Zitat des Tages über Geburtenkontrolle / Birth Control:
I do not want to speak about overpopulation or birth control, but I think education is the way to give new impetus to the poverty question.
Real Texans don't want any woman to die of cancer because she can't get decent health care or medical advice. Real Texans don't want any woman to lose control of her life because she can't get birth control.
One of the biggest issues that we face is that we have people who have their own particular concerns, whether it's on abortion, birth control, divorce and remarriage, civil rights or social justice.
The FDA is redefining birth control as abortion. The FDA is setting the bar higher for this kind of drug.
So why are we having to fight in 2012 against politicians who want to end access to birth control? It's like we woke up in a bad episode of 'Mad Men.'
We need to stop trying to restrict access to lifesaving cancer screenings, birth control, and well-woman exams.
Birth control that really works - every night before we go to bed we spend an hour with our kids.
In my opinion, the battles over birth control and Planned Parenthood are primarily neither political nor religious. This is an issue of equality for women. This is an issue of women's rights: Planned Parenthood is the most important private provider of reproductive health care for women in the United States.
Absolutely. It's something I'd eventually love. In the meantime, I just borrow all my friends' kids. It's seriously the best birth control in the world. I'm so tired afterward, I'm like, Okay, maybe in another two years.
We have access to practical, ethical and scientifically established methods of birth control. So I think that is the most ethical way to reduce our population.
When we talk about more access to birth control, a lot of times that means more funding for Planned Parenthood, and we know that's a touchy subject, so I certainly see that perspective and agree with a lot of conservatives on it.
I believe that birth control is just like every other medication even though it's a controlled substance.
If the Democrats want to insult women by making them believe that they are helpless without Uncle Sugar coming in and providing for them a prescription each month for birth control because they cannot control their libido or their reproductive system without the help of the government, then so be it.
We're more effective than birth control pills.
What's happened with the over-the-counter birth control issue is that the Democrats didn't see it coming. They think that they've got a monopoly on talking to women from the waist down. Anything that has to do with reproduction and birth control and abortion - they call it women's health, then they call it women's issues.
Too many people use abortion as a form of birth control. And that's very wrong. I could never, ever have an abortion.
One year they asked me to be poster boy - for birth control.
If you aren't creeped out by the No Birth Control Left Behind rhetoric of the White House and Planned Parenthood, you aren't listening closely enough. The anesthetic of progressive benevolence always dulls the senses. Wake up.
Whenever I run into prejudice. I smile and feel sorry for them, and I say to myself, There's one more argument for birth control.
I don't think most conservatives are against access to birth control, but they are wary of funding things like Planned Parenthood.
I was in graduate school. I had a birth control accident and went to get the morning after pill.
The causes of youth violence are working parents who put their kids into daycare, the teaching of evolution in the schools, and working mothers who take birth control pills.
It is futile to talk too much about the past... like trying to make birth control retroactive.
So we want to free the women of America? You know what would free the women of America? Make men accept responsibility for birth control.
I used to think it a pity that her mother rather than she had not thought of birth control.
I've been supporting Planned Parenthood all my life. I've even used it myself, back when I had no money. It's where I got my birth control. During college, every one of us got support from them.
A series of studies in the 1990s and 2000s revealed that as women gained more access to education, jobs, and birth control, they had fewer children. As a result, developed countries in western Europe, Japan, and the Americas were seeing zero or negative population growth.
Thanks to health reform, women across the country with private insurance can get birth control without paying out of pocket. This lets women make the health care decisions that are right for them and puts every one of us in charge of our own reproductive health.
The only remedy against hunger is reasonable birth control.
My best birth control now is just to leave the lights on.
There are a lot of good arguments for birth control, but as far as terminating a life that has already come into existence, I haven't found any.
The fact is that a bill allowing any employer to deny insurance coverage based on a moral objection - along with giving an employer permission to ask for medical records showing why a woman is taking birth control - opens up a set of problems that I'm sure its sponsors have not fully considered.
After 'Roe v. Wade' - when the U.S. Supreme Court legalized abortion in 1973 - I thought the national conversation about abortion and birth control would be over. It was not.
Marie Stopes had established the first birth control clinic in Britain; the whole question of informing women, especially those who were poor, about methods of contraception, began to be discussed.
I do not support legislation that would ban birth control.
I always joke with people that having nephews is the best birth control there is.