OnlyAmbrose wrote:If you don't want to get pregnant don't have sex at all. Two reasons I support the "abstinence" side of the "how to protect yourself" debate are:
1) Contraception is an evil and warps the sacred sexual act God created (and I am quite willing to argue this point with any Christian who disagrees).
I can see where that argument comes in, and it's one of the first valid ones i've ever heard made from a Christian standpoint. It does have a side effect of transforming the sexual act from intimate and procreative to something that young men aspire to do before they turn 18. It becomes a rite of passage, and that's somewhat repugnant. At the same time, if it wasn't meant to feel good, then it wouldn't. Not much of a counter-argument at all really, just kinda wanted to throw it out there.
2) Birth control doesn't guarantee safety. STDs are still transferred in spite of the pill, and condoms are known to have malfunctions every now and again.
Which is why the laws of chance don't determine destiny. The rhythm method and premature withdrawal aren't guarantees either. No one single birth control method is safe, which is why it is always wisest to use two. For example the girl takes the pill and the guy uses a condom, this reduces the statistical probability of catastrophic system failure to a much smaller percentage. There is no substitute for the human factor in this equation, and if someone's gonna be dumb then there's really no stopping it.
On the topic of abortion, suffice to say I believe it to be one of the greatest abominations in the history of the human race. To put to comfort of a woman in front of the very LIFE of a child... is not right. Granted, I've never been pregnant, I never will become pregnant, so it may sound easy for me to say, but fortunately for me I associate with some very strong young ladies who are quite capable of becoming pregnant (or already have) and yet still believe they should not be given a "right to choose". That gives a perfectly good amount of credibility to our side of the issue, I think.
"It is a poverty to decide that a child must die so that you may live as you wish." ---Mother Teresa
Personally, I'm divided on the issue of abortion. Biologically, it's not alive yet. It's not really alive until brainwaves start to form, which I believe is 12 weeks. Spiritually and ethically, that's where the pitfalls start to form. Then we start talking about the soul and when the soul forms and when the baby becomes self-aware (which technically doesn't happen until the first year after being born if my memory serves). Sure there are women who don't believe in abortion just as there are women who are perfectly satisfied with being a housewife. There will always be a difference of opinion but the question remains where do we draw the line.
Personally, I'm trying to remain balanced on this issue. I'm coming to the point where I can rationalize both sides of the argument and I realize that I'm not pro-choice or pro-life, but I am anti-criminalization. There was an article on AlterNet where someone went around talking to various pro-lifers who said that abortion should be outlawed. These same people who wanted the act itself to become criminal couldn't come anywhere near a consensus within their group or their own minds as to how women who get abortions should be punished. It also comes down to legality. If we illegalize abortions we'll have secret clinics where people go that aren't the most sanitary or trained and we'll have a slightly more clinical version of the wire-hanger abortion.
So in response to your standpoint, I'd like to rebut with a question. If you criminalize abortion, will pro-life organizations turn to supporting families that cannot afford to care for their children or will they just move on to the next thing that they're against?
Initiate discovery! Fire the Machines! Throw the switch Igor! THROW THE F***ING SWITCH!