“ Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) is suing the Biden administration over a policy that allows adolescents to access birth control without their parents’ consent, arguing that the rule violates state law requiring guardians to consent to their children’s use of contraceptives.”
This doesn’t look like Freedom.
This looks like CONTROL.
Republicans are against freedom.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2024/07/27/texas-teen-birth-control-lawsuit/
@feloneouscat I have a two-sided take on that particular issue.
I'm not sure using *hormonal* birth control in adolescents at a mass scale is a great idea. There may be developmental consequences.
That said, neither condoms nor a copper IUD should have any developmental consequences whatsoever, so should *definitely* be exempted from any "guardian consent" rules.
My hot take is that adolescents should be using condoms and/or, if necessary, copper IUDs instead of hormonal birth control.
🤷🏻♀️ I suggest a child as a teen is worse. A child as a child is worse.
Feel free to differ.
IUDs have there own issues.
@feloneouscat I'm not anti-contraception in the slightest; my concern is with the well-being of the population, and there are plenty of warning signs that specifically using hormonal contraception in adolescents at a mass scale may cause (and be causing) significant, largely unrecognized harm.
I think it would be advisable to strongly encourage the use of non-hormonal methods, and discourage the use of hormonal methods, in adolescents until the developmental impacts are better understood.
@feloneouscat They do, I won't deny that.
However, to my knowledge the adverse events that may accompany (copper) IUD use are overwhelmingly temporary - reversed upon removal of the device.
Developmental impacts of hormonal birth control, on the other hand, may be permanent - including, if animal models are any indication, likely (poorly-understood) effects on brain development (including interfering with prefrontal cortex development, which is very, *very* bad).
eg: https://news.osu.edu/how-hormonal-birth-control-may-affect-the-adolescent-brain/