Birth Control Essay

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    Contraception and the Catholic Church Essay

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    The issue of birth control remains one of the most controversial issues within the Catholic Church dividing members at all levels including the clergy. The Roman Catholic Church for the past 2000 years has been a major opponent of artificial birth control (BBC). Pope Paul VI made a clear declaration on the use of birth control when he wrote ‘the Encyclical Letter ‘Human Vitae’ on July 25, 1968 which banned Catholics from using contraceptives (Pope VI). These important declarations demonstrate the

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    "No woman can call herself free until she can choose consciously whether she will or will not be a mother." Quoted by a women’s rights activist Margaret Sanger. Sanger is responsible for the word birth control and fighting to make it legal. On September 14, 1879 Margaret Sanger was born in Corning, New York. Although Sanger had ten siblings, Anne, her mother, had numerous of miscarriages. Sanger supposed that her mother’s pregnancies affected her health and played a part of her early death. In 1896

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    marriage under the Catholic Church is that the spouses must be faithful to one another as well as being open to procreation. Not just one condition or another; the Church teaches that sex should be a harmony of unity and openness for reproduction. Birth control opposes both of the faithfulness of marriage and the willingness to

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    Women In The 1920's

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    In the 1920’s birth rates dramatically decreased as women were given access to birth control and were educated on health care, allowing women to make discussions about their own lives instead of relying on their husbands. The women’s reproduction movement, led by Margret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood, changed society’s view of women’s sexuality, educated women on healthcare and made birth control options more prevalent in the United States, which empowered women to get an education, dive

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    Tabitha Parker English Research Argument Essay December 6, 2016 Out of Control On May 9, 1960, the Food and Drug Administration announced that it would approve the first pill, Enovid, used to control conception in women. For the first time in human history, women finally had control over their reproductive system. A woman could delay getting pregnant to finish school or to start a career. These simple pills lead to a woman’s revolution in the home and in the workforce. This pill also came with

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    throughout most of its stages is nothing more than a conflict between social radicals and social conservatives. People seemed to be so frightened by the fact that women no longer wanted to be completely submissive to men and therefore continuing to birth numerous children, that they automatically assumed that women just wanted to run around and be promiscuous(Tone 148). One of the earliest waves of this movement began in 1870 ,which Tone describes as the “Victorian sexual system”(Tone 148). During

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    accessible services and other resources that they offer. 9. When, where, and why was it founded? Planned Parenthood was founded in 1916 in Brooklyn, NY by Margaret Sanger. It was originally a birth control clinic but it adopted its name “Planned Parenthood” in 1942. Sanger was an advocate for birth control and wanted to get rid of federal and state laws that prohibited information about sexuality, contraception and human reproduction

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    The benefits of having birth control without a prescription are appealing to many, but is it really worth the risk? “Dr.Poppy Daniels is an OBGYN and hormone specialist with over ten years of clinical experience...In Daniel’s experience, many of her patients suffer from undiagnosed clotting blood disorders that only became apparent after taking hormonal birth control,” says Sarah Watts in her her “An Over-the-Counter Pill Isn’t Safe” article on page one. Blood clotting is life threatening if not

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    Teen Pregnancy in the United States Essays

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    health in the United States. Consequences of having sex at a young age generally results in unsafe sex practices. The consequences can be due to the lack of knowledge about sex education, and access to birth control/contraception (NIH, 2005). Due to the lack of knowledge and access to birth control, adolescents involve in risk taking when they start to explore sexual intimate relationships.

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    Eugenics and Planned Parenthood Essay

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    (Schweikart and Allen 529-532). The purpose of the society was to create the perfect class of men; elite in all ways. Likewise, Margaret Sanger’s feminist, contraceptive movement was not originally founded with this purpose. It was marketed as a way to control the population and be merciful to those yet to be born, again determined also by race and

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