[back to
resources] FAQ
-- Frequently
Asked Questions
If you have a question for the No
Room for Contraception team, send an e
mail to info@nrfc.net, and we'll post
the answer here.
1. What is No Room for Contraception
purpose? Why and how did you decide to
start it?
The purpose of No Room for
Contraception is to expose the harms of
contraception on marriage, society and
women's health. Both pro-choice and
pro-life forces know that the end to
legal abortion is coming soon, and many
think that we should turn to
contraception to decrease the need for
abortion; the widespread availability
and use of contraception, however, is
what created the need for abortion in
the first place.
2. What different methods of
artificial birth control are there?
The three different kinds of
artificial birth control are chemical
contraception, barrier contraception and
surgical sterilization. Emergency
contraception (also known as Plan B or
the morning-after pill) is a type of
chemical contraception.
3. Does No Room for Contraception
oppose all methods of birth control
including condoms?
No Room for Contraception opposes all
artificial methods of birth control. We
support the use of Natural Family
Planning for prevention of pregnancy.
Condoms are proven ineffective much
of the time in preventing both the
transmission of STDs and in preventing
pregnancy. By promoting condoms, people
are given a false hope and are only
encouraged to continue to engage in
risky and extramarital sexual activity.
This increase in sexual activity
increases disease. In the late 1950s,
there were only two known types of STDs;
now, there are almost 50! If condoms
lived up to the expectations of birth
control proponents, there would be less
disease, not more.
4. What is Natural Family Planning?
Natural Family Planning (NFP) is a
scientific method of determining the
time a woman ovulates. The time of
ovulation is the only time out of a
month that a woman can become pregnant
and is called the fertile time. Using
the NFP method requires that the couple
have self-control in order to avoid
sexual relations during the wife’s
fertile time in order to prevent
pregnancy.
5. Is No Room for Contraception a
Catholic organization?
The founders of No Room for
Contraception are Catholic, however this
is not a Catholic organization. The
purpose and goal of No Room for
Contraception is to expose the harms
that artificial contraception brings to
marriage and society, and this goal does
not require belief in any religious
tradition. The Catholic Church has been
the only major Christian religion to
firmly oppose artificial contraception.
Her many documents clearly and
prophetically explain this teaching.
Because of Her firm leadership against
the use of chemical contraception, No
Room for Contraception has links to the
major Catholic Church documents on this
topic, and draws heavily from the works
of Catholic theologians and scholars.
6. Do contraception and birth
control mean the same thing?
Essentially, yes, these two words
have the same meaning. They are used
interchangeably on this site and in
everyday conversation and medical
reference.
7. What does No Room for
Contraception have to say about
premarital and extramarital sex?
The proper place for sex is within
the commitment of marriage. Only
then can sexual intimacy reach its full
purpose and potential. Sex entails
bonding and babies, as Dr. Janet E.
Smith notes. Without marriage,
both bonding and babies are pushed aside
for the sake of recreation or fleeting
pleasure.
8. How do you feel about going
against what has become the norm in the
past decades?
Women have been force fed the agenda
of the abortion/ contraception movement
for almost 100 years. It is time for
women to really see what the dangers of
contraception are on her health and
marriage, and how contraception has lead
to the problems of divorce, sexual
abuse, disease, cancer and more. These
problems have only multiplied since the
widespread use of contraceptives. 9.
A common argument is that in today's
society, sex before marriage has become
so common that people are going to have
sex whether or not contraceptives are
available. How do you feel about the
extreme number of unwanted children who
will be the result?
The concept of "unwanted children" or
"unplanned pregnancy" was born from the
agenda of the birth control movement.
This movement, which began in the early
20th century with Margaret Sanger,
sought to destroy all sense of
sacredness regarding sexual activity.
The procreation of children was
carefully removed from the concept of
sexual activity. This attitude has
become so commonplace that few people
ever stop to question the harms of
contraception. No Room for Contraception
seeks to bring this evidence to the
forefront. 10. More than half of
American teenagers are having sex. While
it isn't good, it's inevitable. Is it
right to refuse contraception?
Teen sex is not inevitable; it's
expected. Teens are expected to engage
in sexual activity because that is what
they are taught in school, through the
media and from their friends, parents
and peers. If teens were expected to be
responsible, have self control and have
respect for self and others, we would
see a decline in sexual activity outside
of marriage, a decline in unexpected
pregnancy and a decline in disease.
Furthermore, thugs and gangsters
"inevitably" kill one another; should we
supply them with switch blades and a
dark alley and tell them it's their
"choice?" 11. The Alan Guttmacher
Institute reports that as much as 43
percent of the decline in abortion over
the past 10 years can be attributed to
emergency contraception. How do you feel
about this? What's the lesser of the two
evils?
Promotion of Plan B presents many
problems with women's health regarding
over-dosage and abuse. Plan B is a
powerful drug whose dose consists of 12
to 15 times that of a typical oral
contraceptive pill. Promoting this
regimen is especially dangerous because
teens are at a great risk of overdosing.
12. Do you feel birth control is
abortion? Do you think pregnancy occurs
when the egg is fertilized or when the
fertilized egg meets the uterine lining?
Please explain.
Pregnancy has been redefined in the
medical community as beginning at the
moment of implantation, but the
biological fact remains that a human
life begins at the fertilization of a
human ovum with sperm. Many
contraceptive methods, including 'Plan
B' emergency contraception, are designed
to prevent implantation of this new
human life. Whether or not this is
called an abortion, a human life is
still terminated.
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