| Replaced_Texan |
10-13-2004 03:44 PM |
I'm Pleased
Quote:
Originally posted by Say_hello_for_me
I am so misunderstood (and I swear that you are one person here who I will never, ever intentionally insult, and its not because you are a moderator... more because you are like a hero).
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Hmph. You're just buttering me up after making me do the wrong research project.
Quote:
My comparison is with the time before all of the great society programs began. I want to see all of my factors at the 1946 or 1927 levels. Comparing our crime factors to the time of our crack wars just doesn't do it for me. Similarly, comparing our abortion and teenage birth rates to any time after 1973 and the 1960's respectively, just doesn't do it for me. Even a conservative pro-choice estimate of abortions will show (I'm fairly certain I've seen several) that abortions skyrocketed after it was made legal, and teen birth generally skyrocketed after government aid was made an entitlement. I'd go so far as to say that the reasons society shies away from going after dads is because of the no-say-in-abortion decisions thing and (of course) the general availability of government aid. We have 19 year olds living in public housing with 3 kids next door to the public housing apartments where they grew up with 7 more. I don't mean to sound like I'm optimistic that all of this (misallocated incentives) gets fixed. Rather, I think this stuff gets slowly rolled back. And I'm not saying that you have not dealt with sheer human misery in this country, but if you've seen the same things I have, you know exactly what I'm talking about.
Hello
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Since abortion was illegal in a lot of states, I wouldn't be surprised if the numbers were considerably lower. I imagine, also, that medically, abortions are easier to perform now than they were prior to 1973. Advances in modern medicine and all that. I guess we'd have to find a state that had legal abortions prior to 1973 and was tracking numbers. California maybe? Looking at the CDC report that I posted earlier, the big difference is from 1970 (193,491) to 1971 (485,816). From 1972 (586,760) to 1973 (615,831), there wasn't as a dramatic of a change. I wasn't alive then, but I imagine that the abortion debate must have alterted pregnant women to the option. Also, these numbers aren't tracking illegal abortions.
BTW, teen birth rates have steadily been declining since the 1950s. When was government aid made available?
Yes, I agree things are bad out there, and people are miserable. I'm not certain, though, that things are continuing to decline and some of the numbers have suggested a turnaround.
Also, you get a special place in hell for making me go and look at stuff like "Table 1.3—SUMMARY OF RECEIPTS, OUTLAYS, AND SURPLUSES OR DEFICITS(–) IN CURRENT DOLLARS, CONSTANT (FY 2000) DOLLARS, AND AS PERCENTAGES OF GDP: 1940–2009" today. ( http://a255.g.akamaitech.net/7/255/2...5/pdf/hist.pdf) Your 1945 number was the wrong one to choose. 41.9 percent, though I guess it was better than the prior two years (43.6 percent). We're at about 20 percent right now, and the data doesn't go further back.
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