Sasha Mirrors
Bio
I'm a poetic radical. I speak my mind. Writing is my passion, and I follow my passions and a change is gonna come whether you like it or not.
Stories (7/0)
Missing white woman syndrome
600,000 people go missing each year, and 4,400 corpses are found. Everyone in the world is impacted by the problem of disappearance. When someone contacts law enforcement after becoming concerned for someone's safety, the search for that person's whereabouts will begin. When each hour passes and there is a lower chance that the individual will be located, investigators begin to race against the time. An inquiry into a missing individual is most crucial within the first 72 hours because, There are eyewitnesses, data, places, evidence, locations, background details, etc. in the hunt for the missing individual. The first 48 hours are also crucial because it gives detectives time to pursue leads before witnesses begin to forget or evidence begins to fade. Forced disappearances have an impact on the people who are involved, their families, and the society at large. Families of the missing, face a range of challenges that can be stressful. In addition to worrying for the future of their loved ones, they usually have to cope with financial, societal, legal, and psychological challenges. Sometimes, without the aid of media and public knowledge, the mothers, fathers, brothers, and sisters of missing people have been seeking for them for over 20 years.
By Sasha Mirrors2 years ago in FYI
A Chance For A Choice: OPINION
In 1969, Norma McCorvey, other known as Jane Roe, a woman in her early twenties, wanted to terminate an unwanted pregnancy. McCorvey, who had grown up in difficult, destitute circumstances had already given birth twice and given both children up for adoption. At the time of McCorvey's pregnancy in 1969, abortion was permitted in Texas—but only to save a woman's life. As a result, some women have resorted to illegal, risky "back alley" abortions or self-inflicted abortions. According to The Guttmacher Institute, “the estimated number of illegal abortions in the United States in the 1950s and 1960s ranged from 200,000 to 1.2 million per year.”
By Sasha Mirrors2 years ago in Humans