Sunday, September 21, 2014

Ordinary Folks with Ordinary Problems

I chose my first post on an article titled, Some Things Worth Considering About the Wendy Davis Abortion Reveal, and how her early book releasing that spewed the candidate's personal life decision so many years ago would effect the outcome of the race for governor of Texas.

An advanced releasing of the candidate's autobiography revealed that Davis had two abortions in the nineties due to medical reasons. Davis's first abortion derived from the egg implanting outside of the womb putting health and life of the mother at risk and the other showed that if she had given birth when expected, the child would have been born with Dandy-Walker syndrome (a severe brain abnormality). The revelation isn't the biggest shocker in her race to the governor's mansion since we have for some time now known where the candidate stood on abortions. Davis spearheaded a huge abortion bill last summer that took two special sessions to become law.

What is boils down to is this, did Davis schedule the early book releasing knowing that critics and the public alike would eventually know about her ordeal in hopes of tugging on the heartstrings of her supporters? I mean, her opponent Greg Abbott created a campaign ad to give the impression that he was just like any other American struggling to rebuild himself after an accident that left him disabled. No one will probably ever know the true intent of the early release of Davis's autobiography, but what we do know is that playing on the hearts of voters have shown in the past to be very effective.

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