Friday, November 4, 2022

Department Of Defense Says Military Enlistment Wouldn’t Be So Low If Women Could Just Kill More Babies BY: WILLIAM A. WOODRUFF OCTOBER 26, 2022 6 MIN READ

 

Department Of Defense Says Military Enlistment Wouldn’t Be So Low If Women Could Just Kill More Babies

A female member of the U.S. army preparing for front line deployment
IMAGE CREDITTODAY/YOUTUBE

Department of Defense leaders are blaming the Supreme Court’s Dobbs ruling for the military’s poor job at recruiting and readiness.

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The Department of Defense seems to be using the Supreme Court’s overruling of Roe v. Wade as an excuse to promote the Biden administration’s abortion agenda.

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin’s Oct. 20, 2022, memorandum, “Ensuring Access to Reproductive Health Care,” cites Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health in directing the services to provide time off from duty and travel expenses for service members and dependents seeking abortions that are not available at their military medical treatment facility or the adjacent civilian community.  

Mischaracterizing Dobbs

The first sentence of the memo claims, “the ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization has impacted access to reproductive health care with readiness, recruiting, and retention implications for the Force.” This is an astounding claim, unsupported by facts, details, or supporting data. 

Dobbs, which returned abortion regulation to the states, did change the regulatory landscape of the abortion industry. But the Department of Defense has not changed its policy of providing abortions in military medical treatment facilities where the pregnancy resulted from rape or incest or the life of the mother was in danger. 

After Dobbs, a service member’s access to off-post abortion services will vary based on their duty location. Some states, such as California, have permissive abortion laws. Others, such as Oklahoma, ban virtually all abortions. But Austin’s claim that Dobbs adversely affected “reproductive health care” other than abortion seriously mischaracterizes the holding in Dobbs.

First, Dobbs held that the Constitution does not protect a right to abortion. Dobbs did not address, much less restrict, hinder, or otherwise regulate “reproductive health care” apart from abortion. 

Second, after mischaracterizing the scope of Dobbs, the memo claims the decision has adverse implications for readiness, recruiting, and retention. Again, the memo provides no data, evidence, or details to support this astonishing claim.

The effect of Dobbs returning abortion regulation to the states means service members and their dependents stationed in some states will have to travel to more permissive states to secure an abortion. That could affect some service members seeking to end the lives of their unborn children, but does it really affect readiness, recruiting, and retention, as Austin asserts?

Dobbs Did Not Affect Recruiting

Not according to an exhaustive Army Times study analyzing the Army’s dismal recruiting efforts in 2022. The Army failed to meet its 2022 recruitment goals primarily because of economic factors, the general lack of fitness of American youth (only 23 percent meet the medical fitness standards), the effects of the pandemic, and Covid vaccination policies.

The timeline of events also discredits Austin’s claims. The Army Times analysis quoted the senior enlisted leader at Training & Doctrine Command, CSM Daniel Hendrex, who said it was known by January 2022 that the recruiting mission was “facing difficult headwinds.” That’s when the service started increasing recruitment bonuses across the board.

A draft of the Dobbs decision leaked on May 2, and the final opinion was released on June 24, 2022, six months after the Army was well aware of the recruiting crisis. Furthermore, neither the secretary of the Army nor the senior uniformed leadership responsible for recruitment mentioned lack of access to abortion services as a detriment to recruitment when they presented their FY 2023 budget proposals to Congress in April 2022. Nor did they mention that a plethora of woke social policies probably is far more responsible for discouraging potential enlistees than abortion being returned to the states.

Dobbs Did Not Affect Retention

Dobbs has not affected retention, either. According to the Army Times analysis, as of July, the Army exceeded its retention goal for FY 2022, securing 57,738 active-duty reenlistments against a goal of 55,900. 

Dobbs Did Not Affect Readiness

Similarly, Dobbs has not adversely affected readiness. Whether intended or unintended, pregnancy has implications for readiness, and these implications are to be expected when a non-inconsequential number of people in the military are women. Pentagon officials have always known that women of childbearing age get pregnant, and they accepted this as part of the reality of recruiting women. Increased pressures to meet percentage-based “diversity metrics” have increased the effects, but Dobbs has nothing to do with this. 

There is no publicly available data indicating how many service members abort their babies each year, so the number of extra duty days that might be lost due to out-of-state travel is unknown. A survey by the Service Women’s Action Network in 2018 estimated that 13 percent of active-duty women experienced an unintended pregnancy at some point during their service. Of that 13 percent, less than one-quarter reported they ended the life of the unborn child through abortion. The remainder carried the pregnancy to term, and a few suffered miscarriages. Obviously, the biggest effect on readiness is the vast majority of women who carried their pregnancies to term and not the relatively few who opted for elective abortion.

We don’t know the number of women who might have had to miss duty days due to out-of-state travel for abortion, but readiness does not seem to be a problem with the services discharging thousands of trained, qualified, and experienced service members who have refused a Covid shot. It strains credulity to think that missing a few extra days of duty to travel to and from an out-of-state abortion facility would have a measurable effect on the overall readiness of the force.

DOD Enlisted in the Abortion Policy Battle

So what is really going on here? The Biden administration has made no secret that it supports abortion rights and will seek to codify Roe v. Wade — and far beyond it — in federal law. The Austin memo is a federal push for abortion without congressional participation.

Given the abysmal failure of the services to reach their recruiting goals, it is not surprising that Austin would mischaracterize Dobbs, use it as a scapegoat, and propose his new policy to remedy problems not caused by Dobbs. But this is not about the three Rs: readiness, recruitment, and retention. It is about the three Ps: preferred policy position.

Blaming the Supreme Court for the military’s personnel readiness problems undermines the credibility of the secretary of Defense, enlists the military in the ongoing political policy debate, and raises gaslighting to an art form. Austin should admit he is following the commander in chief’s policy choices rather than camouflaging his intent under the cloak of military readiness.


On Nov. 7, Americans Honor Those Killed Fighting For Us In Vietnam BY: JOHN LUCAS NOVEMBER 04, 2022 5 MIN READ...If you live near D.C., consider a visit to the Vietnam Memorial Wall next week to witness the reading of the names of the fallen and to honor them.

 

On Nov. 7, Americans Honor Those Killed Fighting For Us In Vietnam

Vietnam Memorial Wall
IMAGE CREDITCHRIS WAITS / FLICKR/CC BY 2.0, CROPPED

If you live near D.C., consider a visit to the Vietnam Memorial Wall next week to witness the reading of the names of the fallen and to honor them.

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No less than Arlington National Cemetery, the Vietnam Memorial Wall is a sacred place. Like many veterans, virtually every day I think of some of my friends who were killed in Vietnam and are memorialized there. Every day.

Next week I will participate in the reading of the names of the fallen who are memorialized on the Vietnam Wall. Starting on Monday, Nov. 7, and going until midnight each day, it will take three and a half days to read all 58,281 names on the wall. For those of us participating, it is part of our promise never to forget and always to honor the lives of our friends and comrades who gave their all in the service of the nation.

People now forget, never knew, or choose to lie about it, but aside from family, friends, and the military, the country did not truly mourn their deaths. Neither individually nor as a group were they accorded the honor, the respect, or the sorrow — whether ersatz or real — of the sort now heaped upon drug-addled criminals killed by police.

Since then, a few of those who slandered them have apologized. But very few. Others have tried to pretend that they opposed the government but “supported the troops” all along. To put it politely, balderdash.

We remember you. Not to remember would be to betray our comrades whose names are carved on the wall. We remember that privileged college students, faculty, the left, and much of the Democrat Party supported the killing of our soldiers.

They now pretend otherwise. But in their classrooms, at their “anti-war” rallies, and on their TV networks, they lauded our enemies. They waved the flags of our enemies who were trying to kill us, and who did kill those memorialized on the wall. That flag-waving was intended to encourage our enemies in their bloody work. It was not just the fringe who did this. It included those who from 1992 have controlled the levers of power in the Democrat Party.

For these leftists, many of whom still wield power today, those of us fighting because the country sent us there were “baby killers,” murderers, and rapists. Consider, for example, the words of our current “climate czar” in the speech that launched his political career, describing those who fought in Vietnam.

John Kerry says these American soldiers had “personally raped, cut off ears, cut off heads, tape wires from portable telephones to human genitals and turned up the power, cut off limbs, blown up bodies, randomly shot at civilians, razed villages in fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan, shot cattle and dogs for fun, poisoned food stocks, and generally ravaged the countryside of South Vietnam in addition to the normal ravage of war, and the normal and very particular ravaging which is done by the applied bombing power of this country.”

According to Kerry, these were “not isolated incidents but were crimes committed on a day-to-day basis with the full awareness of officers at all levels of command.” “All levels of command”: from lieutenants leading platoons to generals commanding divisions, all were reprehensible criminals, you see.

Kerry, we do remember the lies by you and your ilk. By honoring our fallen brothers next week, we reject your calumny and slander of them. We would not honor murderers, torturers, and rapists by reading their names in this solemn ceremony.

Here is one of the fallen, Leonard Reza.

Leonard Reza

Sgt. Reza was a proud paratrooper in the 101st Airborne. He was a member of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, the outfit made famous by the “Band of Brothers” book and series. He had been a star in his high school class in California, where he had been editor of the school newspaper.

Reza was 20 years old when he was killed by small arms fire in Thua Thien Province, Vietnam. He was not a murderer, a sadistic killer, or a rapist. On the day he died — April 22, 1971 — Kerry was smearing him and his buddies in front of the U.S. Senate. Next week the country will honor him.

Like Leonard Reza, most of the Vietnam fallen never lived long enough to take a bride and hold their newborn baby, to see their children grow up, to see their sons and daughters on the ballfield or walking across a graduation stage. Read about them. Honor them.  

If you live near D.C., consider a visit to the wall next week to witness the reading and to honor our KIAs. Some reading slots are still available for those who are interested. You can sign up here.

If you cannot attend, then consider at least visiting one of the electronic memorial walls, such as the Wall of Faces or The Virtual Wall. Do a search and read about the soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines who gave their all at the command of this country. And never forget.

Democrats Muddy The Waters To Ensure Support For California’s Late-Term Abortion Amendment BY: MADELINE OSBURN NOVEMBER 04, 2022

 

Democrats Muddy The Waters To Ensure Support For California’s Late-Term Abortion Amendment

Gavin Newsom speaking in front of crowd of angry women holding planned parenthood signs
IMAGE CREDITABC7/YOUTUBE

With or without passing Proposition 1, abortion will remain legal in California, but that hasn’t stopped Democrats from sounding the alarm.

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Abortion is on the ballot in California next week, or at least that’s what Democratic leaders want voters to believe. Californians will vote on an amendment, Proposition 1, which would add the “fundamental right to reproductive freedom,” to the state constitution in a jurisdiction where abortion is already legal and widely popular. But that hasn’t stopped prominent Democrats from spending time and money on building support for the amendment.

Even though Proposition 1 adds no new protections to abortion, and abortion is and will remain legal in the state of California without passing the amendment, many of the country’s most prominent Democrats such as Gov. Gavin Newsom and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have rallied and raised millions for the “Yes on Prop 1” campaign. In addition to Proposition 1, Newsom is expected to sign more than a dozen abortion-related bills this year.

Democratic political strategist Robin Swanson told CapRadio, a Sacramento NPR affiliate, that the state’s leaders are banking on the issue not only as a way to boost voter turnout for tight races but to send a message to the rest of the country that California is an abortion “safe haven.”

“I think they’re trying to create a sense of urgency around it,” she said. “A lot of Californians feel sort of immune to these right-wing, conservative ideas affecting our lives. But seeing 50 years of precedent overturned should be a shock to our systems.”

Newsom, Clinton, and their ilk in the pro-abortion Democrat Party have warned about the disappearing “right to abortion and birth control” that would allegedly ensue if the motion fails to pass, but little has been clarified for voters on what it would look like for Prop. 1 to take effect — particularly for health care workers, court systems, and the unborn.

Expanding Late-Term Abortion

Proponents of the bill, such as California Attorney General Rob Bonta, say Proposition 1 does not lead to late-term abortions but simply enshrines the constitutional “right to abortion.” On the contrary, the language is vague and lacks specifics. In fact, one doctor who contributed to authoring the amendment is on the record explaining the vague language was “on purpose.”

Dr. Pratima Gupta, a San Diego OB-GYN who consulted on Proposition 1, told KQED they intentionally left out the word “viability” — the key descriptor in determining the limit, if any, at which point during gestation an abortion can legally be performed.

“Every pregnancy is individual and it’s a continuum,” Gupta said. “If I see a patient who has broken their bag of water at 23 weeks of pregnancy, that doesn’t mean that it’s viable or not viable.”

Under laws already on the books such as the California Reproductive Privacy Act of 2003, abortion is limited to “before the viability of the fetus.” The text of Proposition 1 would embed a “fundamental right to choose to have an abortion” without any limits or qualifications about the viability of the baby. California’s own Voter Information Guide states that the amendment “will allow unrestricted late-term abortions” and “will allow late-term abortions at taxpayer expense without limitation for any reason at any time up to the moment of birth — even when the mother’s life is not in danger, even when the healthy baby could survive outside the womb.”

Catherine Hadro, director of media relations for the “No on Prop. 1” campaign, told The Federalist that even some pro-abortion Californians are against the amendment because they fear future court battles will lead to more restrictions on California abortion laws.

“Legal experts have already cautioned the proposition’s flawed, vague language is likely to invite serious legal challenges that would cost California taxpayers millions more and allow random judges to interpret reproductive health in California,” Hadro said.

Dr. Forrest Smith is one of the longest-practicing abortionists in the United States. He has performed anywhere from 30,000 to 50,000 abortions throughout his career, over the course of 50 years. In an ad for the Center for Medical Progress, the pro-abortion OB-GYN explains that “Proposition 1 is really just the same 2003 law, but with the fetal viability clause eliminated. If Proposition 1 is put in our state constitution, abortion doctors will have a right to legally kill viable and healthy babies up to the moment of birth.”

Reconciling the Polls

It seems that post-Roe, pro-abortion Democrats and corporate media allies have intentionally muddied the waters on the abortion debate to the point that even the most extreme policies, which would normally face pushback across the spectrum, are flying under the radar. Polling around Proposition 1 reflects that confusion.

Berkeley IGS poll conducted in mid-August found that 71 percent of California voters said they planned to vote for Proposition 1. A poll from the Public Policy Institute of California conducted in early September found that 69 percent of voters support Proposition 1 while 25 percent said they will vote no.

And yet, a poll conducted by Rasmussen Reports in October found that even though a majority of California voters support the amendment, a majority are also against late-term abortion: “only 14% of California Likely Voters believe abortion should be legal at any time during pregnancy up to the moment of birth.”

“Thirteen percent (13%) think abortion should be legal up to six months of pregnancy, while 34% say abortion should be legal up to three months of pregnancy. Nineteen percent (19%) believe abortion should only be legal during the first month of pregnancy, while 15% think all abortions should be illegal,” the Rasmussen/Capitol Resource Institute study reported.

“We are seeing both in-person and in the polls that voters reject what Proposition 1 would allow in California,” Hadro said. She added that the Rasmussen poll “illustrates support for the proposition drops when voters are educated on the realities of Proposition 1.”

Despite efforts by the pro-life movement, Democrats are doing their best to obscure those realities.

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