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Frist a Major Shareholder in Reputed For-Profit Abortion Provider
Human Events ^
| 12-20-02
| Terry Jeffrey
Posted on 12/19/2002 10:26:29 PM PST by The Old Hoosier
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To: The Old Hoosier
Well, this didn't take long, did it?
2
posted on
12/19/2002 10:27:45 PM PST
by
Howlin
To: The Old Hoosier
Frist has deliberately chosen to live in a country in which Abortion is legal!!!!!! Boy, we'd better not let anyone like that in the Senate, huh?
3
posted on
12/19/2002 10:29:55 PM PST
by
P-Marlowe
To: The Old Hoosier
The GOP eats its own face so it can't see the rest of it's body !
To: Howlin
...is a major shareholder in HCA, a for-profit hospital chain founded by his father and brother...Imagine that, he has a share of the family business.
5
posted on
12/19/2002 10:35:43 PM PST
by
relee
To: relee; Howlin
Imagine that, he has a share of the family business. Just shocking I tell you.
6
posted on
12/19/2002 10:36:21 PM PST
by
Bella_Bru
To: relee; Bella_Bru
He must divest
to pass "our" test!
7
posted on
12/19/2002 10:37:51 PM PST
by
Howlin
To: P-Marlowe
ROFLMAO.
8
posted on
12/19/2002 10:38:09 PM PST
by
Howlin
To: The Old Hoosier
My next door neighbor has a sister that knew a girl who had an abortion.
I guess I shouldn't hope to be majority leader either.
9
posted on
12/19/2002 10:39:07 PM PST
by
dead
To: Howlin
Well, I for one want every Senator and Representative whose health plan is connected to a hospital that provides abortions out now. < /single issue rant>
To: dead
You're screwed.
To: dead; relee; Bella_Bru
Well, thanks a damn lot. Now that WE'VE all read your posts about (you know), we can't be the leader either!
12
posted on
12/19/2002 10:41:14 PM PST
by
Howlin
To: dead
I think I once drank out of a water fountain that was connected to a building that was owned by a man who knew someone who hired a lawyer who thought that Roe v. Wade was actually a good judicial decision. Am I in trouble?
To: The Old Hoosier
Chicago economist links abortion to falling crime rates
By Amy Rust
News Office
Presented at seminars at the University, Stanford and Harvard but not yet published, Legalized Abortion and Crime, Chicago economist Steven Levitts recent study that links the legalization of abortion to the countrys falling crime rate in the 1990s, already is receiving national attention.
The study, co-authored by Levitt, Professor in Economics at Chicago, and Stanford Universitys John Donohue III, suggests legalized abortion may be responsible for approximately half of the crime rates recent fall.
According to the researchers, the decline of the U.S. crime rate may be the result of two mechanisms related to legalized abortion. First, following the Roe vs. Wade decision in 1973, more women at risk of having children who could later engage in criminal activityteen-agers, those living in poverty or those with unwanted pregnancies, for exampleopted for abortion. And second, improved maternal, familial or fetal circumstances may have led to better environments for raising children.
Levitt and Donohue stress that their findings do not carry an endorsement of abortion. We do not take a position on abortion, and the study was not undertaken as a study of abortion, but crime, said Levitt. Neither is the study about race or class. Many studies have shown that children who are born unwanted have unsatisfactory outcomes, including involvement in crime.
As evidence for their findings, the researchers point to data regarding the timing of the crime drop: the first generation of pregnancies terminated under legalized abortion would have otherwise resulted in children who reached the peak ages for criminal activity, 18 to 24, in the early 1990s. Increases in 1970s abortions by high-risk mothers may have lowered the number of potential criminals coming of age in the 1990s.
The study also reports that states such as California and New York, which legalized abortion before 1973, experienced a drop in their crime rates before the rest of the nation. Furthermore, empirical evidence suggests states with higher abortion rates have seen more dramatic decreases in crime since 1985, and those drops in crime have been concentrated among individuals under age 25 in 1997precisely the group possibly affected by abortion legalization in 1973.
While many explanations have been given for the dramatic decline of crime during this past decade, the authors maintain in a study abstract that each of them has difficulty explaining the timing, large magnitude, persistence and widespread nature of the drop. The researchers also predict crime rates will continue to fall slowly for 15 to 20 more years as the full effects of legalized abortion continue.
A better understanding of the reasons for declines in crime helps policymakers as they formulate programs to reduce crime. For instance, with lower future crime rates, there may be less need to build prisons, Levitt said.
To: P-Marlowe; dead; Howlin
P-Marlowe, you cannot even be a dogcather now.
Comment #16 Removed by Moderator
To: dead
Should Republicans in the Senate be led by a man who profits from abortions? I think that's something conservatives should seriously consider.
To: The Old Hoosier
As a doctor he probably believes abortion should be legal and rare. There are reasons for abortions - namely to save a woman's life.
My sister had four tubal pregnancies before having a normal pregnancy. These would have killed the babies and her for sure. Talk about crying an ocean of tears!
I would prefer abortions performed solely in reputable hospitals for valid therapeutic reasons, where a doctor can make a descision based on medical necessity, rather than in abortion clinics where it is the only procedure and done for pure profit.
To: Mister Magoo; relee; Howlin; Uncle Bill
Should Republicans in the Senate be led by a man who profits from abortions? I think that's something conservatives should seriously consider.
To: Bella_Bru
Should Republicans in the Senate be led by a man who profits from abortions? I think that's something conservatives should seriously consider.
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