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I wanted to do that poll but by the time I got there, it was closed. Oh well.
“Let’s debunk the 98% of Catholic women use contraception right here with a poll. I would say Catholic Answers has to be at least slightly indicative of the Catholic population at large.”* These two statements are mutually exclusive. Catholic Answers Forum represents, after suspensions and bannings, nearly exclusively conservative Catholics, and it certainly does not represent the views of the entire Catholic population in United States.Let’s debunk the 98% of Catholic women use contraception right here with a poll. I would say Catholic Answers has to be at least slightly indicative of the Catholic population at large.
What I think might be a large fallacy here is that perhaps a lot of women used contraception during the 1960’s and 1970’s, but don’t any longer. Just like a lot of people might’ve smoked a cigarette once in their life, but aren’t for smoking, and actually to this day think smoking is unhealthy. Yet, despite their current beliefs and practices, they are actually counted as “pro-smoking” because they “have used cigarettes”.
Anyways, on another thread they said this 98% figure the media uses (even Fox news) is actually even more misleading, in that it only counts cases of unintended pregnacies. In other words… A LOT of Catholic women probably don’t use contraception if they want to become pregnant… but all of them aren’t counted.
So… I think an actual poll of CAF members is necessary on this. One which asks whether we have used it (as men or women), and whether we support it or reject it.
98% of Catholics don’t believe in contraception and support it.
**2 assumptions I’m making in the poll=
I’m assuming if Catholic women, Catholic men, or non-Catholics support contraception, that they also have used it. If they haven’t, I’m assuming they will in the future.
I had to lump the genders for Non-Catholics because of a lack of polling options. **
Well, getting your info from Planned Parenthood directly is one way to be wrong. Not the only way, but heck if you’re going to go for the whole enchilada and be dead flat roadkill wrong, you might as well take the plunge and link the real garbage.“Let’s debunk the 98% of Catholic women use contraception right here with a poll. I would say Catholic Answers has to be at least slightly indicative of the Catholic population at large.”* These two statements are mutually exclusive. Catholic Answers Forum represents, after suspensions and bannings, nearly exclusively conservative Catholics, and it certainly does not represent the views of the entire Catholic population in United States.
This from Guttmacher on religious women and contraceptive use:
"Some 68% of Catholic women use a highly effective method, compared with 73% of Mainline Protestants and 74% of Evangelicals.
"Only 2% of Catholic women rely on natural family planning; this is true even among Catholic women who attend church once a month or more . . .
“The analysis, based on a nationally representative U.S. government survey, has important implications for health policy, which is still at times shaped by the mistaken belief that contraceptive use runs counter to strongly held religious beliefs. The new report counters this myth and shows that opposition to contraception by the Catholic hierarchy and other socially conservative organizations is not reflected in the actual behaviors and health care needs of Catholic and Evangelical women.”
guttmacher.org/media/nr/2011/04/13/index.html
Guttmacher is not Planned Parenthood: guttmacher.org/about/faq.htmlWell, getting your info from Planned Parenthood directly is one way to be wrong. Not the only way, but heck if you’re going to go for the whole enchilada and be dead flat roadkill wrong, you might as well take the plunge and link the real garbage.
No, it isn’t. However, Guttmacher and Planned Parenthood enjoyed a special relationship that lasted many years. It would be politically naive to say that just because Planned Parenthood stopped publicly funding Guttmacher in 2007 that the two of them are no longer related or that they no longer share the same interest…namely, that of promoting widespread use of contraceptives.Guttmacher is not Planned Parenthood: guttmacher.org/about/faq.html
Of course it doesn’t. What it does require ius to do is defend it, such as in cases where statistics are manipulated in the media in an attempt to attack a teaching of the Church. As has been pointed out in many places on CAF, even if 98% of people did something wrong at some point, that still doesn’t make it right and it doesn’t invalidate the Church’s teaching. Morality is not determined by democracy.Studies, statistics, information - what is there to fear? Do you believe your religion requires you to stay uninformed?
… Saint Thomas Aquinas, of all people, … says if a Catholic comes to believe the Church is in error in some essential, officially defined doctrine, it is a mortal sin against conscience, a sin of hypocrisy, for him to remain in the Church and call himself a Catholic, but only a venial sin against knowledge for him to leave the Church in honest but partly culpable error. (Source)
Unless I missed something somewhere, the CDC study didn’t appear to differentiate based on religious preference; the 98% figure was for women in general. That said, other studies (such as the one listed below) have shown that women self-identifying as Catholic generally differ from women in general by one percentage point when it comes to contraceptive use.I’m afraid the “debunking” has been debunked.
the 98% ever use of contraceptives figure comes from a CDC study (only cited by the Guttmacher Institute). The CDC study includes all 16-44 y.o. women who have ever had sexual intercourse. See here, page 5
cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_23/sr23_029.pdf
Of course one could deduct the 4.6% of women who report usage of NFP in the study, but that probably understates the ever used number as many women who currently use NFP have used other methods at one time or another.
Worth noting are the much lower figures for women self-reporting as practicing orthodox Roman Catholicism.Here is a study specifically on American Catholic women (again aged 15 to 44) which shows that about 49% of Catholic women use some form of ABC (or sterilization) in any given month.
lifeissues.net/writers/feh/feh_28religion_contraception.html
Wow, that’s a tad insulting, don’t you think? 75% of the women who responded said they believe contraception is wrong. I think you owe them an apology.The results of this local poll so far doesn’t surprise me.
Women on this site are more full pride and girl-power than I had hoped when I joined.
At least I’m comforted to know the men stand with me.
You need to be informed. Here is the page of the Guttmacher Institute.Guttmacher is not Planned Parenthood: guttmacher.org/about/faq.html
Studies, statistics, information - what is there to fear? Do you believe your religion requires you to stay uninformed?
Using NFP puts life in God’s hands. Contraception takes it out of God’s hands and puts it in yours.I honestly don’t understand how natural family planning is any different from birth control methods. This is something I have looked into for years and I really don’t see a difference at all. Using a barrier method of birth control like a condom or diaphragm is just as wrong as the hormonal version of birth control correct. So using a chart as your barrier between your eggs and fertilization is exactly the same thing.