You'd think so, but in the past I defended more than a few birth injury cases. More often than not, not seeking proper prenatal care and being a slob contributed more to the problems than anything a doctor did. It bewildered me that so many women in there 20s who were well north of 300 lbs. were getting pregnant.
It raised 2 questions in 1:
How?
1) How were they getting someone willing to throw one in them? and
2) How, physically, was someone able to throw one in them?
I was left with the conclusion that for every putrid, gelatinous, 'too many folds to find the box' lock, there was at least one desperate, disgusting, toad-like, but persistent key.
You'd think so, but in the past I defended more than a few birth injury cases. More often than not, not seeking proper prenatal care and being a slob contributed more to the problems than anything a doctor did. It bewildered me that so many women in there 20s who were well north of 300 lbs. were getting pregnant.
It raised 2 questions in 1:
How?
1) How were they getting someone willing to throw one in them? and
2) How, physically, was someone able to throw one in them?
I was left with the conclusion that for every putrid, gelatinous, 'too many folds to find the box' lock, there was at least one desperate, disgusting, toad-like, but persistent key.
37That so reminds me of a scene in Clerks where his girlfriend leaves the store...