Monday, August 27, 2012

RH Bill


The Reproductive Health Bill 





The Rh bill or Reproductive Health bill has become the center of an argumentative state discussion. Rh bill is a Philippine bill directing to pledge worldwide access to techniques and information on birth control, sexual education and maternal care.  However there is an overall agreement about its provisions on nurturing and child health, there is great argument on its key proposal that the Filipino taxpayer and the private sector will fund and undertake extensive distribution of family planning devices such as birth control pills and IUDs, as the government continues to allocate information on their use through all health care centers. As a way of monitoring the populace of the Philippines, private companies and the public and private elementary and secondary school system will be required to participate in this information and product dissemination.
As well, the sexual act is considered primarily to the propagation of life; accurately implemented within marriage only. The Catholic Church shows that married couples may take advantage of the natural cycles of the reproductive system and use their marriage precisely those times that are infertile; there are sensible motives for spacing births, such as serious medical conditions in the mother, or extreme poverty.

Conversely, the debate about reproduction privileges is the right to life. The Philippine Constituents says that the State, shall equally safeguard the life of the mother and the life of the unborn from conception. The obtaining and spreading of such family planning provisions are illegitimate and illegal, hence artificial contraceptives are medically recognized to induce abortion as one of their instruments of action.

The bill is being opposed by concerned citizens, especially the pro-family, pro-life and pro-God groups, regardless of creed or religion that is why this is very controversial. It is vastly argumentative, with specialists, authorities, professors, religious administrations, and major political figures both supporting and opposing it, often condemning the government and each other in the process. At one point, if the President, Benigno Aquino III supported the bill, the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines will expose to excommunicate him, which is why this issue is troublesome.
Contraceptives are no longer needed if the economy of a country is opulent. As soon as employees have higher salaries, greater job opportunities, good education for the youths, and if only people could control themselves from duplicating - to compare it with China, even if they are counted as the second populated country in the world, they don’t have to worry because the individuals have better job opportunities. Congruently, they have a good economy. If only people were educated on the consequences of having unplanned or unprotected sex, then they wouldn't have to face them.