A Montana Republican suggests she would prefer [her] daughter die by suicide than allow her to transition
Monday May 1, 2023
My Note: As a parent my only wish, always, was that my children be happy. This woman is undeserving of motherhood and puts her political agenda ahead of her own child's welfare and life. This is sick!
It is my opinion that withholding life saving accepted medical treatment from a child would be considered "involuntary manslaughter". See - "Parents were charged with involuntary manslaughter and child endangerment after the death of their 2-Year-old girl". __________________
A Montana lawmaker who sponsored the state's ban on gender-affirming care for transgender youth is facing fierce criticism over a comment she made on the House floor in March. See Twitter Video
Republican state Rep. Kerri Seekins-Crowe suggested during a floor debate that she would rather her daughter die by suicide than allow her to transition. Though Seekins-Crowe did not identify her daughter as transgender, she said that she was "one of those parents who lived with a daughter who was suicidal for three years."
"One of the big issues that we have heard today and we've talked about lately is that without surgery the risk of suicide goes way up. Well, I am one of those parents who lived with a daughter who was suicidal for three years," Seekins-Crowe said. "Someone once asked me, 'Wouldn't I just do anything to help save her?' And I really had to think and the answer was, 'No.'"
"I was not going to give in to her emotional manipulation because she was incapable of making those decisions and I had to make those decisions for her," she added.
Seekins-Crowe continued:
I was not going to let her tear apart my family and I was not going to let her tear apart me because I had to be strong for her, I had to have a vision for her life when she had none, was incapable of having none."
Seekins-Crowe also said that she "spent hours on the floor in prayer because I didn't know that when I woke up if my daughter was going to be alive or not. But I knew that I had to make those right decisions for her so that she would have a precious, successful adulthood at that time."
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