Abortion and Contraception Equals Birth Dearth


By Dr. David Ayers


Editor’s note: This article first appeared at The American Spectator.

The latest abysmally low birth rates from North America, Europe, and Asia continue to alarm business leaders and policy makers, as well they should. In Europe, only France is within spitting distance of replacement level fertility. Italy’s has tanked so low as to be the subject of a highly publicized meeting between its Prime Minister and the Pope a couple months ago. Every part of North America, even Mexico, is below replacement. Asia is just as dismal or worse, with a huge majority, including all of our top trading partners — except the Philippines and (barely) India and (maybe) Vietnam — lower than replacement. Some have plummeted close to one baby per woman. When even the BBC touts headlines like “’Jaw Dropping’ Crash in Babies Being Born,” and the Economist devotes an entire issue to “The Baby-Bust Economy” just last month, well, we have a problem.

Yet for decades, many of these same hand-wringing elites and policy wonks have been pushing contraception and abortion with the intensity of engineers shoveling coal into speeding trains. And not just to help married folk space, delay, or limit childbearing. No, they want every adult to be able to have sex with as many people as they want, as often as they wish, regardless of marital status, without having any babies they don’t choose.

Since at least the 1960s, separating sex from procreation has been almost an obsession. In the United States, our largest political party is radically committed to this. In recent years, climate activists, including some celebrities, have even talked as if having babies is grossly irresponsible. We have “BirthStrikers,” and “anti-natalists” who wish they’d never been born. We even have the “Voluntary Human Extinction Movement,” the subject of a recent article in the Atlantic they listed as a “must read.”

And now? The chickens have come home to roost.

Let’s look at how contraception use exploded in the 1960s, naturally leading to abortion-on-demand — these two together being the fraternal twins most responsible for our deepening Demographic Winter. We will focus on the United States, starting with contraception.

Not even counting voluntary sterilization, contraception has been around for a long time. As a PBS historical piece covered, condoms, sponges, cervical caps, diaphragms, douches, and even intrauterine devices all existed at some point in the 1800s. But they weren’t reliable, were often “messy and awkward to use,” embarrassing to obtain, and women didn’t like the fact that it was men who controlled condoms. Then along came “The Pill” in 1960. As that PBS documentary put it, “The Pill … was female-controlled, simple to use, highly effective, and … separated reproduction and contraception from the sexual act. The Pill could be taken anytime, anywhere, and without anyone else knowing.”

Most analysts of the 1960s sexual revolution have identified the widespread availability of “The Pill” as a key element and cause of this movement. But the sexual revolution would not have taken off with such intensity and speed without The Pill.

There is another key shift tied to the introduction of The Pill. According to Glenn Stanton of Focus on the Family “the Pill made (along with corresponding legal and cultural developments) the separation between sexuality and the possibility of babies nearly an inalienable right.” (I added the emphasis.) Many people came to view being able to have sex without procreating babies as an “entitlement.”

So, we should not have been surprised that our obsession with separating sex from having babies was not sufficiently satisfied through widely available, increasingly effective, convenient, and inexpensive contraception. To fill in the gap, so to speak, we concocted another “inalienable right” — abortion. SCOTUS gave us that in 1973, in Roe v. Wade.

To be sure, many people who use contraception do not support abortion, except perhaps in rare hard cases. Embracing contraception does not equal embracing abortion.

But as Glenn Stanton also pointed out, “The fact that a woman could be sexually active and virtually guaranteed (by medical science no less!) of not becoming pregnant had the effect of making her feel cheated when an unexpected pregnancy did happen.” (Again, I added the emphasis.) For many, this meant that if a baby they didn’t want happened, well, they ought to be able to kill it before it is born. Standing in the way of any woman wishing to obtain an abortion became seen by a lot of people as fundamentally unjust, denying her “right” to have sex without having a baby.

Abortion was “needed” because contraception is not foolproof, and the risk of pregnancy increases dramatically the more even “protected” sex is engaged in. Abortion was also “needed” because women and/or their partners neglecting to use contraception at all, or using it improperly, should still not, to use Obama’s infamous quote, be “punished with a baby.”

Then, abortion also became “needed” because the woman and/or her partner might not have gotten the baby they wanted or in the manner they wanted. Because the woman was pregnant: with a “defective” child, a boy but she wanted a girl, triplets but she only wanted one, and so on. The justifications for abortion rapidly expanded beyond dealing with unintended pregnancy.

Yes, there are “hard cases.” But these are an unbelievably tiny percentage of abortions. Most abortions are for women who do not want their babies.

Like contraception, abortion boomed. In 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated there were 198 abortions for every 1,000 live births in the United States. At the highwater point in 1984, there were 364 abortions for every 1,000 live births, and that number never dropped below 300 for 20 years from 1976 to 1996. There were over 44,500,000 abortions between 1973 and 2015, and many more since then.

And dismal as they are, these statistics increasingly underestimate the number of abortions. Most abortions are now performed using pills, particularly mifepristone and misoprostol. When these are taken outside of clinical settings, the abortions are not included in official counts. Obtaining pills to do such “self-managed abortions” is remarkably easy. In fact, Doctors Without Borders provides instructions to help women do this. There is even a medical group in Europe that ships these pills to the United States via a pharmacy in India, intentionally and effectively circumventing laws. Such services are easily found on the Internet. Mexican pharmacies providing these pills without a prescription are also currently experiencing booming demand from Americans. At this point, the true figure is much higher than documented.

Most liberals are in panic mode over last year’s Dobbs decision striking down Roe v. Wade. Why? With abortion pills and the ease of getting them anywhere, who needs Roe?

The story of crashing birth rates and, as most policy makers seem to acknowledge, the many serious problems these will cause, is not mostly the story of people deciding not to have sex. It is mostly because they are using a lot of contraception and abortion. Of course, there are lots of complex reasons for these two things being used as much as they are. A couple of big ones are declining marriage rates and rising age at wedlock. But one thing is sure — anyone who thinks we can continue enthusiastically pushing contraception and abortion and see birth rates increase to even marginally acceptable levels in developed countries, is a fool.

Dr. David J. Ayers is the Fellow for Marriage and Family with the Institute for Faith & Freedom. His latest book is “Christian Marriage: A Comprehensive Introduction.”



More Resources


05/05/2024
Trump Is a Rorschach Test for the Body Politic
It is no secret that Donald Trump is a hot wire that either fires up the imagination of voters or fries the brain.For those of us who experience Trump as a Promethean bringer of enlightening fire to the dark barren fields of modern politics, it is hard to fathom the reaction of those who are terrified of him. We just say they have Trump Derangement Syndrome.But for those Trump haters, of course, it is the rest of us who are deranged. We are cult members or Christian nationalists or foot soldiers of the new Hitler.You cannot imagine more diametrically opposed views of one man. On one hand, he...

more info


05/05/2024
The Absurdity of Trump and RFK Jr. Running as ‘Outsiders'


more info


05/05/2024
What Went Wrong With the Third-Party Movement This Cycle?


more info


05/05/2024
2020 Election "Was Not Fair" and "Was Rigged In Many Ways"


more info


05/05/2024
Why the Pro-Palestinian Protests Have Been a Success
Even extreme repression worked to their advantage as they have applied pressure to the political class and liberal institutions.

more info


05/05/2024
The Columbia Protests Are Nothing Like 1968
Today's anti-Israel activists are a sad parody of the 1960s anti-war, anti-racist radicals.

more info


05/05/2024
Marjorie Taylor Greene Is Not as Powerful as She Thinks She Is
The uproars that don't seem to touch Trump at all can still bring down other Republicans.

more info


05/05/2024
Biden Has a Problem With Centrist Voters
Biden won the 2020 Democratic nomination as a self-described centrist, but has since adopted more liberal policies that could cost him in 2024.

more info


05/05/2024
Close Presidential Race Careens Toward Uncertain End
Here's where the race for president stands six months from Election Day - in the polls, on the balance sheet, in key battlegrounds and more.Volume Muted Icon

more info


05/05/2024
It's the Democrats' Turn To Scare America
No one should be surprised it ended up here.

more info


05/05/2024
Is Trump on Track To Blow the Election?
Democrats are in a bit of a panic over Donald Trump's polling numbers against President Biden - the former president has led Biden in the RealClearPolitics ballot test for months and is consistently outpolling Biden in the battleground states.

more info


05/05/2024
The Trump Trial, Columbia Anarchy--and Hope for New York
The view from Ninth Avenue is of a city that has gone crazy. But statewide there are signs of sanity.

more info


05/05/2024
New Polls Show Kennedy a Growing Threat to Both Parties
A new CNN/SSRS poll shows that independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. poses a serious threat to "dual incumbents" President Biden and former president Trump.

more info


05/05/2024
'Equity' Grading Is Latest Educational Fad Destined To Fail
Why work extra hard when you won't be able to get an A? Why try to improve when you won't get worse than a C?

more info


05/05/2024
How Student Encampments Can Strengthen U.S.
Instead of defending the right to protest, many centrists are delegitimizing students, despite the value of what they're doing

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

The Senate's New Drug Bill is Socialism Lite


House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has a radical new plan to let the federal government set drug prices.

Fracking Bans Will Cost Democrats the White House


It often seems as if Democrats want to reelect Donald Trump. Why else would their top presidential candidates advocate a ban on fracking, the drilling technique that supports millions of jobs and accounts for half of all U.S. oil production?

Division One Athletics: It's About the Money


During an episode of Lebron James' online show "The Shop," California Governor Gavin Newsome signed into law a bill allowing California student athletes to sign endorsements while in college. The NCAA Board of Governors, having studied this issue for years, responded by announcing that college athletes can "benefit from the use of their name, image or likeness." The charade of big-name Division 1 football and basketball athletes being in college first and foremost to receive an education has now been fully exposed.

Who's Afraid of Religious Reasoning?


If people fear what they don't understand, then one of the most feared things today is religious liberty. It's standard practice for mainstream and left-leaning news outlets to handle the notion with scare quotes when it conflicts with the civil rights claims of sexual minorities. Reporters routinely relay the talking point that religious liberty is just "a license to discriminate."

Hugh Culverhouse, Planned Parenthood, and Eugenics


The University of Alabama on May 29 announced its plans to return a $26.5 million donation from the largest donor in the university's history. The announcement came only hours after the donor, Hugh F. Culverhouse Jr., called for students to boycott the university in response to Alabama's recent ban on abortion.

Budget Deficit Capitulation: Our Spending Problem


During the week before Christmas, Congress rushed a spending bill into law.

Prioritize Chronic Disease Prevention to Slash Health Insurance Costs


Private health insurance spending surged $101 billion between 2016 and 2018. Hospital care and emergency services accounted for the largest share of that increase -- 42 percent.

Direct-to-Consumer Drug Advertising Benefits Companies, but Patients Even More


Analysts at the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office recently scored Speaker Nancy Pelosi's drug pricing bill, H.R. 3.

Curbing U.S. Population Growth Would Fight Climate Change


Millions of young Americans want to shrink their carbon footprints.

Patients Should Fear Partnership Between The FDA and Anti-research "watchdog"


FDA regulators have approved over 600 new medicines since the turn of the century. And more treatments are on the way. Scientists are currently developing over 7,000 experimental drugs.

The Energy Industry Was Ready For COVID-19


The COVID-19 outbreak has made a lot of things uncertain. Americans don't know the next time they'll see toilet paper in a grocery store, let alone whether or not they'll stay healthy or have a job in a week.

U. S. Was Right to Avoid Tariffs in Oil Price War


The price for a barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude oil delivered in May recently dropped into negative territory.

Government Intervention Would Hurt Energy Producers


America's energy sector has seen better days. The recent price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia rocked oil and gas markets -- and the coronavirus outbreak has reduced demand and forced some companies in the renewable sector to stall projects and furlough workers.

Enough Subsidies for Electric Vehicles


Americans are naturally wary of electric vehicles (EVs). Salespeople may pitch battery-powered cars as the future, but most drivers see them as an expensive, chancy alternative to petroleum-fueled automobiles. This has been true for more than a century.

Enough Subsidies for Electric Vehicles


Americans are naturally wary of electric vehicles (EVs). Salespeople may pitch battery-powered cars as the future, but most drivers see them as an expensive, chancy alternative to petroleum-fueled automobiles. This has been true for more than a century.