For the record, there was actually a fairly reasonable reason that the RCC was against C-sections: until fairly recently, it was a procedure with an extremely high mortality rate. For the longest time, it was so risky it was only performed when the mother was either dead or almost guaranteed to die anyway. Of course, by 1865, it would turn out to only have a mortality rate of 85%, but, frankly, after listening to four years of Catholic rationalizations against abortion, and how even when it’d be necessary to save the mother’s life, the doctors have to do everything in their power to do whatever procedure they need to do without harming the fetus, it only makes sense that they’d extend it to the Cesarean section. Of course, it looks like, these days, nobody, not even the Pope, gives a shit, probably because it’s proven a safe procedure for both the mother and her seed.
Also, the phrase “habitual incontinence” sounds strange to me, like the women who has their pelvises widened developed an intense desire to become ABDL and un-potty train themselves.
Also, the phrase “habitual incontinence” sounds strange to me, like the women who has their pelvises widened developed an intense desire to become ABDL and un-potty train themselves.
Comparing the Universal Oneness of All Life to Yo Mama since 2010.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.