Anonymous ID: 6394de May 3, 2022, 7:22 p.m. No.16205843   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5858 >>5860 >>5868 >>5897

Maybe this is a stupid question, butWhy is Abortion a Jewish Rite? or Part of their religion?Are they required to sacrifice the first born? They way the use their religion as justification only makes me wonder WTF?!

Anonymous ID: 6394de May 3, 2022, 7:34 p.m. No.16205925   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5992 >>6062 >>6184 >>6191 >>6265 >>6334 >>6352

>>16205897

And the Freemasons do many blood drives VIA The red Cross, some guys had Pins that said they donated 10 gallons. 80 pints of blood is a lot. If they drank it or sold it in a hospital it is big business they want people to give away for free.

Just how much does blood transfusion cost?

 

The expense of a blood transfusion depends upon where you live, the hospital/clinic you work with, why the blood is being provided, and your blood type. Usually, the treatment is going to cost anywhere from $900 to as much as $3,500 per unit (525 milliliters of blood) without insurance coverage. If you have a medical insurance policy, there is a likelihood this treatment is going to be covered. If so, you will be accountable for your co-pay and deductible. Ask your medical insurance supplier to find out more about it, seeing that every policy is different.

 

You might also like our articles about the cost of lipo stem banking, or a TB test.

 

Yale Global Health Review, for example, states that the expense will be around $210 per unit of blood transfused to the healthcare facility, and the expenses to a patient will depend upon what the blood is being used for; for instance, patients getting an organ transplant can easily see rates go beyond $3,800.

 

This Hopkins Medicine price catalog notes that the typical blood transfusion service is $4,271.

 

According to the Journal of Scientific Oncology, the expense to have a blood transfusion can vary anywhere from $1,800 to $3,000, and the Iowa Orthopedic Journal states the expenses can vary anywhere from $1,700 to $2,500 per unit of blood transfused.

 

Choosing Wisely also states that a blood transfusion can cost a lot. With a unit of blood costing $200 to $300, there are other included expenses to consider such as the storage, processing, and the health center and equipment charges. Plus, the expenses can be much higher if you were to come down with an infection and/or severe problem because of the transfusion.

 

The Dayton Daily News did a story on a client who was charged $1,600 per unit of blood.

 

https://www.thepricer.org/blood-transfusion-cost/

Anonymous ID: 6394de May 3, 2022, 7:47 p.m. No.16206015   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6019 >>6044

Jewish law does not consider the fetus to be a being with a soul until it is born. It does not have personhood. Furthermore, before 40 days, some poskim, or deciders of Jewish law, have a low bar for allowing an abortion.

 

The Talmud, in Yevamos 69b, cites the view of Rav Hisda that “until forty days from conception the fetus is merely water. It is not yet considered a living being.”

 

If there is a threat to a woman’s life, the safety of the mother takes precedence over continuing the pregnancy at any stage. Many sources illustrate this graphically and rather unambiguously, and all modern poskim, or religious decisors, agree on this. In fact, in certain circumstances, a fetus that endangers the life of the mother is legally considered a “murderer” in active pursuit.

 

For example, in a case of maternal danger, we find in Sanhedrin 72b (further clarified with Rashi’s commentary) that “a midwife may insert her hand into the womb and kill the fetus … [the reason is] for as long as the fetus has not emerged into the world, it is not a nefesh [a being with a soul]; one is therefore allowed to kill it and save the mother …”

 

According to Mishna Oholos 7:3, “If a woman is having trouble giving birth, they cut up the child in her womb and bring it forth limb by limb, because her life comes before the life of [the child].”

 

Jewish law prohibits killing in all cases — except if one person is trying to murder another. If an individual is trying to end someone’s life, killing that person is actually a requirement. How much more so, a fetus (not yet a full person) who threatens the mother’s life may be aborted.

 

In his Mishneh Torah, Maimonides writes the following: “The sages ruled that when complications arise and a pregnant woman cannot give birth, it is permitted to abort the fetus in her womb, whether with a knife or drugs, for the fetus is considered a rodef [a murderer in pursuit] of its mother … If the head of the fetus emerges, it should not be touched, because one life should not be sacrificed for another. Although the mother may die, this is the nature of the world.”

 

In other words, when a fetus endangers the life of the mother, unless it is in the process of being born, abortion is a halachic requirement.

 

https://www.jta.org/2019/05/22/opinion/what-jewish-law-really-says-about-abortion