Saturday, December 15, 2018

The most unstable populations in the world are exploding with fatherless havenots



The most unstable populations in the world are exploding with fatherless havenots  and the resulting instability, violence and unhappiness are exploding along with it.

When the life expectancy was in the 20s, young people were dying like flies.  All of a sudden, in a few years, thanks to the health organizations and others, the law of unintended consequences has kicked in, the life expectancy has skyrocketed to the 60s and beyond, leaving millions of young havenot males still alive!

When legal abortion, free family planning and non polygamy take hold in a subculture, the population stabilizes giving rise to the happiest and most peaceful and productive  people on the planet


Friday, December 14, 2018

More proof of the critical need for nuclear fathering


The bomber's father abandoned him as a child


Yet another case where a troubled, unstable adult grew up fatherless



"..........A lawyer for the family of Cesar Sayoc Jr., the man charged with mailing explosive devices to several prominent Democratic figures this week, said Friday that Sayoc "found a father" ................................. while discussing the arrest of Sayoc, someone he said he had represented in past cases and whom he described as a "sick individual" who seemed "lost" and needed help.
"He was looking for anything, and he found a father ......" the lawyer said, noting that the man's father "abandoned him as a child" and "he was trying to create an identity."........."

More proof of the importance of the nuclear family and the critical importance of the nuclear father
read morehttps://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/413446-lawyer-for-mail-bomb-suspects-family-he-found-a-father-in-trump

Thursday, November 29, 2018

Rape victim in El Salvador facing prison Time to rescue Latin America from draconian abortion laws in every country


Young woman in El Salvador was sexually abused by her stepfather since the age of 12, impregnated by him at age 18, facing up to 20 years in prison after being accused of attempted murder due to her country's strict abortion laws, even though she says she didn't try to have an abortion,

Cortez has been in custody since April of last year after she'd been rushed to the ER bleeding profusely and in pain; a doctor at the hospital suspected she'd tried to induce an abortion, which is banned in all circumstances in El Salvador. It turns out Cortez, who said she didn't even know she was pregnant, had given birth to a baby girl, who was found safe and healthy by cops.

Cortez's case underscores the plight that young, poor women in El Salvador face, with an abortion law that doesn't allow for one even in cases of rape, when the mother's life is in danger, or when the fetus isn't viable. Some women have been convicted even when they've had a miscarriage or stillbirth. "By shackling these women to hospital beds and sending them to prison, it sends a strong message: If you're poor, it's not safe to seek health care," a human rights lawyer says. As for Cortez, she's "despondent," her lawyer tells Reuters: "Her case could go either way. But if the judge is objective and looks at the evidence, Imelda should be set free." Her criminal trial starts Monday. ...........

read more................