Sentences with phrase «people about contraception»

Not exact matches

How many people on this planet have AIDS because they believed the teachings about condoms; how many unwanted children have been abused because their parent (s) bought the argument about the evil of contraception.
All you people who talk about contraception and abortion as sins are being blind to the larger picture.
If you approve of planes flying into buildings, dressing women in cloth bags, denying stem cell research, discrimination against women, gays and anyone with alternate beliefs, denying contraception to people who can't afford families, picketing soldiers funerals, etc, etc, then keep your fuzzy mindset about good and evil.
Again, marriage may be thought the ideal but there will be a strong motivation to ensure that young people have all the necessary information about contraception because they may end up, fairly naturally, doing the «loving» bit first before they are ready to have children.
How about forcing people to pay for other people's contraception?
«What young people really need is not more talk about the mechanics of sex and contraception, but encouragement to develop the character qualities of stability, faithfulness and commitment - the qualities they will need to build a strong and lasting marriage based on something that runs deeper than feelings and physical attraction.»
I think what you should be saying is that if we educated our children about the use of contraception instead of the «just don't do it» you would have people making more informed descisions and using the contraception in a more educated manner.
No, momoya, it's about out of control insurance costs going ever higher because more and more is mandated to be covered, it's about tax exempt groups being in effect taxed via mandates and indeed mandated to pay things that go directly contrary to their philosophy, it's about disingenuous mumblers on the left talking incoherently about people being «forced» not to use contraception when (a) no one is forcing them to affiliate with the organization balking at the mandate, (b) no one is preventing them from buying contraception on their own dime and (c) no one is preventing them from buying their own health insurance plans, something MANY will have to do when Obamacare kicks in for real.
In addition people, contrary to what is bandied about, contraception is exactly that — things which prevent conception.
We believe young people need to be encouraged to work out what they think about issues to do with their own sexual health and wellbeing, especially when it comes to issues around abortion, contraception, same - sex attraction, age for first time sex, and whether sexual activity is likely to be a part of one's life at all.
• Strong evidence suggests that approaches to sex education that include information about both contraception and abstinence help young people to delay sex, and also to have healthy relationships and avoid STDs and unintended pregnancies when they do become sexually active.
In addition, a 2004 congressional report found more than two - thirds of these programs distort information and mislead young people by giving them false information about contraception.
More than 90 percent of Planned Parenthood services are focused on prevention: every year, Planned Parenthood doctors and nurses provide family planning counseling and birth control to 2.2 million women and men, more than 1.1 million pregnancy tests, 770,000 Pap tests, identifying about 94,000 women at risk of developing cervical cancer, nearly 750,000 lifesaving breast exams, more than four million tests and treatments for sexually transmitted infections including HIV, nearly 1.5 million emergency contraception kits, and education programs to nearly 1.1 million people.
«Minnesotans understand that young people need information about abstinence and contraception and that sex education does not encourage young people to have sex.»
On a related note, one reason it bugged me so much when anti-Obamacare people would rant about the contraception mandate and «having to foot someone else's birth control bill» is that it seemed to be based on the premise that men derive no net benefit from contraception whatsoever!
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