Is it safe to have a child? Americans rethink family planning ahead of Trump’s return

Beyond states controlling abortion, nothing has changed in the US. We are nowhere close to the 1800's. People had babies as they desired from 2016 to 2020 and will continue to do so for the next four years. Labor & Delivery doctors will continue to treat pregnant women. Birth control will be available and used as desired.

You are talking crazy.
Are you closet MAGAt, Mode? Do you, like most MAGAts, believe the Constitution gives us our rights or do you believe, as the Founders did, that we all have unalienable rights and the Constitution limits the Federal government?

When the birth rate drops even lower, will you and the other MAGAts start backpedaling like Alabama tried to do on IVF? How many dead mothers will it take to convince you there's a problem? Have you had a vasectomy or, like Trump, do you try to impregnate as many women as possible and then blame them for getting pregnant?

You're free to lie about me, Mode. All the other MAGAts do it. :thup:
 
Are you closet MAGAt, Mode? Do you, like most MAGAts, believe the Constitution gives us our rights or do you believe, as the Founders did, that we all have unalienable rights and the Constitution limits the Federal government?

When the birth rate drops even lower, will you and the other MAGAts start backpedaling like Alabama tried to do on IVF? How many dead mothers will it take to convince you there's a problem? Have you had a vasectomy or, like Trump, do you try to impregnate as many women as possible and then blame them for getting pregnant?

You're free to lie about me, Mode. All the other MAGAts do it. :thup:
The right has their conspiracy theorists. The left has those who are neurotically paranoid. They are very similar in a lot of ways.
 
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Some in the US are reconsidering children, with fears over reproductive healthcare and the climate crisis front of mind

Carter Sherman
Sat 30 Nov 2024 08.00 EST
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Chris Peterson wasn’t surprised that Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election. But he was surprised by how quickly he and his wife started asking one another: should we try to have another baby before a possible nationwide abortion ban takes effect? Or should we give up on having a second child?

Peterson and his wife, who live in North Carolina, are thousands of dollars in debt because their first child needed to spend weeks in the hospital after being born prematurely. They had wanted to pay off that debt and wait a few years before having a second baby. But now, reproductive rights are again in the balance – Trump has said he would veto a nationwide abortion ban, but his allies are emboldened to push through more restrictions.


Peterson is terrified of what is to come, and that his wife might not be able to get the medical care she needs if they decide to conceive again.


FILE PHOTO: New Mexico Abortion Clinic Provides Medical Abortions for Patients from Texas<br>FILE PHOTO: Boxes of mifepristone, the first pill given in a medical abortion, are prepared for patients at Women's Reproductive Clinic of New Mexico in Santa Teresa, U.S., January 13, 2023. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo's Reproductive Clinic of New Mexico in Santa Teresa, U.S., January 13, 2023. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
Americans stockpile abortion pills and hormones ahead of ‘reproductive apocalypse’ under Trump
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“We should be happy thinking about expanding our family,” said Peterson, who is, like his wife, in his late 30s. “We shouldn’t be worried that we’re going to have medical complications and I might end up being a single father.”

Peterson is not the only American who, in the weeks after the US election, is rethinking plans around having children. On 6 November, the number of people booking vasectomy appointments at Planned Parenthood health centers spiked by 1,200%, IUD appointments by more than 760% and birth control implant appointments by 350%, according to a statement provided to the Guardian by Planned Parenthood. Traffic to Planned Parenthood’s webpages on tubal ligation, vasectomies and IUDs has also surged by more than 1,000% for each.

After the election, the Guardian heard from dozens of people in the US reconsidering whether to have children. Most pointed to fears over the future of reproductive healthcare, the economy and the climate in explaining their concerns.


“I hesitate to bring more children into a world with an uncertain ecological future, assuming that the incoming administration pulls out of the Paris climate accord and ceases to support green energy transition,” a 34-year-old Minnesota mother of one wrote to the Guardian in response to a callout inviting readers to share their thoughts about post-election family planning. Trump pulled the US out of the historic agreement during his first administration; doing so again – which Trump has promised to do – could “cripple” the it, according to the UN secretary general.


“We have two children and I have desperately wanted a third – but now I am fearful of being able to get adequate care if I get pregnant,” wrote another woman who lives in Louisiana. “I can’t risk leaving my two children behind if die because I can’t get adequate care here. It feels like a dystopian novel, and yet here we are.”

These worries are not necessarily new. In 2023, a Pew Research Center survey found that 47% of 18- to 49-year-old US adults say they are unlikely to ever have kids – a steep jump from 2018, when 37% said the same. Of the people who are unlikely to have kids, 38% said “concerns about the state of the world” were a major part of their decision-making. Roughly a quarter pointed to fears about the environment.
Note to unhinged lefties, stop reproducing.
 
Why would you not have kids? Are labor and delivery doctors going to vanish off of the face of the Earth on January 20th or are they going to be disallowed from treating patients? Does anyone really believe that all birth control is going to be banned from the country? Come on...
If there is a problem with your fetus, you can’t get life saving D&C because doctors are afraid of prosecution.
 
If there is a problem with your fetus, you can’t get life saving D&C because doctors are afraid of prosecution.

That's pretty lame. I would think that a doctor who goes through almost a decade of higher education to be a medical doctor would have the common sense to keep up their knowledge of the legal aspects of their vocation.
 
That's pretty lame. I would think that a doctor who goes through almost a decade of higher education to be a medical doctor would have the common sense to keep up their knowledge of the legal aspects of their vocation.


Poor Brad.
 
Oh, I think any and all Lefties should decide to not have any children.

They should not own a car, but rather walk or just lie in a gutter. They should not eat or drink to minimize their impact on the environment.

If they freeze to death in the gutter, just think of noble their sacrifice to "Save the Planet"!

Yes, it is clear, what the Lefties should be doing...

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I strongly suggest every Leftie sign up for the Voluntary Human Extinction Movement (yes, they're serious!). Here's the link. So, Lefties, do your part to go extinct today!

 
This article is so fitting, on multiple levels, for the Guardian.

If someone thinks the world is overpopulated with 8 billion people and don't want to bring another child into the world because it's bad for the environment, then fair enough. But Trump is going to wreck the globe for the future of mankind?

And people don't want to have a baby, because they might have a girl and down the road this possible girl might not be able to have an abortion - because of Trump? Because he can somehow magically pass a federal ban on abortion? And that magical ban would never be able to be overturned in the future?

The best part is in a country of 330 million the Guardian heard from dozens of people who claim this.

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This article is so fitting, on multiple levels, for the Guardian.

If someone thinks the world is overpopulated with 8 billion people and don't want to bring another child into the world because it's bad for the environment, then fair enough. But Trump is going to wreck the globe for the future of mankind?

And people don't want to have a baby, because they might have a girl and down the road this possible girl might not be able to have an abortion - because of Trump? Because he can somehow magically pass a federal ban on abortion? And that magical ban would never be able to be overturned in the future?

The best part is in a country of 330 million the Guardian heard from dozens of people who claim this.

17a6011d-acbe-45af-aa48-c017b3a37953_text.gif
Oh, come on...

We're one good mega volcanic eruption, serious meteor strike, or nuclear world war from reducing that population to under a billion in a matter of nothing time-wise...
 
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So....

Don't have a child because you might not be able to kill it before it is born?

Is that what I am hearing?

Really?!

And this position / opinion is not an indicator of mental illness?

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