helen
Panic Sex Lady
The entire article has graphic details some of you may want to skip. I'm posting this excerpt because they admit to giving advice to minors under the age of consent.
This is someone's child going through a tremendous trauma, and they tell her to keep it secret. This child is suffering the effects of a drug sent to her from out of state by people who claim they have no treating medical relationship with her. This child has passed a fetus that is older than the limit the drug is licensed for. This child may bleed to death, die from sepsis, or permanently injure her ability to have children when she is "ready to be a mom".
This 15-year old child cannot legally consent to sex in many states, so this pregnancy could be the result of statutory rape, stranger rape, or domestic violence rape. The fetus is evidence of a crime. This child is a crime victim being told by an unknown adult to keep this a secret.
Fetal remains are human remains and subject to laws regarding disposition. Telling this child to flush human remains down the toilet is telling her to commit a crime. In this example, the girl asks if she can "throw it away". The article is not clear about the answer.
This child has parents or guardians who are denied the right to seek appropriate health care, psychological care, and moral guidance as they see fit, but they are legally responsible for her injury or death.
If this were my kid, I'd move heaven and earth to prosecute them for anything that sticks.
A doctor answers panicked calls
Linda Prine was answering a few emails, coffee mug in hand, when her cellphone rang.
“Hi, this is the hotline doctor,” the 72-year-old said from her New York City home one Sunday morning in January. “Can I help you?”
The voice Prine heard was quiet and scared — belonging to a 15-year-old with an area code in a state with an abortion ban who had taken pills and passed a fetus larger than she’d expected.
Unable to flush the fetus down the toilet, the girl asked about throwing it away.
She was young enough to be Prine’s granddaughter.
Prine cradled the phone in both hands and leaned in, trying to channel every ounce of reassurance and understanding she could muster through the phone line.
“There’s nothing in there that’s traceable back to you,” she said. “As long as you don’t tell anybody.”
The girl asked if the abortion made her a bad person.
“No it doesn’t,” Prine said. “Not a bit.”
“You are doing what’s right for you and your future family,” she added, her voice firm.
“This way you can be a good mom when you’re ready to be a good mom.”
This is someone's child going through a tremendous trauma, and they tell her to keep it secret. This child is suffering the effects of a drug sent to her from out of state by people who claim they have no treating medical relationship with her. This child has passed a fetus that is older than the limit the drug is licensed for. This child may bleed to death, die from sepsis, or permanently injure her ability to have children when she is "ready to be a mom".
This 15-year old child cannot legally consent to sex in many states, so this pregnancy could be the result of statutory rape, stranger rape, or domestic violence rape. The fetus is evidence of a crime. This child is a crime victim being told by an unknown adult to keep this a secret.
Fetal remains are human remains and subject to laws regarding disposition. Telling this child to flush human remains down the toilet is telling her to commit a crime. In this example, the girl asks if she can "throw it away". The article is not clear about the answer.
This child has parents or guardians who are denied the right to seek appropriate health care, psychological care, and moral guidance as they see fit, but they are legally responsible for her injury or death.
If this were my kid, I'd move heaven and earth to prosecute them for anything that sticks.
A doctor answers panicked calls
Linda Prine was answering a few emails, coffee mug in hand, when her cellphone rang.
“Hi, this is the hotline doctor,” the 72-year-old said from her New York City home one Sunday morning in January. “Can I help you?”
The voice Prine heard was quiet and scared — belonging to a 15-year-old with an area code in a state with an abortion ban who had taken pills and passed a fetus larger than she’d expected.
Unable to flush the fetus down the toilet, the girl asked about throwing it away.
She was young enough to be Prine’s granddaughter.
Prine cradled the phone in both hands and leaned in, trying to channel every ounce of reassurance and understanding she could muster through the phone line.
“There’s nothing in there that’s traceable back to you,” she said. “As long as you don’t tell anybody.”
The girl asked if the abortion made her a bad person.
“No it doesn’t,” Prine said. “Not a bit.”
“You are doing what’s right for you and your future family,” she added, her voice firm.
“This way you can be a good mom when you’re ready to be a good mom.”
MSN
www.msn.com