Essay On Male Birth Control

742 Words3 Pages

1960s became a pivotal year for women; a pill that prevented pregnancy. This gave women the power to be in charge of their own body. With the same freedom this pill gave to women, expectations were also risen. Women were to be more responsible about the usage of the pill and men relied on them. With new technology, a new form of contraceptive for men has been invented and now men no longer need to rely on women. This is the equivalence to the women’s 1960s; there is a vast different in views and attitudes when comparing both pills. When the male contraceptive was first announced in the market, society has viewed the launch of the birth control differently than when the female pill launched in the 60’s. The female pill has been seen as a women’s rights issue, a “special interest group” issue, an identity politics issue, a liberal issue.Women have, and are currently, been seen as promiscuous and are slut shamed for making this decision.On the other hand, male birth control is not, because male issues are not often labeled “special interest group” issues. The concern of the male birth control are not how …show more content…

Women view this as an opportunity to take a break of the pill, its side effects and it also give a “taste” to men of the side-effects women go through when they are on the pill. However, the side-effects of the pill is what might stray most men away from the contraception. Some of the side-effect include weight gain, change of mood and night sweats, however, the two severe side effects that scare men away are retrograde ejaculation and libido. No one should expect for the pill to take world by storm in 2017 because it has been predicted that when the first crop of men start to experience a dry orgasm, a new culture war will begin. Although women might view the launch of the pill as an opportunity to take a break, men do not share the same