A Vision for A New Era of Empathy in America / #humanrights #leadership #womensrights #criticalthinking #socialresponsibility



A Vision for A New Era of Empathy in America


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Children and adults who grow up in a society were life is wholeheartedly valued would benefit from a new social compact. The changing of culture from base and immoral, towards greater degrees of respect, decency and valuing of human dignity is needful. I see a land where women are treated with respect and esteemed for their intellects. I see a land where men live according to the highest ideals God intended for them. I see a land were women are reverenced and built up to be critical thinking leaders, more so than they are now, and I see a land were boys and girls are taught to respect how life is formed and cared for from the moment of conception to the moment of age-old death.
A people who no longer kill themselves at the moment of their formation are a people who begin to think about everything else in their life differently, even how they govern each other. Our congressional leaders would be different than the stock we have and get now. None would be directly or indirectly funded through the abortion industry. A great amount of our music would switch from sexing us towards more responsible subjects, though the love songs would remain. Mass murder would drop significantly in a national environment were the message would be that each of us is very special, each of us matters.
Directly and indirectly, the dynamic of our relationships are changed, how we treat each other, how we court one another in relationships, and how we view the onset of parenting as new mothers and new fathers. Becoming pregnant begets tremendous responsibility that should not be shirked away so easily. Instead, intercourse and pregnancy becomes a more sanctified experience. To be realistic, this will not be so for everyone, yet, as a whole, the United States of America would enter a new era of social responsibility which would bring in a natural perspective on the sanctity of sex, marriage, procreation and how we treat one another under a new empathic paradigm. A paradigm were we are not things to be used for empty pleasure, but human beings who ought to respect the life and value of each other. Women; our daughters, should not have to grow up into cultures that treat them as objects of gratification, as shown through much of our music and entertainment, but reverence them as equal partners in life.
How much salt does each of us have before it is expended? 
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Like a spill-over effect throughout our communities, empathy would tow and lead hearts and minds forward with greater social responsibility to ourselves and one another, how we raise our children and how we see human life. That said, although these changes would not happen overnight, new generations of Americans growing up in a land wherehuman life was no longer discarded over six thousand times a week, would benefit the most from the changed empathic society. Inevitably, with the closure of all human extermination facilities, vestiges of its old guard would seek to undermine the new reality, yet in time, an abortion-free America would view human life much more differently. Life being immeasurably valued, our perspectives  would lead to positive changes felt most over decades of time as the offspring of ethnic minority and low income mothers; potential black children, hispanic children and white low-income households would no longer be targeted for extermination. Abortion has long sent the message to these groups that they did not matter as much, and this has impacted their sense and value of self. It is so that inHarlem, for a time, more black babies were aborted than were born. The cultural lie that presently seeps into the neighborhood is that getting pregnant will not stop a woman from leading the life she wants to lead. Ethnic minorities who are targeted for extermination, are subject to receiving cultural messages that their lives do not matter as much as the lives of people not targeted.
1. Does this rob the woman from the ability to feel empathy for the life inside her?
2. Done over three hundred thousand times every year in America, year after year, does this affect our culture and how we view the preciousness of life?
In a pro-life country, women would begin to be valued for their intellect, their ideas, and their ability to be positive, intellectual forces. These virtuous woman would be esteemed beyond their basic abilities and be unequivocal leaders of society next to men. They would not have to lead for the championing of their gender or fight for their equality as able professionals with savvy intellects and worthwhile ideas anymore, because the sanctity of their life would already be protected in the social compact. Instead, to borrow from eastern philosophy, we would move (chakras) upwards from the base, primal forces that govern us, towards a way of life that values critical thinking and uses this as a defense against pressures to devalue life again.
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Could it be that in the devaluing of humanity, we devalue each other? Makes…sense. Likewise, could it be that in the championing of humanity, we begin to cherish each other more? 

In a pro-life country, decades after the last human extermination facility is shut down, ladies and gentlemen would be seen more often. These are simply people with manners and respect for being socially responsible. These are simply people who value human dignity and prove it with the way they live their life and how they are with one another. Not all social maladies would be fixed. People would not be perfect, but human life would become more important and the perspectives on how both genders view one another would be seismically changed because of it. I believe that a pro-life America would would raise its children to think differently about love (on all levels) and how to build lives in an honorable manner, and I see a pro-life America would certainly treat its women with greater respect, kindness and gentleness, supporting their continued rise as intellectual members of society.

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