04-30-2019, 07:43 AM
(This post was last modified: 04-30-2019, 08:01 AM by AspieMillennial.)
(04-30-2019, 12:49 AM)TheNomad Wrote: I did not attempt to publish a numerical document on who and who was not aborted and when. I meant to convey the idea up until Generation X, abortion was against the law and always had been. What was it about these parents or prospective parents or not-wannabe-parents and the society they came from, the politics they helped craft and the civilization at that moment that allowed a law to be passed at national levels to abort the unborn and for that to be protected under our laws?
We are supposedly meta thinkers up in here, so if Generation X is not the Sacrifice of a Nation, what is going on here? Nomads got the worst of everything, made the best of everything, hated by most, respected by few... what would Millennials say to their parents if their parents had passed laws prior to their birth allowing them, The Millennials, to be aborted?
I think they might lodge a protest @twitter and, like, sob through emjois? But for real, the generation that EXPECTS to survive as a RIGHT............. what does that generation say if abortion were made legal when THEY were being born?
Yet, X got a peanut butter sandwich and told to clean up after themselves because mommy's new roommate is coming over.
I have Gen X uncles and aunts and this didn't happen with them. Then again, they had a socially conservative father born in the 1920s and pro life parents. My point is experience is subjective. You aren't the only ones to face divorce and broken homes yet act as if you are the only ones with that specific experience. Because you believe in the TV world delusion that "If you are born in this year you couldn't have experienced this or that." You act like somehow families stopped divorcing in the 90s. I may also add that a person could be poor as a child but have a richer family later in life. Finances can change so fast that for some, the lines between experiences are blurred.