Friday, May 27, 2011

Science Facts on the RH Bill



Science Facts on the RH Bill

IN PLAIN LANGUAGE

The world’s leading scientific experts resolve the issues on the Reproductive HealthBill, the forced distribution of birth control devices by all private employers and bythe government using Filipino taxpayer’s money.


1. The pill and the IUD kill children.

When does human life begin? At fertilization, when the sperm penetrates the egg. This was the“overwhelming agreement in countless scientific writings”, and of top experts (including scientists from Harvard Medical School and the Mayo Clinic) at an eight day hearing of the US Senate.[1]

Do birth control pills and the IUD kill the young human being? Yes, aside from preventing fertilization, the pill also works to kill a young human if ever a sperm gets to penetrate the egg, according to the scientific journal of the American Medical Association.[2] The American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology of 2005 pronounced that the intrauterine device brings about thedestruction of the early embryo.”[3]

2. The pill injures women’s health.

Is the pill safe? The International Agency for Research on Cancer in a 2007 study made by 21 scientists reported that the pill causes cancer, giving it the highest level of carcinogenicity, the same as cigarettes and asbestos.[4] It also causes stroke,[5] and significantly increases the risk of heart attacks.[6] Several scientific journals have stated that the natural way of regulating births through theBillings Ovulation Method has no side-effects, and is 99.5 % effective.[7]

3. More condoms promote the spread of AIDS.

Will the use of condoms lower the rate of HIV/AIDS in a country? It will increase it, according tothe “best studies”, concluded Harvard Director for AIDS Prevention, Edward C. Green. Availability of condoms makes people they take wilder sexual risks, thus worsening the spread of the disease. He showed that fidelity and abstinence are the best solutions to the AIDS epidemic. [8]

4. Wide use of contraceptives leads to the destruction of families, and other great social evils.

Will the greater availability of contraception improve the conditions of families? Wide contraceptive use leads to more premarital sex, more fatherless children, more single mothers, more poverty, more abortions; and also a decline of marriage, less domesticated men, more crimes, more social pathology and poverty, according to the studies of Nobel prize winner, George Akerlof.[9] Many other studies reached the same conclusion.

5. The RH Bills are based on wrong economics.

Is there a correlation between population growth and economic development? “No clear association” is the answer of Simon Kuznets, Nobel Prize winner in the science of economics.[10]Many later studies confirmed this, including a 2003 study of the RAND Corporation, a world leader in research associated with 30 Nobel Prize winners.[11]

Is population control one of the ingredients for high economic growth and poverty reduction?No, population control is not among the five solutions or ingredients found by the 2008 Commission onGrowth and Development headed by Nobel prize winner Michael Spence. The growth factors are: good governance, openness to knowledge, stable finances, market allocation, investment and savings.[12]Our country loses 400 billion pesos to corruption every year.[13]

Help dispel ignorance of these science facts. Beware of the wealthy and powerful pro-RHlobby. Make copies and pass on to many, including our leaders. TODAY!



[1] Subcommittee Report, S-158, 97th Congress, 1st Session 1981, 7.

[3] Stanford and Mikolajczyk (2005). "Mechanisms of action of intrauterine devices: Update and estimation of postfertilization effects".American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (W.B. Saunders Comp) 187: 1699–1708.

[4]"Combined Estrogen-Progestogen Contraceptives" IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans 91. 2007.

[6] Baillargeon, McClish, Essah, and Nestler (2005). "Association between the Current Use of Low-Dose Oral Contraceptives and Cardiovascular Arterial Disease: A Meta-Analysis". Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (The Endocrine Society) 90 (7): 3863–3870.

[7] British Medical Journal, American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Lancet, Contraception, Fertility and Sterility.

[8] Green (2003) Rethinking AIDS Prevention. Praeger.

[9] Akerlof, Yellent and Katz (1996), "An Analysis on Out-of-Wedlock Childbearing in the United States", Quarterly Journal of Economics (TheMIT Press) 111 (2): 277–317; Akerlof, “Men Without Children,” The Economic Journal 108 (1998)

[10] Kuznets (1974) Population Capital and Growth, Norton.

[12] The Growth Commission (2008) The Growth Report: Strategies for Sustained Growth and Inclusive Development, World Bank Publication.

[13] Studies of the Asian Development Bank and World Bank