K
Kaninchen
Guest
If you look at my post (#5) you’ll see that it was in response to the statement:Kaninchen, your posts are usually quite reasoned and easy to follow, but you totally lost me this time. Up until now, we’ve been talking about abortion rates and their correlation with legal status. You made a claim that Dutch abortion rates were very low in spite of easy abortion availability.
I’m merely asking if RU-486 (and similar chemical abortions) were considered “abortion” in your statistical source or “contraceptives.” If Dutch women simply abort with a pill instead of a scalpal, I’m not all that impressed. I’m not sure what sex educational philosophy has to do with it at all.
Sexual education is no answer as far as lowering abortion rates.
Now, the Netherlands has had considerable success with its approach to sex education which means that it stands out, not only in comparison to the US but to her neighbors and, particularly, to the UK (which has some similarities in certain attitudes to the US and some similar problems with teen pregnancies).
The question of Mifepristone and RU-486 being the ‘reason’ for the difference of abortion rates might be valid if the Netherlands had them but her neighbors didn’t - which is not the case. Not only that but one of the major pro-life arguments I’ve seen used on this board about these chemical interventions is that ‘emergency contraception’ has little effect on abortion rates - it would be rather difficult to maintain this while saying that the low abortion rate in the Netherlands is the result of using them - unless, of course, the argument carried the caveat ‘except in the case of the Netherlands’ whenever it’s used (which might beg the question of whether the Dutch have some important answers).