E
edwest2
Guest
Sexual revolution. This was not about love but sex. First, contraception and then abortion. Having lots of sex without worrying about a baby showing up was the issue. Did women ‘gain’ from this sort of thinking? Sex is designed for having babies. It should not be regarded as another plaything. First, a little background on the contraception issue from a qualified person:Well, you just changed your entire point. You specifically called up your references to support your claim, and I would assume your lack of response in this area is your acknowledgment that it does not, if fact, support your claim.
Ill repeat it here again: I do not have any information to either support or deny a direct connection between contraception and abortion. I personally have trouble seeing it, as I do not have any issue with someones choice to use contraception, but would never in my wildest dreams consider abortion. Many of my 30 something friends are the same. Its not hard to imagine. Again, statistically, we know the vast majority use contraception, but we are pretty evenly split on abortion. Right there, we know there is a huge chunk of the population that supports contraception but not abortion. Everyone here loves to lump the two together, but that is mere opinion at this point. I would propose the of those that use contraception, roughly half support, and half reject abortion. Again, the rough statistics bear this out. How some of your then draw a line is beyond me.
Also, I must point out there are plenty of forces as play through the end of the 50s, into the 60s and beyond. How people are so sure that contraception was to blame is beyond me. Sure, it was there, but so were about 1000 other forces. If you think we could magically erase the pill from history, and therefore the entire sexual revolution would stop, you are probably deluding yourself.
I get the broad point being made. If you are in a sexual relationship and do NOT want a child at all costs, you would likely contracept, and if that failed, you would abort. That a simple logic. If you are someone who would abort, you are likely already using a contraceptive, of course. What I fail to see, is how someone who would not consider abortion is now open to it because of condoms or the pill.
In a practical sense, contraceptives are not going away. If you want to use them in a case against abortion, you need to draw a strong and distinct connection.
Please tell me where you got this number.
I am venturing a guess that you got this from the link you posted earlier. For your sake, I hope you have a separate source. Its not that this may or may not be roughly accurate. Rather, my guess is you are taking a number in your given link and completely mis-interpreting what the data is saying; basically making another mistake with statistical data, as you did the first time.
catholiceducation.org/articles/sexuality/se0002.html
A few salient words:
"Speaking of the link between contraception and abortion, Dr. Siegfried Ernst, M.D., said: “The anti-baby pill has made it possible to separate, fundamentally and radically, the production of pleasure from the act of procreation. It thus automatically started the ‘sexual revolution.’ … Having become ‘safe,’ sexual acts have multiplied as a result of contemporary propaganda touting ‘the right to a happy sexual life.’ ‘Accidents’ have increased proportionately despite – or has been in consequence of? – the anti-baby pill. And those ‘unwanted children’ must logically, be removed by abortion.”
"Professor Janet Smith also drew attention to the link between contraception and abortion when she said: “Contraception takes the baby-making element out of sexual intercourse. It makes pregnancy seem like an accident of sexual intercourse rather than the natural consequence that responsible individuals ought to be prepared for. Abortion, then, becomes thinkable as a solution to an unwanted pregnancy. Contraception enables those who are not prepared to care for babies to engage in sexual intercourse; when they become pregnant, they resent the unborn child for intruding itself upon their lives and they turn to the solution of abortion. It should be no surprise that countries that are permeated by contraceptive sex, fight harder for access to abortion than they do to ensure that all babies can survive both in the womb and out. It is foolish for pro-lifers to think that they can avoid the issues of contraception and sexual irresponsibility and be successful in the fight against abortion.”
60% of the poverty in the United States is linked to unwed mothers.
God bless,
Ed