No need for an RH bill, now or ever
by Bernardo Villegas, Evelina Atienza Frank Padilla Anthony Lumicao and 15 others
Philippine Daily Inquirer 10:23 pm | Saturday, September 15th, 2012
There is no need for any legislation that
guarantees universal access to contraceptives, the so-called
reproductive health (RH) care devices, now or ever. Whatever “band-aid”
amendments may be proposed by well-intentioned proponents of the RH bill
to make it more palatable, the underlying principles behind it are
inherently flawed.
Antisustainable growth
The first component of sustainable
development is a rate of economic growth that is high enough to
contribute, together with appropriate economic policies, to the
eradication of poverty. High gross domestic product growth is dependent
on a growing and young population as has been stated by numerous
international economists and top officials.
The just released Global Competitiveness
Report 2012 of the World Economic Forum, like the HSBC 2012 Report, had
the Philippines jumping several notches up in economic competitiveness
because of our large, growing population.
Population control, however, will backfire
and cause the acceleration of our falling fertility rate. Many pro-RH
proponents harp on the dangers of population explosion. They have not
learned from the lessons of the last two centuries of unparalleled
economic progress in many countries of the East and the West that have
disproved the Malthusian theory of perpetual poverty caused by the
so-called geometric growth of population.
New resources
The unlimited capacity of the human mind to
discover new resources and technologies has overcome the “limits to
growth” that sowed fears in the last century.
Some of the greatest minds of the 20th
century such as Nobel laureates Simon Kuznets and Michael Spence; Dr.
Mahbub ul Haq, creator of the development index; and resource
specialists Colin Clark and Julian Simon have shown through
cross-country studies and long-term analyses of the economic experiences
of developed countries that population growth was a positive stimulus
to economic progress and that it was surpassed by the growth in real
income.
Economists who purport to show the opposite
have for their sample very few countries. They also have access to data
over a relatively short period compared with the studies showing that
there is no correlation between population growth and the spread of mass
poverty, which is due to erroneous economic policies and failure of
good governance.
Even those few countries in which there is
some evidence that birth control policies temporarily helped in boosting
economic growth in the short run are now regretting their fertility
reduction programs. Well-known are the attempts of the leaders of
Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea, Hong Kong and Japan to appeal to their
women to bear more babies.
Premarital sex, abortion
Since material well-being is not the only
component of human development or happiness, there is another problem
that widespread use of contraceptives can unleash. The findings of Nobel
laureate George Akerlof who, despite his protestations that he was in
favor of abortion and artificial contraception, demonstrated with
empirical evidence that the “reproductive technology shock” led to an
increase in premarital sex, and due to contraceptive failure, also in
unwed mothers, children without fathers and other societal ills.
A 2009 University of
Pennsylvania study, titled “Sexual Revolution,” showed that premarital
sex in the United States ballooned from 0.06 percent of women in 1900 to
75 percent today as contraception provided the youth the ease of sex
without “cost” or responsibility.
False sense of security
This same link with
premarital sex was also suggested by the studies by JE Potter in Brazil,
and clearly seen by the work of Dr. Edward Green in Africa. Green,
former director of the AIDS Prevention Research Project at Harvard
University, affirmed that “condoms have not worked as a primary
intervention in the population-wide epidemics of Africa,” citing studies
at the Lancet, Science and British Medical Journal and explaining that
the availability of condoms led to earlier and riskier sex by creating a
false sense of security.
As the contraceptive
mentality sets in (contra = against; conception = beginning of human
beings), a negative view of human beings is promoted. A 2011 study in
the scientific journal Contraception showed that the rise in
contraceptive use in Spain also saw a jump in abortion rate. This
link—both logical and empirical—has been acknowledged by leaders of the
abortion industry, such as Malcolm Potts, the first medical director of
International Planned Parenthood.
Only five nations in
the world still prohibit abortion. A hundred years ago all nations did.
It was acceptance of contraception that changed their minds. This will
happen here, too, if we accept contraception.
Secularist ideology
Another serious flaw
in the RH bill is the sweeping generalization about “unwanted
pregnancies.” Scientific studies in the United States, especially those
by Lant Pritchett of Harvard University, have seriously questioned the
assumption made by pro-RH bill advocates that unwanted pregnancies among
married women are rampant. The finding of social scientists is that
mothers have the number of children they want.
Surveys in the
Philippines that purport to show that there are many mothers among poor
households, who regret having given birth to some of their children, are
suspect. These surveys are usually funded by international
organizations that have a strong bias for population control.
Obama administration
It is no secret that
in the Democratic National Convention, the Obama administration made it
clear that there will be continuing support for abortion. One does not
have to be paranoid to assume that if President Obama wins a second
term, he and his Secretary of State will continue to target countries
like the Philippines to spread their culture of death.
Besides being part of
an ideological interpretation of “women’s rights,” such aggressive
campaign to promote reproductive health (which Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton averred “includes access to abortion”) continues the
US-supported worldwide program that was unleashed by the National
Security Study Memorandum 200: Implications of Worldwide Population
Growth for US Security and Overseas Interests.
Considering the
revelations about the participation of foreign interests in lobbying for
the RH bill, any version of it will be suspect.
Let us not be naïve.
Only last year, Green, through his book “Broken Promises,” exposed in
brilliant detail how the West’s AIDS establishment disowned scientific
evidence that wide condom use was in fact ineffective in stopping AIDS
in Africa, and how those who dominate it—the homosexual ideologues,
population controllers and condom suppliers—worsened the epidemic and
betrayed the developing world.
Taking away funds for poor
Besides being the
antithesis to sustainable economic growth and human development, the RH
bill also unwittingly goes against inclusive growth, i.e. economic
progress that benefits the poorest among the poor.
It misdiagnoses the
reason households of larger family sizes are poorer than those with
fewer children. Studies have shown that households with larger family
sizes are poorer not because they have too many children but because
their heads are the least educated. This should lead policymakers not
to convince these poor households to have fewer children, but to invest
more resources in their education, especially the women, a proposal that
is strongly supported by the studies of Economics Nobel laureates
Amartya Sen and Gary Becker.
Improve basic education
Government should
divert whatever is budgeted for contraceptives to improving the quality
of basic education among the poor. Poor households, especially in the
rural areas, choose to have more children because human beings are their
only resources, especially considering the failure of the state to
provide farmers with infrastructure.
The poor farmers will
suffer manpower shortages in their labor-intensive farming if they start
imitating the rich in having only one or two children. The same applies
to those millions of households that have at least one of its immediate
members working abroad. Seducing them to have fewer children could very
well leave them even more destitute, as publications of the UN and
Asian Development Bank have predicted.
Disseminating a
contraceptive mentality among the poor unmasks a condescending and
elitist attitude that the poor should not be allowed to multiply. This
policy is dangerously close to the eugenics practiced by authoritarian
leaders like Adolf Hitler.
Considering that the
competitive advantage of the Philippines in the global economy is its
young, growing population, a really propoor economic strategy should
allow the poor to choose to have as many children as they wish and then
to generously support them with infrastructure, educational and
technical skills training, and microcredit support, among other things,
so that they can turn their children into truly productive resources.
Suspect surveys
Those who support the
RH bill refer to surveys purporting to show that there is a large demand
for free contraceptives among the poor. As mentioned, these surveys are
suspect because they are funded by international agencies advocating
contraception and abortion. Questionnaires are formulated to influence
respondents to give the desired answers.
A recent consumer
survey conducted among the C, D and E households (constituting more than
60 percent of households) by SEED Institute, a field research group,
came out with more objective data about the demand for contraceptives
among mothers in poor households in Metro Manila.
Wish list
The survey was
conducted to identify the consumer patterns of the poor with the
intention of giving guidelines to profit-making firms and social
enterprises about what goods and services could be tailored specifically
to the needs of the poor. The respondents (all mothers) were asked to
list down the top three goods or services that they most wanted the
government to provide for free after they exhausted their resources to
meet their most basic needs. Among more than 20 goods or services on
their wish lists, there was no mention whatsoever of “free
contraceptives.”
The Philippine Medical
Association also asserted that the goal of reducing maternal and child
deaths “could be attained by improving maternal and child health care
without the necessity of distributing contraceptives. The millions of
[pesos] intended for contraceptive devices may just well be applied in
improving the skills of our health workers.”
Provoking moral crisis
Several religious
groups, Muslim, Protestant and Catholic, oppose the RH measure on moral
grounds. Belying pro-RH surveys, these groups, together with other
people of goodwill, have rallied by the thousands in many cities and
towns around the country, and have contributed in winning post-debate
polls on national television.
The Imam Council of
the Philippines, leaders of our 4.5 million Muslims, pronounced that
contraceptives “make us lose morality.” Throughout the centuries, the
Catholic Church has taught that contraception is intrinsically evil.
Pope John Paul the Great wrote that contraception “leads not only to a
positive refusal to be open to life but also to a falsification of the
inner truth of conjugal love.”
It is, therefore,
advisable that Congress refrain from passing a law that would oblige
citizens who adhere to their religion to fund an item which they
consider immoral. Considering the strong arguments against the RH bill
based on secular sciences, it would be prudent for the state not to
provoke a religious-moral crisis among a large majority of the Filipino
population.
Need for virtue
Lastly, two Asian
intellectuals spoke of the virtue needed by a nation. Speaking of the
“crime” of contraception, Mahatma Gandhi taught: “Even as many people
will be untruthful and violent, humanity may not lower its standard, so
also, though many, even the majority, may not respond to the message of
self-control, we may not lower our standard.”
Jose Rizal wrote:
“Only virtue can save! If our country has ever to be free, it will not
be through vice and crime, it will not be so by corrupting its sons,
deceiving some and bribing others, no! Redemption presupposes virtue,
virtue sacrifice and sacrifice love!”
(The
19 authors are Dr. Bernardo Villegas, Ph.D Economics [Harvard
University]; Maria Conception Noche, Alliance for the Family; Frank
Padilla, CFC-FFL; Rolando de los Reyes, Courage Philippines; Dr. Eleanor
Palabyab, Doctors for Life; Alan Dacanay, Families against the RH Bill;
Dr. Angelita Aguirre, Family Media Advocacy Foundation; Leonardo
Montemayor, Federation of Free Farmers; Evelina Atienza, Kababaihan ng
Maynila; Joseph Tesoro, Live Pure Movement; Eric Manalang, Pro-life
Philippines; Jemy Gatdula and Felipe Salvosa, Pro-life Professors; Dr.
Raul Nidoy, Science and Reason for Human Beings; Maribel Descallar,
Teodora: In Defense of the Authentic Woman; Kiboy Tabada, UP for Life;
Luis Buenaventura III, YUPamilya; Anthony Lumicao, Youth United for the
Philippines; and Anthony Perez, Filipinos for Life.)
No comments:
God bless you!