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Monday, June 30, 2008
Jennifer Roback Morse :: Townhall.com Columnist
Now You Tell Us
by Jennifer Roback Morse
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The advocates of contraception have finally admitted in public what some of us have known for a while: The Pill doesn't work very well.  Professor James Trussell of Princeton, one of the world experts on failure rates of various forms of contraception, told a conference in the UK:

“One in 12 women taking the Pill gets pregnant each year because they miss so many tablets. ….Half of all pregnancies in America are unintended and half of those happen because contraception failed or was not taken properly, the rest were not using any contraception.”

I just spoke at an abstinence education conference in South Carolina, on this very subject of contraceptive failure.  South Carolina Parents Involved in Education brought together middle and high school teachers and guidance counselors for training on abstinence.  Probably two-thirds of the audience was female. Easily half the audience was African-American.

I showed the participants this chart (Table 2) reporting failure rates of the Pill broken down by demographic groups. It turns out that poor, cohabiting teenagers using the Pill have a failure rate of almost 50%: 48.4% to be exact. That means, out of 100 low income girls taking the Pill, who are under the age of 20 and living with their boyfriends, 48 of them will have a pregnancy within 12 months.  

People usually gasp when I show that chart. (Last year I did an article on the subject. The lefty netroots went nuts.) My South Carolina teachers weren’t surprised. They see “contraceptive failures” among their students all the time. A little thought will tell you why the failure rates are so high: the women aren't using their contraception correctly. Prof. Trussel confirms this point:

“Studies have shown women miss three times as many pills as they say they do. Computerized pill packs have revealed that … between 10 per cent and 14 per cent admitted missing more than three pills in a month, actually between 30 per cent and 50 per cent missed that many.”

Now you tell us, after years of government sponsored contraceptive education, that women still aren’t using it consistently or correctly.  Experts like Dr. Trussell have given up on educating women on proper contraceptive use. His preferred solution is long-acting hormonal contraceptives, like implants and injectables. In other words, he proposes that women chemically neuter themselves during their peak child-bearing years.

Prof. Trussell also admitted what American pro-life leaders have said all along: “emergency contraception” is not a magic pill. “Increasing access to emergency contraception will not reduce unintended pregnancies and the resulting abortions, despite a massive Government drive to provide it free to young girls. It is unrealistic to expect women to take the emergency contraceptive every time they have unprotected sex.  It has not reduced unintended pregnancies in America or anywhere else that has introduced it.”

You heard it here first, folks: Contraception, even the emergency type, is not realistic. Continued...

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About The Author

Jennifer Roback Morse, Ph.D., is the author of Smart Sex: Finding Life-long Love In A Hook-up World. She blogs at jennifer-roback-morse.blogspot.com

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created in God's image
Loved Tom's comments!!! Abstinence education is a means to help young people realize who they are and expose the lies that they see all around them. When I was a teen, there was more pressure to abstain than to have sex-now it is so much more the other way around. If someone truly loves you, he/she will probably wait. If not, move on.
I join the ranks of the righty moonbats. I love my brothers and sisters of the world and I especially want to make the world an easier more beautiful place for our younger brothers and sisters! Chaste and pure is the way to go.

Soul Searching
Another assumption is the “they’re going to do it anyhow” attitude. Of course, parents don’t want their children to engage in a variety of intimate relationships. Why is that?

Often, fiction is very close to the mark, and we can learn much about ourselves by taking an objective look at a distance. If the sexual experience is a sharing of our soul with another, such sharing with multiple partners diminishes the integrity and stability of that soul. Note the character Valdemort in the Harry Potter series, who has split his soul into several parts. The attempt at multiple lives and longevity of at least one has merely resulted in a diminished life for him. Of course, that is just fantasy, but do we see an important principle at work? This might be worth considering.

The answer of course is not just because the parents want to control the lives of their children. However, when a single parent is sleeping around with a variety of potential long-term partners or “separated” partners behave thusly because abstinence is hard to maintain once one has tasted the fruits of love, then the teens see the hypocrisy of the “party line” being forced upon them. Without positive role models, it’s not going to work. If parents take a “don’t do it” stance and then have a bucket of condoms in the cupboard for their teens to use without feeling judged, the hypocrisy of that position is equally evident. . When we take a “You shouldn’t do it, but I will understand if you do” attitude, that’s the same as saying “maybe” when we mean “no” and the children reading it as “yes.” The problem is that the media portrays casual sex as “normal” and even necessary in a healthy lifestyle
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