Saturday, December 12, 2009
Contraceptives and the Environment
Ellen Goodman had some interesting
remarks about the environment and contraceptives in her Friday column:http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2009/12/11/the_human_factor_is_missing_in_copenhagen/
Among other things, she said: “It turns
out that every society that offers a range of contraceptive options and
information to women has a fertility rate of two children or fewer - and this
includes developing countries such as Iran and Thailand. Today the average size
of a family has shrunk from five children to two and a half. But there are
still hundreds of millions of married women who don’t have access to services
or information. . . .
“There are nearly 7 billion people in
the world today. Scientists project 9.5 billion people by 2050. In fact, there
could be 8.5 billion or 10.5 billion. Depending
on what we do.”
Goodman argues, I think rightly, that
policy regarding contraceptives has enormous implications regarding the
environment. She suggests that there is no investment in protecting the
environment that is as inexpensive or that brings such enormous benefits.
Of course, Church leaders will think
these considerations do not bear on the moral issue. But they do make it all
the more important that the Church leaders are right and they make it even more
tragic that the Church has stubbornly adhered to a flawed position if it is
wrong.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2009/12/contraceptives-and-the-environment.html