The
risk of a dead baby is both awful and abstract, maybe «natural» in a weird, distant, won't happen to me way.
If your wife or girlfriend has an abortion, that doesn't make you «not a father,» it makes you the
father of a dead baby!
And the bombs keep falling and the killing goes on and the
photos of dead babies keep filling your social media feeds.
Animal - nutritionist John Goihl knows Minnesota farmers who feed the
remains of dead baby pigs to hogs used for breeding in attempts to ward off infections of a deadly virus in offspring.
Evidently, there is no limit to the
number of dead babies that Colorado homebirth midwives think is acceptable.
Failing to inform women of the increased risk
of a dead baby if Homebirth is chosen is heinous.
Of course, the statistics quoted by those in the woo encourage this mentality, as though the
chance of a dead baby or dead mother in a home birth is 1 in a million.
It can't be because of her safe midwifery practices; it can't be because she abides by the law; and it certainly can't be because the
trail of dead babies in her wake demonstrates that homebirth is safe.
I can understand being upset you had to have a cesarean but to think the
experience of a dead baby is preferable is frankly horrifying.
They had tide pools, which were fun, but they have a
lot of dead baby crabs on the sand, which kind of creeps me out.
This episode goes over-the-top at times — a Chris Farley sound - alike shouting, «You'll still be a mother... the
mother of a dead baby!»
I mean, yeah, a dead baby would be like 1000x more offensive and emotionally difficult for viewers, but the metaphor holds better, and if you want to guilt us dirty bottle feeders into making our boobs work or forgoing our mental health meds or suffering through rape flashbacks or never - ending mastitis or simply not enjoying how we feed our babies, then a
picture of a dead baby will be much more effective.