There is actually built in failure rates for birth control.
Condoms have maybe 30% failure rate, birth control maybe 15% depending on which study you cite. So a certain percentage will get pregnant. And if you're sleeping around for fun and you happen to get pregnant, abortion is the back-up birth control, and it translates into the blood of millions.
Most of those failure rates are based on typical (ie, sloppy) use. That's to say, those are the failure rates when human error is factored in. When used properly, the failure rates are far lower.
The end result is still the blood of millions. When horny teens or whoever really really wanna get some, they're not going to be scrupulous or careful. Sex is rarely ever a logical or measured affair. Just unbridled lust and passion.
60 million dead babies. The numbers speak for themselves.
The problem isn't birth control in and of itself. The issue is a combination of at last two factors.
1. Promiscuity.
Abstinence until marriage would solve most of the problem in and of itself. "Hookup culture" in particular is a major factor.
2. Reliance on non-foolproof methods, and complacency due to the pill.
The more care it takes to practice a birth control method, the higher the chance of failure due to human error. The birth control pill in particular has bred a sort of complacency in which many people think that preventing pregnancy is as easy as popping a pill, which can lead to sloppiness (forgetting to take it some days, etc). Before the pill existed, some people were extra-careful, using multiple methods simultaneously (such as both a condom and a diaphragm at once). Some people still do, but it's far less common now due to the more casual attitude toward birth control today.
Ultimately, 100% reliable, foolproof birth control exists, but it involves completely avoiding vaginal penetration every single time (ie, the "Monica Lewinsky method" and several others). However, the current culture does not promote the idea that vaginal sex is too dangerous unless one is willing to risk pregnancy, so few people are willing to commit to consistently avoiding it.
Abortion is just subsidizing responsibility.
With birth control, condoms and pulling out you have to try to get pregnant. I don’t get how accidents happen with all of these available.
Condoms and birth control should be banned too. No reason to sleep around unless you want to procreate. It spreads disease.
There is actually built in failure rates for birth control.
Condoms have maybe 30% failure rate, birth control maybe 15% depending on which study you cite. So a certain percentage will get pregnant. And if you're sleeping around for fun and you happen to get pregnant, abortion is the back-up birth control, and it translates into the blood of millions.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXZCOaRVrbg
Most of those failure rates are based on typical (ie, sloppy) use. That's to say, those are the failure rates when human error is factored in. When used properly, the failure rates are far lower.
The end result is still the blood of millions. When horny teens or whoever really really wanna get some, they're not going to be scrupulous or careful. Sex is rarely ever a logical or measured affair. Just unbridled lust and passion.
60 million dead babies. The numbers speak for themselves.
The problem isn't birth control in and of itself. The issue is a combination of at last two factors.
1. Promiscuity.
Abstinence until marriage would solve most of the problem in and of itself. "Hookup culture" in particular is a major factor.
2. Reliance on non-foolproof methods, and complacency due to the pill.
The more care it takes to practice a birth control method, the higher the chance of failure due to human error. The birth control pill in particular has bred a sort of complacency in which many people think that preventing pregnancy is as easy as popping a pill, which can lead to sloppiness (forgetting to take it some days, etc). Before the pill existed, some people were extra-careful, using multiple methods simultaneously (such as both a condom and a diaphragm at once). Some people still do, but it's far less common now due to the more casual attitude toward birth control today.
Ultimately, 100% reliable, foolproof birth control exists, but it involves completely avoiding vaginal penetration every single time (ie, the "Monica Lewinsky method" and several others). However, the current culture does not promote the idea that vaginal sex is too dangerous unless one is willing to risk pregnancy, so few people are willing to commit to consistently avoiding it.
What the fuck is this confirmed?
There are several studies on this
https://www.cdc.gov/reproductivehealth/unintendedpregnancy/pdf/contraceptive_methods_508.pdf
So CDC says condoms have 18% failure rate and pill has 9% failure rate.
https://www.ashasexualhealth.org/pdfs/ContraceptiveOptions.pdf
ASHA has similar numbers.
https://www.guttmacher.org/fact-sheet/contraceptive-effectiveness-united-states