In general, in any country where we find a diminished prolificity a

falling off of childbirth _unaccompanied_ by a decrease in the number

of marriages occurring at the reproductive ages, we may attribute this

decrease to _voluntary restriction of childbearing_ on the part of the

married, or in other words, to the prevalence of "birth control."

This incidentally, is not a theoretical statement, but one supported

by the almost unanimous medical opinion in all countries. Everywhere

and especially here in our own United States, we find evidence of the

extensive employ of "birth control" measures to prevent that normal

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development of family life which underlies the vigor and racial power

of every nation. These preventive measures which arbitrarily control

human birth had long been in use in France with results which,

especially since the war, have been frequently and publicly deplored

in the press, and have led the French Government to offer substantial

rewards to encourage the propagation of large families. From France

the preventive practices of "birth control" had spread, after 1870,

over nearly all the countries of western Europe, to England and to the

United States; though they are not as much apparent in those countries

where the Roman Church has a strong hold on the people.

As a general thing, the practice of thus unnaturally limiting

families--"unnaturally" since the custom of "birth control" derives

from no natural, physical law--prevails, in the first instance, among

the well-to-do, who should rather be the first to set the example of

protest against it by having the families they are so much better able

to support and educate than those less favored with the world's goods.

If the evil of voluntary control of human birth were restricted to a

privileged class, say one of wealth, the harm done would, perhaps, not

be so great. But, unfortunately, in the course of time it filters

down as a "gospel of comfort"--erroneous term!--to those whose

resources are less. They accept and practice this invidious system of

prevention and gradually the entire community is more or less

affected.

The whole system of "birth control" is opposed to natural, human and

religious law. Nature, in none of her manifestations, introduces

anything which may tend to prevent her great reason for being--the

propagation of the species. Birth as the natural sequence of mating is

her solemn and invariable law. It is in birth and rebirth that nature

renews herself and all the life of the animal and vegetable world, and

her primal aim is to encourage it. Human law recognizes this




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