Mike Pence is seriously dangerous

if Trump is elected he will be impeached then we will be left with President Mike Pence who will then appoint 4 Supreme Court Judges


Heaven's Gain Ministries
Early Second Trimester
The flannel baby blanket interior gives a warm look and feel to this casket's interior. Casket, burial bottle, glue, and a baby blanket bottle covering are included. This casket seals when the glue is applied. Note: The diameter of the opening to this bottle is 2.1 inches and the length is 5.75 inches.
Exterior Size 10.25"(L) x4.5"(w) x 3.75"(H)
Interior Size 8.4"(L) x 3.5"(w) x 3.1"(H)
We can personalize your baby's casket with a golden metal name plate. Just type the baby's name in the text box below before adding to your cart. There is no additional charge for the name plate.
Heaven's Gain Ministries
Why The Bottle?
View our clients baby in our bottle (Click here) One of our clients has posted on Baby Center how she used our bottle to preserve and bury her baby. Scroll about three fourth down the page for the picture and read that page and the next page for more info.
Through our experiences in our own miscarriages, we realized that the handling and burial of a miscarried baby often brings with it some special challenges. Specifically, the miscarried baby’s skeletal system is not fully developed, and so the baby does not retain his/her natural form after birth. The miscarried baby’s body is very fragile and the skin may be sticky to the touch.
If still in the womb, the baby would be peacefully floating in his/her own amniotic fluid. Our bottles allow the baby to be suspended in the natural state of water. Babies at this stage are meant to be suspended in amniotic fluid. The use of the bottle filled with water gives the body of the baby a womb-like environment. We recommend a saline solution (contact Solution works well) to preserve the baby for a couple days until burial. Often times a miscarried baby does not look exactly as might be expected from the baby development pictures. When place in a jar with a combination of distilled and saline water, babies usually return to his/her natural beautiful state for that stage in pregnancy. This change in appearance allowed our other children and family members to view the baby. Also, the clear bottle allows the baby to be photographed.
Placing our baby in the womb-like environment of the bottle, and partially wrapping the bottle with a blanket allowed us to cuddle and rock our baby without worrying about skin breakdown. After being suspended in water, our baby's appearance was improved. If you are uncomfortable burying the baby in the bottle, the bottle can be used just temporarily to help preserve the baby with the side effect of improving his/her appearance in and out of the water.
We carefully selected bottles for our various caskets according to the baby's age and size. This is why we ask the baby's age/trimester. Although recommended, use of the bottle is totally optional. We will include the bottle and you can make your own decision.
At this point, we only have bottles fitting babies up to 28 weeks. Bottles are included with caskets up to 20 weeks. If you wish to use a bottle after 20 weeks please specify that in your order.
http://www.heavensgain.com/id3.html
Pence Signed a Law Requiring Burial or Cremation for Aborted Fetuses
The measure was part of a controversial abortion bill that Trump's vice presidential pick signed this past March.
HANNAH LEVINTOVAJUL. 15, 2016 1:54 PM
Mike Pence speaks at a 2011 anti-abortion rally on the National Mall in Washington, DC. Alex Brandon/AP
The sweeping abortion bill that Indiana Gov. Mike Pence signed into law in March gained national attention for prohibiting women from electing to have an abortion due to the race, gender, or disability of the fetus. But the bill contained another unusual provision: It required that aborted fetuses receive what amounts to a funeral.
Pence, whom Donald Trump announced as his vice presidential running mate on Friday, signed the law that made Indiana the second state ever, after North Dakota, to pass a ban on abortions carried out for certain reasons. The law also imposed liability for wrongful death on doctors that perform an abortion motivated by one of the prohibited reasons. And, as Mother Jones reported in March, the law also required that health care facilities inter or cremate the remains of an aborted fetus, and prohibited fetal tissue donation.
Following the Supreme Court's decision to strike down several Texas abortion restrictions in June, a federal judge blocked the Indiana law from going into effect.
"By enacting this legislation, we take an important step in protecting the unborn, while still providing an exception for the life of the mother," Pence said in a statement when he signed the bill. "I sign this legislation with a prayer that God would continue to bless these precious children, mothers, and families."
This sort of fetus funeral provision has recently gained traction in legislatures around the country: Arkansas and Georgia have similar laws on the books, while Ohio, South Carolina, and Mississippi have all considered similar measures in the last year.
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/201 ... ed-fetuses
Decoding Mike Pence's Misogyny
Having lost the women’s vote, the Trump campaign doubles down on gendered language.
By Adele M. Stan / The American Prospect October 5, 2016
f there’s any one thing the Trump campaign wants you to remember about Hillary Clinton, it’s that she’s a woman—a play for the votes of people who believe that’s not a good thing.
In Tuesday night’s vice presidential debate, Mike Pence, the right-wing extremist Indiana governor who is the running mate of Republican presidential nominee Donald J. Trump, attempted to paint the foreign policy of Trump’s Democratic opponent as weak, saying of the war in Syria, “Look, we have got to lean into this with strong, broad-shouldered American leadership that begins by rebuilding our military.”
Ah, that broad-shouldered leadership. You know who doesn’t have broad shoulders? The woman!
It’s not the first time Pence has trotted out the term. Just before the September 26 debate between Trump and Clinton—the first time a woman has stood on the debate stage as a major-party presidential nominee—Pence said of his boss, “Look, Donald Trump's got broad shoulders. He's able to make his case and make a point."
Pence is smooth, carefully choosing his turns of phrase. Nothing crass here, just very polite sexism of the kind that could serve him well when he vies for the Republican presidential nomination in 2020.
Other Trump surrogates are less adroit. On Sunday, former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani went straight to the point. Addressing a New York Times report indicating that Trump may not have paid personal income tax for some 18 years, Giuliani described his man as a “genius” for having worked the system so brilliantly.
“Don’t you think a man who has this kind of economic genius is a lot better for the United States than a woman?” Giuliani asked during an appearance on ABC’s This Week.
The Trump campaign has long played to the fears of a large constituency of white men unnerved by the changing role of women in the world. More than any one thing, the place of white men in society is what this election is all about. For them, knowing that no matter how hard the times on which they’ve fallen, they’ve still got a leg up on people who are not like them—be they women, black people, or brown-skinned immigrants—is no longer a given.
In addition to Trump’s crasser statements of misogyny, he’s suggested that Clinton “doesn’t have a presidential look.” (Her shoulders are not broad enough?) And, of course, Trump’s repeated questioning of his opponent’s “stamina” is all about gendered stereotypes—as if we still lived in the days when corseted upper-class white women regularly took to fainting couches from forcing themselves into lung-crushing garments constructed of grommets, laces, and animal bones, all to have a figure like that of a Miss Universe pageant winner.
Questioned about his “presidential look” comment by moderator Lester Holt,Trump doubled down. Clinton neatly dispensed with his reply, saying, “As soon as he travels to 112 countries and negotiates a peace deal, a ceasefire, a release of dissidents, an opening of new opportunities in nations around the world, or even spends 11 hours testifying in front of a congressional committee, he can talk to me about stamina." (During her tenure as secretary of state, Clinton’s travels covered 956,733 miles; she spent 401 days on the road.)
The upshot of Trump’s debate performance in September was to reopen Clinton’s lead among women. Going into the first debate, Clinton’s advantage among women, according to national polls as parsed by the International Business Times, was as low as 5 percent. But in the days following the debate, her advantage soared by as much as 20 points, according to two Fox News polls. Meanwhile, according to the most recent CNN/ORC poll, Trump is winning men by 5 points.
Trump is not likely to win back many of those women voters, so his campaign has little choice but to make a fierce bid for every vote of every white man in the country who fears the usurpation of the Barcalounger throne in his cul-de-sac castle. Hence, whatever such a man’s misgivings about Trump, he’s got to be, as Giuliani so baldly put it, “better than a woman.”
Yet the very things that set off alarm bells in such men are the very things that appeal to women. Hillary is confident, capable, and remains unruffled by the very sorts of insults that every woman who has sat in a male-dominated workplace meeting, or simply walked down the street alone, has had to endure. She’s the embodiment of the Urban Dictionary’s definition of a “broad.” Once a pejorative term, “broad” came to denote something admirable, according to Urban Dictionary contributor Alexei Kotsov. “Broads … know how to compete and win in a man's world,” he writes. To summarize, Kotsov quotes Bette Midler, who said, “People always love a broad—someone with a sense of humor, someone with a fairly wicked tongue, someone who can belt out a song, someone who takes no guff."
No one yet knows the true dimensions of the 2016 electorate (the people who actually cast a ballot on Election Day). But we do know that women historically vote in greater numbers than men.
In the vice presidential debate, Pence offered little defense of his running mate—except for Trump’s broad shoulders. But women voters are likely to pick the broad minus the shoulders, as are a number of guys who find broads more appealing than bluster. That leaves Trump scurrying to muster a militia of angry white men large enough to put him over the top. More misogyny is surely on tap.
http://www.alternet.org/election-2016/d ... e-misogyny
All of Mike Pence's Awful Positions on Women's Rights
A reminder that the Indiana governor has some of the most extreme anti-abortion stances in the country.
By Prachi Gupta
Oct 04, 2016
Indiana Gov. Mike Pence’s views on abortion rights are heavily influenced by his religion as a born-again evangelical Catholic. During the first (and only) televised vice presidential debate of the 2016 election Tuesday night, he said, "For me, my faith informs my life."
Though it may have been the first time watching Pence speak for some, many voters — particularly, many women — may already be familiar with Pence, who is one of the most extreme anti-abortion legislators in the country. "It all, for me, begins with cherishing the dignity, the worth, the value, of every human life," he said.
Earlier this year, Pence signed a controversial anti-abortion law that would have banned abortions of fetuses sought over gender, race, ancestry, or diagnosis of a genetic disorder. The law also criminalized fetal tissue collection or transferring, a practice that is vital to life-saving fetal tissue donation and research (including for understanding the Zika virus), and required women to view the fetal ultrasound hours before receiving an abortion. The law was so far-reaching that women in Indiana began calling Pence’s office to tell him about their periods — you know, since he seems to care about women’s reproductive health so much. A federal judge blocked the law in June.
As a member of Congress and later as governor, Pence also gutted Planned Parenthood funding in his state, which resulted in the closure of multiple clinics. In 2015, this "inadvertently created" an HIV outbreak in one Indiana town, Media Matters reported, "by shutting down access to the only HIV testing centers available to many residents."
Though there is little doubt how extreme Pence’s anti-abortion stance is, he made it explicitly clear on the campaign trail. “I’m pro-life and I don’t apologize for it,” he said during a town hall in July. Of a Trump/Pence administration, he said, “We’ll see Roe v. Wade consigned to the ash heap of history where it belongs."
Pence also has a history of making homophobic comments. In 2006, he said that same-sex couples were a sign of “societal collapse," and he voted against repealing the military’s Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy. Last year, Pence signed a religious freedom bill that critics said enables anti-gay and other types of discrimination. According to the Huffington Post, the bill "would allow any individual or corporation to cite its religious beliefs as a defense when sued by a private party" — meaning that businesses that "don’t want to serve same-sex couples, for example, could now have legal protections to discriminate." After the backlash from business leaders, Politico reports that Pence "backpedaled on language" in the bill that worried critics.
Oh, and for an extra kick in the pants: While in Congress, Pence voted against the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act — which calls for equal pay for women — three times.
This post was updated on 10/4/2016 at 11:24 pm to include Pence’s comments on abortion during the vice presidential debate.
http://www.cosmopolitan.com/politics/a4 ... ion-views/
Think Trump Is Scary? Check Out Mike Pence On The Issues.
Trump might blow up the world, but Pence would set the clock back to 1954.
10/03/2016 01:48 pm ET | Updated 21 hours ago
Jerry Bowles
Writer, Editor, Old Guy
MIKE SEGAR / REUTERS
Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump (L) greets vice presidential nominee Mike Pence after Pence spoke at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. July 20, 2016.
Mike Pence looks like a guy who watched too many episodes of “Mary Tyler Moore” as a kid and came away imprinted by the character of Ted Baxter, the pompous and self-deluded silver-haired newsman, whose perpetual cluelessness amused millions of TV watchers across the country. Little Mike appears to have seen Ted’s uninformed close-mindedness as a virtue and grew up to become an unapologetic evangelical social conservative who sees the last 40 years of progress on abortion, gay rights, civil rights, criminal justice reform and race relations as a disaster for the country.
Why does it matter? Because there is a possibility that Pence could become president of the United States. I know, I know. He’s running for vice president but consider that if he wins, Trump would be the oldest person ever elected to the job. He hides it well behind the constant rage and Agent Orange hair dye, but the Talking Yam is 70. At 6’3” and 236 pounds, he is overweight. He lives on Big Macs and Kentucky Fried Chicken. And, we know from John Kasich, who turned Trump down, he envisions making his VP the most powerful in history—kind of a chief operating officer while Trump handles the really important things like 3 a.m. tweets.
Donald Trump might blow up the world, but Mike Pence would set the clock back to 1954. It’s hard to say which would be worse. Here are some of Pence’s positions that should give even the most lukewarm progressive voters pause.
Abortion
As governor of Indiana, Pence signed the most abortion-restrictive regulations in the nation, banning abortion even in cases where the fetus has a “genetic abnormality” such as Down syndrome and holding doctors legally liable if they had knowingly performed such procedures. The law also required that aborted fetal tissue be buried or cremated. Following the Supreme Court’s decision in a landmark abortion case in June, a federal judge blocked the law from going into effect.
He led the national fight to defund Planned Parenthood and forced so many of its clinics to close in Indiana that he triggered an H.I.V. epidemic in one county.
LGBT Rights
in 2015, Pence helped pass one of the nation’s harshest “religious freedom” laws that would have protected businesses who wanted to refuse service to LGBT people if they cited religious objections. After businesses pulled out of expansion plans into the state, Pence signed an amended version of the law that was nominally intended to provide protection for sexual orientation and gender identity.
As a congressman, he opposed federal funding that would support treatment for people suffering from H.I.V. and AIDS, unless the government simultaneously invested in programs to discourage people from engaging in same-sex relationships.
He has resisted changes to hate-crime laws that would have included acts against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. And he was against the end of “don’t ask, don’t tell,” a Clinton administration policy that allowed gays to serve in the military.
He has said publicly, “I long for the day that Roe v. Wade is sent to the ash heap of history.”
Immigration
In 2006, Pence proposed an immigration compromise that envisioned a guest worker program that required undocumented immigrants to “self-deport” before returning to America legally. His plan did not offer a path to citizenship, nor did it propose a “deportation force.” He’s down with the big beautiful wall. He fought against having Syrian refugees settled in Indiana.
Education
Under Governor Pence, Indiana has diverted $53 million in the past two years from public school to funding vouchers for private schools, including religious schools, and to charter school programs. He was the first governor to try to repeal Common Core. Pence earned an F on the official NEA legislative report card in eight of his 12 years as a member of Congress.
He was one of only 25 Republican congressmen to vote against George W. Bush’s “No Child Left Behind” initiative.
The Environment
He is skeptical of climate change and wrote a letter to President Obama threatening to disobey the new regulations on coal mandated by the Clean Power Plan.
Trade
In 2014 Pence tweeted, “Trade means jobs, but trade also means security. The time has come for all of us to urge the swift adoption of the Trans Pacific Partnership.” Presumably, he has, or will, walk that one back.
Guns
Take a wild guess. He has an “A” rating from the NRA and is opposed to any restrictions on assault rifles.
Bonus: Troubling Personal Fact
Campaign finance records from a 1990 run for Congress show that Pence, then 31, had used political donations to pay the mortgage on his house, his personal credit card bill, groceries, golf tournament fees and car payments for his wife.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/thi ... bd896a11db
Purvi Patel: What you need to know about the woman arrested under Gov. Mike Pence’s abortion law
One state's quest to arrest a woman because of her fetus
SALON STAFF
Purvi Patel: What you need to know about the woman arrested under Gov. Mike Pence's abortion law
As a result of Indiana Gov. Mike Pence’s crusade against reproductive rights, a woman named Purvi Patel was convicted of feticide and neglect of a dependent in what was called an illegal abortion. The charges were dropped, and Patel was spared a 20-year prison sentence. But the case remains a mark of the dangers that women face under Gov. Pence’s rule.
Salon has covered the case, as well as the war against abortion and reproductive rights, many times.
–Woman sentenced to 20 years in prison after claiming she had a miscarriage, March 30, 2015
– Religious right’s next crusade: What they want to throw women in jail for now, April 3, 2015
– Secrets of the hate-pizza revolution: Indiana’s dreadful culture-war week, April 4, 2015
– Pregnant women are now targets: The tragedy of Purvi Patel, April 26, 2015
– Purvi Patel to appeal conviction: “Feticide is an extreme, extreme proposition, April 29, 2015
– America’s criminalization of women continues: Woman charged after allegedly self-inducing abortion, June 9, 2015
– The dark road to criminalizing pregnancy: Why everyone should care about the “feticide” conviction of Purvi Patel, May 2, 2015
– Abortion rights at stake: Purvi Patel and the fate of pregnant women in Indiana, May 25, 2016
– The case of Purvi Patel: How Mike Pence won his crusade against abortion in Indiana
http://www.salon.com/2016/10/05/purvi-p ... rtion-law/