Ūūlę ([info]chimera) rakstīja,
@ 2012-05-15 09:38:00

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tas, kurš domā, ka kontracepcijas'n'abortu aizliegums+totāls bezbērnu nodoklis, neveicina dzimstību, ir losis. un vēl kā veicina! uzprasi čaušesku. taču ja civēku ir iespējams piespiest dzemdēt, tad piespiest parūpēties par sadzemdēto - nav.

In 1966, in an effort to boost the country’s low birthrate, the dictator Nicolae Ceausescu banned both contraception and abortion and taxed those who were childless after age 25—whether married, single, or infertile. As the birthrate rose, so did poverty and homelessness. Children were often simply abandoned. Ceausescu’s response was to create a gulag of state orphanages, with children warehoused by the thousands.

The orphanages soon were stripped of resources as Ceausescu began exporting most of Romania’s food and industry to repay the country’s crippling national debt. The scenes in these orphanages were shocking. Babies were seldom held or given deliberate sensory stimulation. Many were found tied to their beds, left alone for hours or days, with bottles of gruel propped haphazardly into their mouths. Many infants stared blankly into space. Indeed, you could walk into some of these hundred-bed orphanages and not hear a sound. Blankets were covered in urine, feces, and lice. The childhood mortality rate in these institutions was sickening, termed by some Westerners “pediatric Auschwitz.”


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[info]chimera
2012-05-15 10:13 (saite)
http://www.sustainer.org/dhm_archive/index.php?display_article=vn318cohort_of67ed

http://www.ceausescu.org/ceausescu_texts/overplanned_parenthood.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cighid

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o, šis man īpaši patīk
[info]chimera
2012-05-15 11:40 (saite)
The government's enforcement techniques were as bad as the law. Women under the age of 45 were rounded up at their workplaces every one to three months and taken to clinics, where they were examined for signs of pregnancy, often in the presence of government agents - dubbed the "menstrual police" by some Romanians. A pregnant woman who failed to "produce" a baby at the proper time could expect to be summoned for questioning. Women who miscarried were suspected of arranging an abortion. Some doctors resorted for forging statistics. "If a child died in our district, we lost 10 to 25 percent of our salary," says Dr. Geta Stanescu of Bucharest. "But it wasn't our fault: we had no medicine or milk, and the families were poor."

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