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JD Vance contradicts Trump, praising admirable anti-abortion & IVF laws
Sen. J.D Vance (R-OH) has expressed support for conservative proposals to further restrict abortions and fertility treatments. His support contradicts recent statements made by his Republican presidential running mate, former President Donald Trump, opposing further restrictions on both. Trumps first presidency rolled back national legal protections for both.Vance voiced support for these restrictions in his foreword to the 2017 Index of Culture and Opportunity, a collection of essays that largely focused on the role of women in modern families. The collections 29 essays were written by conservative authors for The Heritage Foundation, the right-wing think tank that later authored Project 2025, a blueprint to help Trump roll back the federal government and civil rights protections. Related JD Vance begs gay billionaire Peter Thiel to fund his & Donald Trumps campaign The Trump campaign is far behind Harris when it comes to fundraising. Could the gay tech mogul bail them out? The collection said the increasing number of single-parent households was on the wrong track, Forbes reported. One of the essayists wrote that theyd like abortions to one day become unthinkable. Another essay, written by Jennifer Lahl, founder of the anti-abortion Center for Bioethics and Culture Network, said that IVF was harmful to women and criticized women who have children later in life for spending a large portion of their most fertile years building their careers. Other essays criticized food stamps and disability benefits programs for incentivizing people not to seek work. Another said that hunger is a great motivator for people who are able to work to find work. Your LGBTQ+ guide to Election 2024 Stay ahead of the 2024 Election with our newsletter that covers candidates, issues, and perspectives that matter. Subscribe to our Newsletter today Vances foreword to the collection praised the essays as admirable for their willingness to house culture and opportunity under the same intellectual roof. He also said that the prevalence of single-parent families and declining participation in civic institutions like churches are destroying social capital and upward mobility for Americas middle class.Vance spokesperson Luke Schroeder told The New York Times that Vance does not agree with every opinion in the essay collection. The Heritage Foundation also wrote that Vance had no role in producing or approving the contents of the 2017 essay collection. Nevertheless, the 2017 essay collection somewhat echoes Vances past statements on parents and childbirth. Vance has previously said that childless cat ladies including stepmother Kamala Harris and adoptive father Pete Buttigieg are determined the country miserable. He has said that people without children have no physical commitment to the future of this country, and that postmenopausal females (that is, women above the age of 50) exist mostly to help raise other peoples children. Vance also wrote the foreword to Dawns Early Light: Taking Back Washington to Save America, a book by Kevin Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation. In his book, Roberts wrote that contraceptives, IVF and childless individuals have all ruined America. Vances foreword compared Democrats and left-leaning liberals togardeners who have poisoned American soil and wolves who must be shot dead.Vance also wrote a blurb endorsingUnhumans, a book by anti-LGBTQ+ conspiracy theorist Jack Posobiec which said that liberals arent human. The book suggested overthrowing the U.S. government and praised historic dictators who murdered thousands of their own citizens. Trump has recently said he supports abortions beyond six weeks of pregnancy and has said he wants to provide free access to in vitro fertilization (IVF) a conception method used by many LGBTQ+ families even though anti-abortion advocates believe that IVFs discarding of any unused fertilized embryos is murder. Trump has only recently voiced support for these measures as numerous polls show that majorities of voters oppose Republican efforts to ban abortion and IVF.
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