It is incumbent upon us to respond to the unique needs of military women and ensure they receive proper care during the first year following childbirth.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Women are needed in the military because there aren't enough soldiers, and we're seeing more women serve.
Post-military service can be a period of anxiety and uncertainty. So many men and women return and ask themselves: what now? The Labor Department is here to help answer that question with an array of programs designed to clear pathways into the middle class.
We should work to guarantee that there is a midwife or health worker by every woman's side during childbirth.
My decision to register women confirms what is already obvious throughout our society-that women are now providing all types of skills in every profession. The military should be no exception.
Let us also reflect on the honorable service of our men and women of the U.S. Armed Forces currently serving our country overseas in Iraq and Afghanistan, and around the world.
We have more women serving in the military than any time in our nation's history, and yet the VA has not done a pivot to look at women's healthcare issues.
Putting women in military combat is the cutting edge of the feminist goal to force us into an androgynous society.
I have no problem with women in the military, if that's what they want to do.
Requiring military hospitals to perform elective abortions exposes the physicians, the nurses, the military personnel to move against their own personal convictions of life in many cases.
We need to honor our troops who served and show our support by giving our men and women who served the best health care, the best educational opportunities, and the best job training available. They deserve nothing less.
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