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Elizabeth502
Guest
Rence, I do agree that PP is consumer-driven. I think it’s a fallacy that minorities get the sudden inspiration, let alone “pressure” to have abortions just because there may be more concentrations of PP clincis in those neighborhoods. What I always (btw) felt about PP is that they set up in urban areas because of density (again, for economic reasons). And it is true that minorities are more concentrated in urban areas. Therefore I think many Catholics make connections that PP “targets” minorities because of location, when it’s more logical that they’re targeting population density. I don’t know, I could be wrong: are there lots of rural PP and suburban PP centers? (in similar percentages?)
I think that Catholics also connect Margaret Sanger’s eugenics beliefs with current PP intentions, but I don’t think necessarily that the two are related at all. I think most modern young women do not know anything about Sanger’s political persuasions, nor do frankly many, if not most, of the PP administrators.
With regard to your paragraph about contraceptives, again I am divided about this. I understand what you’re saying about the general adult public in the U.S., and can’t argue with freedom of choice, nor do I want to. I do have a concern with PP’s platform about “establishing sexual rights,” particularly as applied to minors. So now we have a new entitlement, which is ‘I get to have sex whenever I want, under whatever conditions, and at whatever age.’ It’s bypassing the parenting role, first of all, and acting like Big Sister, preemptively, which I find just magnifies the social ills we already have in encouraging extra-family decisions. As I said earlier, I’d feel more comfortable, if they were going to take an educational role with regard to minors rather than a marketing role with regard to minors.
I think that Catholics also connect Margaret Sanger’s eugenics beliefs with current PP intentions, but I don’t think necessarily that the two are related at all. I think most modern young women do not know anything about Sanger’s political persuasions, nor do frankly many, if not most, of the PP administrators.
With regard to your paragraph about contraceptives, again I am divided about this. I understand what you’re saying about the general adult public in the U.S., and can’t argue with freedom of choice, nor do I want to. I do have a concern with PP’s platform about “establishing sexual rights,” particularly as applied to minors. So now we have a new entitlement, which is ‘I get to have sex whenever I want, under whatever conditions, and at whatever age.’ It’s bypassing the parenting role, first of all, and acting like Big Sister, preemptively, which I find just magnifies the social ills we already have in encouraging extra-family decisions. As I said earlier, I’d feel more comfortable, if they were going to take an educational role with regard to minors rather than a marketing role with regard to minors.