En 2050, la majorité des enfants seraient conçus en laboratoire. Cest ce quaffirme linventeur de la pilule contraceptive. Sexe sans enfant, et maintenant enfant sans sexe.
Children Conceived Without Sex Will be Commonplace Says Father of contraceptive “Pill”
If true, another aspect of Aldous Huxley’s disturbing Brave New World would become a reality
Children without sex will be commonplace in the future says the inventor of the contraceptive “Pill”, whose invention facilitated the “Sexual Revolution” in the developed world.
According to London’s Daily Mail, Carl Djerassi predicts the western world will soon enter into another cultural revolution to surpass the “Sexual Revolution” that would make children without sex the norm among women by 2050.
"It is my own prediction that within the next 30 to 50 years in the Western world, many women, when young, will bank their eggs or ovarian tissue, have them frozen, and use them when they feel the time is right for them to have a child," Djerassi said. "It will become commonplace.”
"The world has changed. The days are past in which women in countries like Britain have economic dependence on their husbands and take care of the children,” said Djerassi. “The days are past when women looked after children and nothing else. Women have careers now.”
“Soon there will be nothing to stop a woman freezing her eggs when they are at their healthiest and then using them later on in life.”
However, this has radical implications not only for relations between men and women, but also for children. With many women viewing men as unnecessary for economic independence to raise their children, women could in theory not only put off childbearing to their 40s, but also forgo the father completely. Such incidents are already a reality and have caused psychological trauma for children feeling the absence of love from their biological fathers.
If Djerassi’s predictions come true, it will mean that his invention has led human beings very close indeed to the stark world predicted by Aldous Huxley in his famous 1932 novel Brave New World, where children are products of technology, and not conceived from the self-giving love between a man and a woman.
Huxley’s novel was published just two years after the Church of England made a historic rejection of Christian doctrine condemning contraception leading many other Christian denominations, except the Catholic Church, to follow suit. Huxley’s “brave new world” features a barren technological world of promiscuous sexual relations devoid of any meaning and made possible through contraceptives women carry in “Malthusian belts.” Instead of procreative sex, human beings are manufactured and conditioned through cloning and other processes to fit a predetermined place in a society ordered to the hilt.
Djerassi synthesized norethindrone, the first oral contraceptive, on October 15, 1951 and said, "I could not anticipate the impact the Pill would have. No one really knew that women would accept the Pill so readily."
However Pope Paul VI, leader of the Catholic Church during the tumultuous era of 1960s, reaffirmed the traditional Christian teachings against contraception with the 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae. Paul VI predicted contraception would bring about a collapse of morality in society with loss of respect especially for women and their inherent dignity.
The Pope was abandoned by many Catholic bishops and theologians in this matter, who repudiated his teaching authority in favour of a permissive stand on contraception. The famous Winnipeg Statement of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops in 1968 was one such case indicating individuals could in good conscience use contraception in a number of circumstances, despite the fact that this was a deliberate misrepresentation of Catholic teachings.
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