In a good relationship that’s about to become sexual, the introduction of a condom can seem like the introduction of a lot of baggage: fear, disease, death.
The economic argument against contraception assumes an unnerving disregard for humanity.
Perhaps non-partisan research like this can help our country approach contraception as a health issue like any other health issue.
One of Bush’s last gifts to our nation was the Provider Conscience Rule, which protects anyone who works in a health-care facility and who doesn’t want to provide “any services or advice they find objectionable.”
In North Dakota, is it personhood or informed consent?
By requiring that a woman go through an additional medical procedure solely for the purpose of telling her what she already knows – that she’s pregnant – ultrasound bills are wasteful and offensive to medical providers.
When access to contraception is politicized, the well-being of the young adult is not the primary concern.
Who wants family planning resources, politicians or low-income American women? Tony Perkins claims that it’s the former.
If the climate of the Catholic Church today were what it was in the early 20th century, might we see bishops taking steps not to limit access to abortion but rather to make their teaching on abortion more feasible for Catholics?