Looking at someone in a deployed setting, it's not in their best interest to get pregnant overseas, but if it happens, it happens.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
If one is reported as having set up camp overseas, it's as if one has made oneself unavailable.
In many countries, women aren't jubilant when they learn they are pregnant. Quite the opposite - they're terrified.
Most women get pregnant and even though it's a challenge physically and uncomfortable, they generally wanted to be pregnant.
The military is already sexually integrated.
Being pregnant is an occupational hazard of being a wife.
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.
Children born of married parents in America face a higher risk of seeing them break up than children born of unmarried parents in Sweden.
Losing their reproductive rights is the first step to how women live in Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan.
Your forties is not the time to be thinking about getting pregnant.
You would have a huge statelessness problem if you don't consider a child born abroad a U.S. citizen.
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