ShannonCT
Deity
How do people feel about a hypothetical policy requiring women (and possibly men) who receive government assistance to receive birth control implants/injections as a condition of that assistance?
I am of the opinion that a person who is unable or unwilling to provide for themselves is unfit to raise a child. In general, the state shouldn't have the power to restrict who can bear children, but when a person makes themselves a dependent of the state, they should relinquish the right to bear children. The loss of this right would only be temporary. Birth control injections are only effective for 3 months. People who are able to find work and leave the welfare rolls would be free to get pregnant.
Children born to parents on welfare, especially single parents, have pretty poor prospects in life. And people in poverty face even greater obstacles in improving their lot in life when they have to raise an unexpected child. Forced birth control would be more humane and more effective than abortion, as abortion is morally objectionable (to some people) and is voluntary. The individual and social benefits of abortion that Levitt and Dubner discuss in Freakonomics would only be increased with a policy of forced birth control.
Is this plan humane? Is it eugenics? Is it racist? Vote!
I am of the opinion that a person who is unable or unwilling to provide for themselves is unfit to raise a child. In general, the state shouldn't have the power to restrict who can bear children, but when a person makes themselves a dependent of the state, they should relinquish the right to bear children. The loss of this right would only be temporary. Birth control injections are only effective for 3 months. People who are able to find work and leave the welfare rolls would be free to get pregnant.
Children born to parents on welfare, especially single parents, have pretty poor prospects in life. And people in poverty face even greater obstacles in improving their lot in life when they have to raise an unexpected child. Forced birth control would be more humane and more effective than abortion, as abortion is morally objectionable (to some people) and is voluntary. The individual and social benefits of abortion that Levitt and Dubner discuss in Freakonomics would only be increased with a policy of forced birth control.
Is this plan humane? Is it eugenics? Is it racist? Vote!