On the anti-contraception movement.
Mar. 21st, 2006 12:40 amThis is a great Salon article: expect to hear more from these people in the future. I hold out some hope that the push to ban contraceptives will be the moment that American cultural conservatism finally overreaches enough to lose popularity, but that may be naive.
Amanda Marcotte has an ingenious argument against the "pill as abortifacient" attack (though its dependence on conventional Earth logic may be its fatal flaw): since actual evidence indicates that the birth control pill normally works by preventing normal ovulation (and therefore fertilization), and over 50 percent of normally fertilized eggs either don't implant or spontaneously miscarry early in pregnancy, the birth control pill is actually the greatest preventer of zygote death of all time, if that's what you really care about.
Amanda Marcotte has an ingenious argument against the "pill as abortifacient" attack (though its dependence on conventional Earth logic may be its fatal flaw): since actual evidence indicates that the birth control pill normally works by preventing normal ovulation (and therefore fertilization), and over 50 percent of normally fertilized eggs either don't implant or spontaneously miscarry early in pregnancy, the birth control pill is actually the greatest preventer of zygote death of all time, if that's what you really care about.