Here: www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/may/23/unsafe-sex-why-everyones-at-it
I feel I might be being harsh, but I really didn't like this. Is it just me?
Obviously, if you are having sex with someone and there's a risk of STDs, it matters hugely to protect yourself and them.
Obviously, if you don't want to be pregnant or get someone pregnant, it matters.
I just feel it's very unbalanced to focus almost entirely on women (as the article does), especially when a fair bit of it is about using condoms. Then there's a paragraph about 'genuine' issues with hormonal contraception (something I know a fair few MN threads have discussed and which does carry risks for depression etc.) ... which is shot down with the following implication that women are really influenced by 'scare stories' and 'hyperconscious' and 'backwards' if they don't like the pill.
The author's talked to several women in long-term relationships, and she acknowledges with one of them that (duh!) she and her partner might actually be kinda wanting a baby therefore relaxing contraception. But as a whole, the article sounds to me as if she doesn't really understand or believe that a woman in her 20s might want a baby and that not using contraception might be a reasonable choice. I find this really odd - I'm 29, many of my mates have children, and several have had children for years now. It's normal, isn't it?
Anyone else find this a bit odd and anti-feminist?