Back to the Future
What's it all about? From 1914 until the eve of the Second World War, Margaret Sanger and her allies fought and won the battle to make contraception widely available in the United States. Didn't they?
What's it all about? From 1914 until the eve of the Second World War, Margaret Sanger and her allies fought and won the battle to make contraception widely available in the United States. Didn't they?
Cynthia Kounaris | Posted 04.23.2012
Do men want every sexual encounter to end in a pregnancy -- their own or those of their daughters, their sons, their wives... or their mistresses? That seems very illogical to me. So, I have to draw the conclusion that there are many, many men who are for contraception.
AP | By RACHEL ZOLL | Posted 04.04.2012
-- The Obama administration's decision requiring church-affiliated employers to cover birth control was bound to cause an uproar among Roman Catholic...
HuffingtonPost.com | Amanda Terkel | Posted 05.25.2011
WASHINGTON -- While Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) continues to wait out the state's Senate Democrats on his budget bill that would strip collective ...
Jonathan Merritt | Posted 05.25.2011
At the dawning of the 21st, Catholicism is still holding out on condoning birth control. Perhaps that is about to change.
Cristina Page | Posted 05.25.2011
It may come as a shock to most pro-life Americans, but there's not one pro-life group in the United States that supports contraception. Rather, many lead campaigns against contraception.
J. Goodrich | Posted 05.25.2011
We are told that hospitals and other health care providers should hire people who refuse to do parts of the job. If they don't hire those people, health care providers are then guilty of discrimination.
Jennifer Seymour Whitaker | Posted 04.28.2012