Tim Walz fabricates a false “IVF” narrative to disparage Republicans; his spouse Gwen exposes the reality
To point out Republicans opposing fertility treatments, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz made public his and wife Gwen’s infertility problems. As luck would have it though, their experience of infertility involved things like vitro fertilization also. But as it happens, their experience with infertility included medical care other than in vitro fertilization.
During his campaign rally speech, Kamala Harris’ running mate advised the Republicans to “mind their own damn business.” He then went on to talk about what he had gone through with his family concerning the issues of infertility treatments. Meanwhile, Gwen Walz told the New York Times that a neighbor who worked as a nurse helped her understand their predicament and gave her the vaccinations she needed for I.U.I.
Walz explained that he and his wife had undergone years of fertility treatment before deciding to have a child together, in his first appearance as Harris’ Vice President.
The statements by Walz left some people confused leading them to think that they used IVF when having their two children (Ginsberg 2019).
Gwen Walz shares her own story.
In the meantime, according to Gwen Walz interviewed by The New York Times about how she became aware of her situation; a neighbour who was working as a nurse informed her about this condition and gave the necessary vaccination for IU. She said that when she would go home from school, her neighbor would give her a shot.
“What is more important is my neighbor who’s a nurse would help me with all injections required during IUI procedure so I run from school straight into home” says Gwen.
JD Vance did not take kindly to this announcement being made. It has come to light today that Tim Walsh lied about having an IVF baby. “Who makes up such stories?” he asked
Since then anti-abortion extremists have not even attacked it in anyway they always do IVF because these procedures are known not to produce or destroy embryos in any way.
During the operation, the sperm is directly injected into the uterus. Unlike IVF, IUI has lower success rates.
According to a spokesman for Walz in response to Times’ inquiry, Walz often mentions his family receiving “treatments like that” and “he was utilizing well-accepted abbreviations for fertility treatments.”
After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, effectively eliminating the constitutional right to abortion, some anti-abortion groups have focused on in vitro fertilization (IVF). February’s ruling by the Alabama Supreme Court that frozen embryos should be treated as children completely disrupted and called into question the future of reproductive treatment industry.
Over 10 million children globally have been born with this method of reproduction since its inception over half a century ago and each year more than half a million babies are born through in vitro fertilization (IVF).