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Birth Control Access in America

Since the early 18th Century, an perhaps earlier than that, women have known that the ability to plan if and when you get pregnant is vital to having control and ownership over your own life. Author of The Birth of the Pill, Jonathan Eig, states,  "Women realized that if they want to stay engaged in the community, if they want to stay active, they have to have fewer children," That’s when you start to see women realizing that there is a tie between family size and political power. Y ou can look at all of human history and see that for 99% of it, women were considered objects, like vessels for birthing and caring for children, Once you can control your own body, you can control your own life, and then you can assert yourself in your family, your community, in the workplace." Today, we know that of course birth control, primarily contraceptives and intrauterine devices (IUDs), are used for family planning and preventing pregnancy, but birth control is also used to treat

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