Something special

Family values:

Anti-abortion Colorado Republican Lauren Boebert has said that her 17-year-old son will make her a grandmother in April.

Isn’t that sweet. She had a baby when she was a teenager and now her son is following her lead.

“There’s something special about rural conservative communities,” Boebert continued. “They value life. If you look at teen pregnancy rates throughout the nation, well, they’re the same, [in] rural and urban areas. However, abortion rates are higher in urban areas. Teen moms’ rates are higher in rural conservative areas, because they understand the preciousness of a life that it’s about to be born.”

Or they’re lower in urban areas because people with better access to schools and libraries and higher education understand that teenagers don’t make the best parents.

A 2019 study published in the American Journal of Public Health (AJPH) suggested that teen birth rates in rural areas might be higher than in urban areas because teens might be vulnerable to “local conditions that limit unintended pregnancy management options.” Teens living in rural areas often face large geographical barriers to access abortion providers—a difficulty that’s been exacerbated by a proliferation of abortion bans in Republican-led states.

Also teenagers living in rural areas often have parents like Lauren Boebert.

The CDC also reports the impact that teen pregnancies have on the girls’ lives: only 50 percent of teen mothers receive a high school diploma before the age of 22. Among women who don’t give birth in their teens, this number goes up to 90 percent. A 2008 study mentioned by the CDC also studied the impact of teen pregnancies on the children. 

The offspring of teen moms are more likely to have lower school achievement or drop out of school; have more health problems; be incarcerated in their teens; and give birth as teenagers themselves.

Like Lauren Boebert’s son’s babymama.

Boebert was a teen mom herself and had to drop out of high school because of her pregnancy. 

And she’s never caught up.

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