UKIP leader Nigel Farage has defended remarks he made about
women breastfeeding in public places.
These recommendations were put in place with a public health motive in mind: to increase the number of
women breastfeeding in the United States.
And so it's such a great way of helping these moms with younger babies get over their fears because they see all these other
women breastfeeding in public and it's no big deal so I just think you know power and numbers to like it definitely helps you overcome your fear if you're not the only one doing it.
If staff members see
women breastfeeding in the water, they are instructed to «explain politely that following a risk assessment in the pool and within the pool surround this is not permitted but that alternative areas are available.»
I see
women breastfeeding in public every day, and no one thinks anything of it.
But his hostility for
women breastfeeding in anything less than solitary confinement is adolescent, repulsive, and downright * weird *.
Over the years I've watched
women breastfeeding in public, and they invariably try to minimize the exposure, often using a cloth diaper over the shoulder to hide the bare breast.
Support
women breastfeeding in public without a, «UNLESS» or «BUT» after it.
There are things people feel fine saying to
women breastfeeding in public, and I think it's time breastfeeding moms start talking back.
You don't want to get into a big discussion with someone who is vehemently objecting to
women breastfeeding in public.
Women breastfeeding in public has become a controversial subject.
You may be thinking what do these crazy mothers at Natural Parenting Advice know about
women breastfeeding in public if they don't do it very often?
This doesn't mean that we schedule our day so that we are making a point about
women breastfeeding in public.
Another major objection to
women breastfeeding in public is the perception that feeding a baby a bottle is just as good as the nutrition a baby gets while nursing.
From this perspective objections to
women breastfeeding in public make us ANGRY, they don't make us feel bad or embarrassed.
In
the women breastfeeding in public debate, it is the health of children everywhere that should take priority, not the «sensitivities» of adults who are perfectly capable of looking the other direction.
Women breastfeeding in public have a wonderful opportunity to educate others about the importance of breastfeeding.
For
all women breastfeeding in public, the best idea for handling objections is to keep it short and concise.
Not necessarily to
women breastfeeding in public or at family events, but to the fact you are breastfeeding for longer than they view necessary.
I will strive for my daughter to grow up in a society where breastfeeding is perceived as the norm, where
women breastfeeding in public aren't picked out as ostentatious, where feeding a child the way nature intended isn't only discussed in schools as part of sex education.
Most European countries are very open to
women breastfeeding in public.
If you can't handle
women breastfeeding in church or kids crying in church, it's time for you to find another church.
I have seen
women breastfeed in St. Peter's Basilica years ago under a different pope.
I've seen plently of
women breastfeed in public and only two of them made a huge deal of it and then got offended when asked to cover up a little.
Maybe
a woman breastfeeding in a business suit?
In the past, breastfeeding was more successful because humans interacted more with each other face to face and learned how to breastfeed by watching other
women breastfeed in groups where they connected more with one another and learned from each other in person.
Yet, if someone says «I have nothing against breastfeeding, I just don't like it when
women breastfeed in public», everyone loses their minds...
Women breastfeed in full niqab / burka in some countries, such that you would never know they had a baby the whole time you talked to them.
Plus, whether you nurse in front of your own kids or not shapes what they think about seeing
women breastfeed in public, so I'd say the problems start at home on this one.
58.1 % of African - American
women breastfeed in the early postpartum period, compared to 77.7 % of White women and 80.6 % of Hispanic women.
Most of the general public knows it too, and yet many people are still uncomfortable with
a woman breastfeeding in public.
My wife uses discretion with a cover up and most wouldn't even know a feeding is taking place, but Lord save the fool that feels it's their place to criticize or attempt to shame my wife or
any woman breastfeeding in public.»
Not exact matches
«A Georgia
woman named Nirvana Jenette claims she was kicked out of church for
breastfeeding, the pastor ordering her to nurse the baby
in the bathroom and calling her behavior «lewd,» comparing her to a stripper...»
Women in Virginia are allowed to
breastfeed anywhere they have a legal right to be, due to a law passed
in 2015.
Why anyone would be offended or «disgusted» at the sight of a
woman breastfeeding a child
in public is beyond me.
I agree; there is nothing morally wrong with
breastfeeding in public, especially since that is what God intended when He designed
woman.
«misogynistic and twisted» yes, those must be the words that come to mind when one doesn't want to see some white trash
woman breastfeeding her kid
in a public place.
it would not bother me a bit if a
woman breastfed her child next to me
in a restaurant.
I firmly believe that if more boys witnessed their mothers /
women in the community
breastfeeding their siblings / children, they wouldn't have this issue when they grew up.
That is one reason why I actively support
women (and by extension, their partners and families) who want to
breastfeed and parent their children
in an «attached» way.
According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, there are about 45 states that have laws that specifically allow
women to
breastfeed in public.
Also, consider this scenario — you are a typical slightly shy straight guy
in the business world giving a presentation you have worked on for months, working on your social anxiety with a psychologist, and a
woman in the front row starts
breastfeeding in front of you.
Twenty - eight states exempt
women from public indecency charges if they
breastfeed in public.
That being said, there is a definite lack of information out there for pregnant and
breastfeeding women with autoimmune diseases and I would like to start to help fill
in that gap.
Just recently I read an article Dr mercola wrote about ketosis but he advised against doing this diet while
breastfeeding saying
women need oxaloacetate, a compound essential for creating lactose
in breastmilk, which is essential for baby's growth.
The report from the WBTi UK Core Group — the 20 members of which include
breastfeeding NGO Baby Milk Action as well as the UK's Department of Health — concluded more should be done to improve
breastfeeding rates including tightening regulation of the infant formula market and paid
breastfeeding breaks for
women in the workplace.
The formula companies have erected and cemented these hurdles, and it is not fair to expect all
women to be able to surmount them
in order to succeed at their desire to
breastfeed.
So I just don't get the «too much pressure to
breastfeed» when all around me are images of bottles, ads for formula telling me a happy feeding makes a happy mom, bottlefeeding moms, moms and doctors and nurses telling new moms that formula is «just as good» and «not to feel guilty»,
women getting «the look» for nursing
in public, or feeling weird about doing it (I sure did)-- to me, any pressure out there is NOT to
breastfeed, or do it as little as possible (not if it's not immediately easy or you don't love every minute, not past 6 mos, not
in public, not around male relatives and friends, not around children, not if you ever want to go out alone sometime...)
-LSB-...] posts by: My Seaside Retreat Melissa's Place It's All About The Hat The Prudent
Woman PhD
In Parenting
Breastfeeding Moms Unite Musings of Mummy Bee The Mother's Lamentations Escaping to My -LSB-...]
After a few months of this, the lack of sleep, the crying, the «helpful» people who tell you to just work a little harder, it would be a miracle if any
woman in this position kept
breastfeeding.