LATEST WRITINGS FROM PASTOR PHILIP HOPPE

Posted inMarriage and Family / Sexuality / Theology and Practice

The other shoe may soon drop

If you think the Pill changed our world, wait until this one gets fully approved.  One treatment, ten years of infertility.  How many 20 year old men will get this and then be sterile until 30 without a thought.  I think women at least think through what all going on the pill means for the future lives and dreams.  Most men will simply say, “Kid free sex.”  All the pleasure,with no risk of attachment or responsibility.  Untold millions of “potential children” will never see the light of day.  Woman after woman will be used, exploited, and discarded freely without any fear.  Sexuality will be further removed its two most natural companions: marriage and children.

But in a world that embraces birth control without ethical consideration or even rational thought about its consequences, it will be coming. Someone will find a way to monetize this product or an organization that will distribute it for free in order to forward its anti-people purposes.    Who will be ready to speak  ethically and rationally about it when it does?  Will there be enough to speak in one voice in order to amplify the message to audible levels in our society?  I hope 50 years of the pill will allow for some dialogue before we unleash this on the world.

 

Male Birth Control

Scientists in India have come up with a birth control for men that is 100% effective and lasts a minimum of ten years. You read that correctly, but I’ll repeat it: 100% effective for ten years. The birth control is administered via an injection, called RISUG—an acronym for “Reversible Inhibition of Sperm Under Guidance.” The injection is given to the male through the scrotum, twice during the same session. The procedure totals about fifteen minutes, has no side effects, and is completely reversible.

It works relatively simply.  A non-toxic, positively charged polymer is injected into the tube the sperm pass through on the way out of the body. The polymer stays in this tube (there’s no blockage) and zaps the negatively charged sperm with a positive charge, which makes pregnancy impossible.

The RISUG is not available in America, yet. If approved it would revolutionize the way birth control is carried out. Needless to say, this is not the type of things drug companies are interested in; because one dosage lasts upwards of ten years, there is no potential for a great capital gain. The syringe costs more to produce than the drug inside of it.

In spite of this, a company called Parsemus is working on making RISUG accessible to American men (they are also testing the formula on women). RISUG is in the last phase of testing in India, which means it will be option for anyone who wants it within the next few years.

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