even trauma.
It is a tragedy that the women (and men) who serve the United States feel pressured to abort their own children in order to continue that mission. Duffy notes that the grief and regret women can feel from an unwanted abortion may follow them throughout their lives. As they return to civilian life at some point, those feelings wont fade and may contribute to the rising rate of suicide among young veterans, she explains.
So what has abortion solved for these women? Nothing. It has simply replaced their original so-called problem a baby with a new one. And thats what Buttigiegs plan supports, thereby further signaling to women that they arent good soldiers if they choose life, that they arent strong enough to be mothers and soldiers, and that the government isnt interested in helping them to have their babies only to have abortions.
What pregnant and parenting women in the military actually need is the same thing that pregnant and parenting civilian women need: support. Their careers should be protected while they take maternity leave. Resources should be available such as access to quality health care and baby gear. No woman who has dedicated her life to serving her country, and has already sacrificed so much in order to do so, should be expected to also sacrifice the life of her child.
Many female enlisted have used pregnancy to get out of their enlistment contract.
Many female enlisted have used pregnancy to get out of their enlistment contract
After many years in the military and during war time I never knew of any. Served with a lot of exemplary female personnel. On Deployment, getting shot at, too.
Many men have used abortion to get out of their fatherhood responsibilities
Dwell on that for a while
Didn’t say they weren’t good people. But the military life isn’t for everyone.
better than demanding they have abortions.
also will stop women from accidentally getting pregnant to avoid deployment.
Ugh boy.
How about coming up with, for men, a group I carcinogen, stroke inducing chemical that makes men unattractive to women (suppressing phermones) making them infertile and try to force them to take it.
Never happen. It would never be marketed, its never been in research phase. Men wont do it.
They put that burden on women
Didnt say they werent good people
Its exactly what you did
Want to succeed in the military? Don't get pregnant down range.
During 15 month XO tour on a DDG with 60 female enlisted we had one pregnancy a month, for a 25% unplanned turnover.
This isn’t counting the ones who reported onboard on a Monday and were gone by Wednesday due to pregnancy. Just facts as I experienced them.
My aunt was a navy wife, and she told me that a lot of female crew would turn up pregnant at the base clinic before their ship was supposed to go out.
They’d get shore duty and then most of them would have abortions. This was back in the eighties.
Not much excuse to get pregnant by accident these days. Either use a condom every time, or the pill, IUD, implant. Condom plus one of the others equals 0.01% chance of getting pregnant each year. You’d think the military would teach risk calculation.
Many young women will enjoy male attention too much when they are scarce. Wanton doesn’t think of consequences.
The other solution of course is chastity, very old school.
This “women need abortion for their careers” has been going on for decades too. Let the babies pay for careers with their lives; let the women who have a lurking conscience tear their hearts out, and let’s call that a compassionate and pro-woman society.
All of the women I was deployed with got out after we got back as far as I know. Most of them were mothers of small kids most had husbands.
Thats the officer corps. On a 12 month tour there was one woman who left pregnant it was soon after wed arrived not sure why that was
But the point I the article is to pressure women to have abortions
A woman who will leave a commitment by quitting - whatever means- is not a pregnancy problem. Its a character problem.
Pressuring people to have abortions or to go on birth control adds to the sickness of our culture
For every one of those women, there is a man involved in that pregnancy but he gets out of it. What is his responsibility? None?
Thats not logical
...60 female enlisted we had one pregnancy a month, for a 25% unplanned turnover.
Hmm. Immaculate conceptions? Or boys will be boys- theyre in no way responsible?
Blechh
When a female troop gets into the sack with a male troop she is planning a pregnancy. There are no unplanned pregnancies that are not due to rape.
In Buttplug’s ideal military, all those fags would have no interest in females, so no abortion problems.....
So, if some guy that works in an office, and makes rapid promotions suddenly shoots himself in the foot when he gets orders for an unaccompanied tour of Afghanistan, that doesn’t arouse any suspicions in your mind?
I didnt say it didnt.
When a female troop gets into the sack with a male troop she is planning a pregnancy.
And the guy is not planning on a pregnancy?
And the guy is not planning on a pregnancy?
He doesnt know where babies come from?
What do you figure is easier...getting knocked up or shooting yourself in the foot? Free medical, either way.
Becoming pregnant involves two people and as ore circumstances. The misogynistic mindset on this thread is very certain that becoming pregnant is solely to get out of deployment and should be remedied with abortion and or birth control. The guy has nothing to do with it
How ignorant
The circumstance that I’m referencing involved a husband complicit in the avoidance of deployment, to the best of my knowledge. . The child was not aborted. And someone else was deployed, I’m certain. Great for morale.
The guy is doing what guys do. He is planning on a few moments pleasure. He won’t get pregnant. Pregnancy is not even in his horizon. The female gets pregnant knows what she is getting into from the outset, This is the real world, not the PC imaginary world.
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