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		Thekla
Guest
It's not a simplification; it is a reasoned analysis of the ithos of self control vs. the ithos of artificial contraception. It is to look within the two, and likewise to look at what both require of the person, and also the "playing out" long term of their respective uses.I agree 100% that self-control is all that you say it is.
I disagree with you about birth control for reasons completely unrelated to self-control.
Because the issue is so much more complicated than self-control vs. contraception, I believe your attempts to simplify it into that are just attempts to refuse to think about the real issues being discussed.
Your example of Reagan and Thatcher, like the discussion of self control and artificial contraception, stopped short of an actual analysis of what was done and its relationship to how this played out in human lives.You are doing the same thing with the example I gave you.
Violence and hate and evil killed all those people, not the free-market.
Aside from the fact that we don't have a "free market", I am pointing out that there is much more to a reasoned logical treatment than a surface consideration of the two methods. Both methods have an inherent aspect which has been entirely skipped in the conversation.I'm not advocating free-market or anything. This isn't about free-market at all.
But that's just it, isn't it?
The RC is being touted here as in some sense suspect because they do not consider self control to be artificial birth control. A fuller consideration of the ithos of the two in fact recommends that this is in fact the case. At the very least, the two approaches under consideration are indeed quite different and require a completely different interaction with self and other. As before, they have a different ithos.You don't want to discuss what this thread is about. You want to discuss self-control, not contraception. Fine. Make a thread about it, and I'll be there agreeing with you.
And also, per the studies on estrogen mimickers, the use of "the Pill" may indeed be a contributor to infertility. It has already in animals (fish, specifically).
But this isn't about self-control. It is about contraception. Self-control is only one of the many things we can say about contraception and birth control. Great. You've said it. And in so far as you've said it, I agree with you.
But, don't neglect the fact that there are many other things to be discussed about this. The choices being condemned, though neutral in regards to self-control, are not so neutral in regards to other things. Therefore, now that we have discussed that particular aspect of it, can we not discuss the other things that actually make this an important issue?
It seems to me that the RC indeed has a different way of looking at this. Just as you have your way, is that in itself reason for condemnation ? Historically, and even through the 1980s in this country, that a view was RC was enough to invite complete condemnation regardless of the particular merits of the issue at hand.
Just as it seems prudent and reasonable to look beyond the surface of birth control, the "free market" a la Reagan and Thatcher, and self control in order to discern the deeper realities, likewise it seems prudent to inspect what is actually the source of the discomfort with the RC position on this issue. And whether this disagreement might be more than the issue - that this may upon inspection and self inspection be something else entirely.
It has seemed thus far in this thread to be at least somewhat not at all about this particular issue.
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