The only thing I ever find at Lane Bryant are what I call “Give up” shirts, those poorly fitting shirts that you wear when all your good clothes are dirty and you literally just need something that fits.
The only thing I ever find at Lane Bryant are what I call “Give up” shirts, those poorly fitting shirts that you wear when all your good clothes are dirty and you literally just need something that fits.
I believe in this case he is actually a Financer
This is like a pregnancy dictionary
Additional evidence: At our 4th of July BBQ, 18 weeks pregnant, I couldn’t remember the word “cake” and tried explaining to my confused husband that I wanted a slice of “sugar bread.”
and for the rights of citizens to determine appropriate medical safety standards and procedures through their elected representatives.
I think you make excellent points. Emergency services is definitely an area where access is life-saving. I don’t think any OB should be able to avoid learning it as part of their training, I don’t think any hospital should be able to deny those services.
But right now, is access restricted by practitioners who are available and just choose not to provide it, or is it unnessessary laws that restrict access to those services, making it unavailable or too expensive to provide, that is the underlying cause of the lack of late-term providers?
Are you saying we can’t legally require a faith-based hospital to provide abortion service or you don’t think it’s morally right to do so?
I agree
My trepidation is that it feels like saying every eye doctor should have to provide lasik, or every heart surgeon must perform bypasses, or every OB should be required to perform Mammograms, without understanding how people/practices break up their business and specialties. Not offering a service is not always the…
they should point blank be forced to provide accurate factual medical advice and aid you in getting the services you require
There was a stat back in 2011 that was like only 14% of OBGYNs offer abortion services. Not sure if that is still valid, but if lack of performing doctors was causing lack of access (vs the type of laws like HB2 that close down providers already willing to do abortions) I could back that up.
Legally or morally?
OBGYNs often refer you to others for a lot of procedures they could do themselves. I’ve been referred for colposcopies, ultrasounds, heck- even bloodwork and labs are handled by outside vendors. Not all practitioners do everything medically within their field within their practice. Granted, none of those are based on…
I know missed miscarriages are a thing. I’ve had one. And I wouldn’t want a DR who didn’t feel comfortable with what they were doing anywhere near me at that time.
I’m super pro-choice, but I think it’s a huge step from every woman has the right to abortion access to every OB has an obligation to provide the service.
Fisher v University of Texas reaffirmed that use of racial preferences in undergraduate admissions decisions can be sustained under this Court’s decisions interpreting the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
I would be interested to see something that backs up your assertion that employers and school administrators can define what constitutes minority status? I’ve never heard that before, and can’t find a clear resource that answers it.
Oh, well see, so you feel you are allowed to define what is and is not a minority, and that’s just not how the law (or the dictionary) work. So I guess your mistake is that you don’t understand that.
So a person whose mother is Mexican, and who father is white, can not consider themselves Hispanic? Where do you come up with that one?