Texas Woman, 26, Charged with Murder for Alleged Self-Induced Abortion

If you don't want your family to have abortions , don't have one , Not everyone is a christer goy like you

Jewish law state that life does not begin conception Sources in the Talmud note that the fetus is “mere water”
before 40 days of gestation. Following this period, the fetus is considered a physical part of
the pregnant individual’s body, not yet having life of its own or independent rights. The fetus
is not viewed as separate from the parent’s body until birth begins and the first breath of
oxygen into the lungs allows the soul to enter the body.

Jewish law does not consider a fetus to be alive. The Torah, Exodus 21:22-23, recounts a story of two men who
are fighting and injure a pregnant woman, resulting in her subsequent miscarriage. The verse
explains that if the only harm done is the miscarriage, then the perpetrator must pay a fine.
However, if the pregnant person is gravely injured, the penalty shall be a life for a life as in
other homicides. The common rabbinical interpretation of this verse is that the men did not
commit murder and that the fetus is not a person. The primary concern is the well-being of
the person who was injured.
According to Jewish law, is abortion health care
Jewish sources explicitly state that
abortion is not only permitted but is required should the pregnancy endanger the life or health
of the pregnant individual. Furthermore, “health” is commonly interpreted to encompass
psychological health as well as physical health.

sorry.....rabbis are in error if they think God wants them to kill his children......
 
Thoughts?

A 26-year-old South Texas woman, Lizelle Herrera, was arrested and charged with murder on Thursday for allegedly self-managing her own abortion. Herrera is from Starr County in the Rio Grande Valley, along the border with Mexico.

The Starr County Sheriff’s office told Jezebel that Herrera is alleged to have “intentionally and knowingly cause[d] the death of an individual by self-induced abortion.” The Sheriff’s office arrested Herrera and served her with an indictment on murder charges, and she was being held on $500,000 bond, they said. Herrera was released on bail Saturday evening and has secured legal counsel, according to Frontera Fund, which funds abortions and provides practical support to people needing them in the Rio Grande Valley.

https://jezebel.com/texas-woman-26-...n3ysITnzHcvF3WxH97jhpzQEyTLioVJuxm1qd4tFAQK18

As the religious whacktards get the (R) hellholes to crack down more and more on safe and aseptic procedures performed by licensed, educated medical personnel, we will be seeing more and more of this invasion of privacy and criminalizing of women.
 
It baffles me why it's taking so long to get a male contraceptive similar to the pill.

Second potential male birth control pill passes human safety tests
Peer-Reviewed Publication
THE ENDOCRINE SOCIETY

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/832968

Nexplanon lasts at least 3 years if not five in most cases. Here we are well into the 21st century and abortion is still a controversial issue, why you may ask when there are so many forms of contraception available? There are also many reasons why male contraception hasn't happened yet. I wonder why croc shit never took off?

Why Is There No Male Birth Control Pill?

People have used contraceptives to prevent pregnancies as far back as 1850 B.C. They've used everything from honey and crocodile dung to do it.

Throughout history, much of the responsibility for contraception and birth control has fallen on women. These days, they're front-and-center for three of the most common forms of birth control:

Sterilization (surgery)
"The pill" (which contains hormones that prevent pregnancies)
LARCs, or long-acting reversible contraceptives, like an intrauterine device (IUD).

Certainly, men play some part in preventing pregnancies. Some wear condoms (another popular method of birth control) or have sterilization surgery (called a vasectomy).

Still, the search for the long-promised male version of "the pill" continues.

Why?

The Challenge of a Male Birth Control Pill
Research shows that many men would welcome the choice of a hormone-based male birth control pill. Depending on who you ask, up to 83% say they'd use it. But coming up with a safe, reliable, effective male birth control pill is slow work.

Why? Researchers are after a lot in an ideal male pill. Of course, it should be effective, and also:

Cheap
Easy to use
Free of serious side effects
Easily available
Reversible

The science of male birth control is tricky, too. In order for a pill to be effective, researchers look for it to do at least one of a few things:

Slow or stop the creation and formation of sperm
Stop the sperm from leaving the body
Slow down the sperm to keep them from reaching their destination
Keep sperm from fertilizing the egg (possibly through a nonhormonal drug)

So far, most tries at this have been injectables, not pills. That's not ideal. Some pills made have the potential to create problems for your liver. You'd have to take others more than once a day -- again, not ideal. And other side effects -- things like acne, weight gain, altered sexual drive, and mood changes -- can happen, too.

Work continues, though. Many researchers are using testosterone, either alone or with other hormones, in their potential contraceptives. These may be closer to the market than other options. But other, nonhormonal methods are in the mix, too.

Where We Stand
In 2012, a hormone-based gel that you rub over your upper arms once a day significantly lowered sperm counts with only minimal side effects. Studies on this option are still going on.

A large study of an injectable hormone combination showed promise in 2016. Even with some side effects, 75% of those interviewed after the study said they'd use it again.

A procedure called RISUG -- reversible inhibition of sperm under guidance -- has been under development for decades in India. With this treatment, you'd get a one-time shot of a long-acting substance. It goes into the tube that carries sperm out of your testes (called the vas deferens). After that injection, sperm can't leave the body. If circumstances change, another shot can clear the blockage and reverse the procedure.

But a safe, effective male birth control pill is still in the making.

A study of 82 men in early 2019 determined that a hormone-based pill called dimethandrolone undecanoate (DMAU) was safe when used every day for a month. It also had no serious side effects.

Another promising pill, 11β-MNTDC, was announced in March of 2019.

Trials are ongoing for both.

https://www.webmd.com/sex/birth-control/male-birth-control-contraceptives-pill
 
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Really? As if Jewish text ever had anything to do with you goyim to begin with, an idolator who follows a triune dead man god knows Jewish texts better then Jews!! :laugh:

Pork eater, please :palm:

do you think God wants his people to kill their unborn children?.....if so, then I obviously know the Torah better than at least one Jew.......
 
As the religious whacktards get the (R) hellholes to crack down more and more on safe and aseptic procedures performed by licensed, educated medical personnel, we will be seeing more and more of this invasion of privacy and criminalizing of women.
wouldn't it really be better if we saw fewer people killing children?.......
 
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