Fat hurts wrote:
Trollminator wrote:
Point taken but doesn’t change the argument since the most important group are unmarried women when it comes to birth control. At the end of the day, they are at the mercy of draconian policies supported by religious Americans who besides ultimately having to help bear the cost of unwanted births have zero connection to these women and the repercussions of their personal decisions.
Yep.
I just wanted to correct those who were saying that the religious right is against birth control. They are not. And, in this case, they are not being hypocritical. They are just promoting bad public policy.
Here is an incomplete list of different denominations and their views on contraception:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_views_on_birth_controlIt should be noted that there are fundamentalist nutbars in just about every denomination who will state they are against contraception even if the church they attend has a position that it is ok.
I know a fundamentalist Christian guy who goes to a more liberal denomination church where contraception is not an issue but he is against the use of contraception. He is a crude guy though and on this subject stated "there are other holes".