Community Tard Baby General (includes brain dead kids) - Fundies and their genetic Fuckups; Parents of corpses in denial

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.
I have to say I'm impressed by how long Luna lived before she got her feeding tube. Something like six, nine months? Unfortunate that her mom eventually changed her mind and got one installed, but I wonder how much longer she could've gone on without one.
She was the perfect visual representation of starving baby, so probably not too much longer. I get the idea that while Luna was never great at feeding her ability to nurse sharply decreased as her head size (and cysts) increased. I think the last weeks the small amount that dripped down her throat was just barely keeping her alive.

I’m sure hospice tried to steer her away from a feeding tube but maybe once they had to acknowledge she was probably days from death Robyn backed away from “acceptance” and started her fully delusional woo healing journey, via using the most invasive treatments medical science has to offer.
 
Many genetic disorders, one of them indeed being Down syndrome, have heart defects as one of the symptoms, and until the 1950s, little if anything could be done for them.

There's a book called "Angel Unaware" that Roy Rogers and Dale Evans wrote about their daughter who was born with Down Syndrome in the 1950s, and died at the age of 2 1/2 from mumps encephalitis. She also had a heart defect, and they were honestly surprised that she lived as long as she did.
That is accurate.

My first cousin (once removed) has a son with severe autism, who was also born with a hole in his heart. (It was surgically repaired when he was a baby.) He also had deformities in both ears (both inside and out) and coloboma in one eye.
 
There's a syndrome whose primary symptom is autism, but as the kids get older, as in 8 or more, they also develop big crops of colon polyps that often turn cancerous at very early ages. I know a woman who has a relative (cousin's grandchild, I think) with this condition, and he had to have his colon removed. He didn't have to have a permanent colostomy, but how traumatic this must have been, and he couldn't really understand what was done to him. Fortunately, this is very rare.
 
a woman in Louisiana is being forced to carry her baby with acrania (will be born without a skull) to term. if i’m understanding this right, it’s because the hospital doesn’t consider the baby’s condition to be life-threatening for the mom and the baby is technically alive, therefore not a suitable candidate for an abortion.

article w/bypassed paywall

68EFAEF8-4E05-4075-895E-A009451B5BE6.jpegCFEF8440-B516-412E-9CC1-C174A69D7C76.jpeg
 
a woman in Louisiana is being forced to carry her baby with acrania (will be born without a skull) to term. if i’m understanding this right, it’s because the hospital doesn’t consider the baby’s condition to be life-threatening for the mom and therefore not a suitable candidate for an abortion.

article w/bypassed paywall

This angers me so I'm just gonna try to be civil and not get hats.
Every single last Bible thumper and all of the politicians responsible for overturning RvW should be forced to be present at the birth of this thing and be forced to hold it up close. I hope this woman has resources to leave the state permanently.
 
This angers me so I'm just gonna try to be civil and not get hats.
Every single last Bible thumper and all of the politicians responsible for overturning RvW should be forced to be present at the birth of this thing and be forced to hold it up close. I hope this woman has resources to leave the state permanently.
They should be forced to breastfeed it, even if male, like Mr. Boss on Smiling Friends breastfeeding the baby creature:


Babbies need skin to skin contact, skull or not!
 
a woman in Louisiana is being forced to carry her baby with acrania (will be born without a skull) to term. if i’m understanding this right, it’s because the hospital doesn’t consider the baby’s condition to be life-threatening for the mom and the baby is technically alive, therefore not a suitable candidate for an abortion.

article w/bypassed paywall

This poor kid will hopefully not live long, right? Just awful.
 
This poor kid will hopefully not live long, right? Just awful.
According to the article acrania is in the same category as anencephaly i.e. potato that will die shortly after birth, if it's born alive at all.

I hope women who were denied abortions for terminally fucked fetuses are able to get a class action lawsuit or something together, because there is no excuse for this Islamic-ass content.
 
That's usually people who have demonstrated their value already. In a preliterate society that depends on oral tradition to perpetuate itself, that old crippled guy is worth keeping around. Not so much a tard baby that will never amount to anything.

It's not so much this as the fact that when you're older and get injured, people already care about you. We've only started loving 'babies' from zygotes very, very recently. In the ancient world, babies died so damn often everyone knew that it wasn't worth getting attached to them. The Gauls apparently didn't let their fathers see kids until they were 5, because by that time kiddo was actually likely to grow up. There's a letter of Cicero where his grandson dies as a baby and he's just like, meh, happens. But when his daughter (an adult) died, he was absolutely distraught.

The baby was the lowest form of person because it didn't have much of a personality, and there wasn't anything distinct about it to love, being "yours" didn't really cut it. There's a reason that passover killed the firstborn: it was much more of a loss because as the oldest it was the most likely to survive and also the one you'd known the longest. For the same emotional impact now, you'd probably have to kill the littlest.

The whole idea of 'loving' an UNBORN baby would have been absolutely alien and laughable, like crying over a sperm on a tissue as your beloved dead child.
 
This angers me so I'm just gonna try to be civil and not get hats.
Every single last Bible thumper and all of the politicians responsible for overturning RvW should be forced to be present at the birth of this thing and be forced to hold it up close. I hope this woman has resources to leave the state permanently.
I get what you're saying, but the problem is the diehard "all life is precious" Bible thumpers that are glad about RvW being overturned already eagerly cuddle and hold their own premature stillborn potatoes. And force young kids that don't understand death to do so as well. They'd probably double down and spin it as "proof" about how they're right about their beliefs.
 
Malachi Warnock
Screenshot_20220818-210424_TikTok.jpg
TikTok @warnock.warriors2.0

Severe hydranencephaly. Mother Kris Warnock posts the most grotesque videos of the poor child. I have no words to describe how horrifying I find this. He has zero quality of life and the mother parades him around the Internet like some sick sideshow. Gives real Gwen vibes.

He has a sister, Kalla, who has the saddest eyes I think I've ever seen on a child. She looks utterly traumatised. I think there will be similarities with Atlas Ramirez if Luna lasts a few more years.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
a woman in Louisiana is being forced to carry her baby with acrania (will be born without a skull) to term. if i’m understanding this right, it’s because the hospital doesn’t consider the baby’s condition to be life-threatening for the mom and the baby is technically alive, therefore not a suitable candidate for an abortion.

article w/bypassed paywall

Off-topic, but Philippe Jeanty, who is credited at the bottom of that photo, was world renowned in the study of fetal anatomy. His website, TheFetus.net, has tons of interesting articles and nightmare fuel photos. Dr. Jeanty is called "the godfather of fetal ultrasound" and by all accounts was a great guy.

(Also, what is happening to this woman is horrific and unimaginable.)
 
According to the article acrania is in the same category as anencephaly i.e. potato that will die shortly after birth, if it's born alive at all.

I hope women who were denied abortions for terminally fucked fetuses are able to get a class action lawsuit or something together, because there is no excuse for this Islamic-ass content.
I'm angry but I'm rational so I know the child will not live BUT my concern is more for the mother.
It's inhumane to make her carry it to term and go through the trauma of birth.
 
I'm angry but I'm rational so I know the child will not live BUT my concern is more for the mother.
It's inhumane to make her carry it to term and go through the trauma of birth.
Yeah forced pregnancy is traumatic regardless, but I can't imagine what it's like to be forced to gestate something that's not even compatible with life. A healthy kid isn't in the cards in this situation no matter what, even though the woman wanted that more than anything.

This is just pointless cruelty to women for the sake of pointless cruelty to women, especially since you know she's not the only woman in that situation in abortion ban states.

See also, 10 year old rape victims being forced to go out of state to abort chomo embryos.
 
It's not so much this as the fact that when you're older and get injured, people already care about you. We've only started loving 'babies' from zygotes very, very recently. In the ancient world, babies died so damn often everyone knew that it wasn't worth getting attached to them. The Gauls apparently didn't let their fathers see kids until they were 5, because by that time kiddo was actually likely to grow up. There's a letter of Cicero where his grandson dies as a baby and he's just like, meh, happens. But when his daughter (an adult) died, he was absolutely distraught.

The baby was the lowest form of person because it didn't have much of a personality, and there wasn't anything distinct about it to love, being "yours" didn't really cut it. There's a reason that passover killed the firstborn: it was much more of a loss because as the oldest it was the most likely to survive and also the one you'd known the longest. For the same emotional impact now, you'd probably have to kill the littlest.

The whole idea of 'loving' an UNBORN baby would have been absolutely alien and laughable, like crying over a sperm on a tissue as your beloved dead child.
Dr. Florence Murray was a Canadian physician who worked in what is now North Korea, prior to the division and ensuing war. The blurb to this book said something about "a society so primitive, its women were not considered worthy of having names." But that was only half true; in that region, the infant death rate was so high, babies usually were not named until they started walking.


These are tragic situations all around.

Dr. Edith Potter was also a fetologist and neonatologist who wrote extensively on this subject.

TEP, thanks for leading me down yet another Internet rabbit hole! I signed up and looked at some of those images, and some of the scariest looking things turned out to be NBD in the end.

Dr. Jeanty does indeed sound like an amazing person. RIP.


I'll admit to cracking up at the second picture, and specifically the need for an arrow to identify the toddler Philippe from his friends.
 
Dr. Florence Murray was a Canadian physician who worked in what is now North Korea, prior to the division and ensuing war. The blurb to this book said something about "a society so primitive, its women were not considered worthy of having names." But that was only half true; in that region, the infant death rate was so high, babies usually were not named until they started walking.


These are tragic situations all around.

Dr. Edith Potter was also a fetologist and neonatologist who wrote extensively on this subject.
Potter sequence, the constellation of fetal deformities associated with oligohydramnios (insufficient amniotic fluid), is named after Dr. Edith Potter.
 
Isn't that another condition that's incompatible with life in the most severe forms?
Yes, it is, and renal agenesis (the absence of kidneys) is also known as Potter syndrome.

Many years ago, I worked with a woman whom I think may have had a baby with that. This was back in the days when, about halfway through the pregnancy, the doctor said he thought she might be having twins, and the x-ray revealed exactly that. As is typical with twins, she went into labor about a month before the due date; her daughter was a normal baby, and her son died during labor. They wanted to do an autopsy because he looked perfect from the outside and nobody could figure out what had happened - until they opened him up, and this was only one of many deformities he had. I had never heard of such a thing at the time.
 
Back