C
Catholic_Dude
Guest
A consistent sexual ethic shows all sexual perversions are interlinked, so even if say contraception and sterilization are not the same thing as abortion, they still directly relate. Sterilization is a perversion stemming from the mindset that sex can be freely engaged in without the ‘danger’ of conceiving a child. Such a perversion is no less monstrous than fornication.I simply do not agree that fighting a fight about sterilization keeps one on track for fighting abortion. They are different issues
I accept that data, and it’s perfectly reasonable, I’m just saying this reduces down to: “married couples abort less because they are smarter at using birth control.”I repeat: the category responsible for the stunningly high abortion rate is the category of women aged 20-24, unmarried. Second highest rate is by women aged 25-29, unmarried. Third highest rate is teenagers, most of whom are unmarried. … it is the unmarried who still represent a minimum of 80% of abortions in this country and as much as 90%. In other words, fornicators who are clearly not sterilized, or they would not be having abortions!
The biggest promoters of contraception are those who argue “responsible use” of contraception is the key to reducing unwanted pregnancy. The category of “fornication” doesn’t truly exist in this world-view, since an unintended (abortable) child is simply one who came about because contraception was not used “responsibly”. The unmarried have abortions for the same reasons married couples do: they feel they’re in no position to care for an unintended child.Why is it that whenever one tries to seriously address the need for reducing abortions in this country, people get sidetracked talking about the need to eliminate contraception and sterilization, instead of the clear need to reduce fornication
The only disparity between the rates is purely incidental: the unmarried are simply more often likely to not be in a position to care for the unintended child. The married are more often in a position to ‘absorb’ an accident or two, but the child was no less unintentional, and their “resolution” is to become more “responsible” at contraception, especially the “sure-thing” of sterilization.
It has a chance of succeeding if Catholics of all states of life, lay and religious, would live faithfully to the teachings of Christ and His Church.Married people are using contraception at very high rates, Catholics and non-Catholics, and I promise you that no effort to eradicate contraception among legally married adults in the U.S. has a snowball’s chance in hell of succeeding.
As it turns out, the ‘White’ populations in America and Europe are disappearing and being replaced by Mexican, Arab, African, and Oriental populations because the White populations are having fewer and fewer children while their immigrant families are having more and more. So God’s Providence will deal with the problem of contracepting “Christian” nations one way or another.
Such a proposition cannot fly because you’re saying contraception should be limited to those who can use it “responsibly,” and only married couples are “responsible,” which is a largely arbitrary argument. Such is similar to the logic of saying pornography should only be legal for those mature enough to handle it, meaning “adults” who are 18+. (Notice there is zero reference to the fact porn is just as poisonous and sinful for those above 18 as it is for those under 18, just as contraception/sterlization is no less sinful for married as it is for unmarried.)Now, if you want to talk about seeking ways to severely reduce the easy availability of contraception among the unmarried, I’m all ears.
And the “Palins and Chastity” article shows the ‘chastity movement’ is an uphill (even losing) fight precisely because it’s preaching a message without much of a coherent foundation. How can someone preach chastity when they’re also preaching sex is simply a matter of being “responsible” (i.e. using contraception ‘smartly’)? All the child hears is that they just need to be “responsible,” and when their unmarried friends are being “responsible,” then they can too. Thus the teens who get pregnant were simply too irresponsible, and are the equivalent “oops” to those married couples who got pregnant on their honeymoon.I would love to see that, although I think that is also very much an uphill fight.
I agree. The key is a consistent Message: “Sex is principally for procreation,” rather than “Sex is principally for recreation.” If contraception were outlawed, then this Message would become easier to preach and accept.I would love to see easy sex with no consequences becoming very inconvenient --as inconvenient as it was prior to The Pill, when unmarried couples had to be a lot more circumspect about taking big risks in that department – and when there was an “accident,” the default choice was not (an illegal) abortion, but often marriage!
I also agree. I would just add that there is another dimension that wasn’t a reality in that era, and that was rampant divorce and fatherless households. All those dynamics generally rise and fall together, since they’re all interrelated.That was also a different era when (1) women had much fewer choices for sustaining self-support outside of marriage, and (2) men and women, both, took far greater responsibility for all of their private actions, and (3) casual sex was hardly unheard-of; however, unmarried couples tended to become intimate more often when they were already serious about each other, and less as a form of detached recreation.