A male contraceptive is almost here – and it’ll be another test of whether heterosexual men are actually willing to share the responsibilities of adult life

  • Sabre363@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    The article is kinda awful. It barely reports on the drug (it doesn’t even mention the name of the drug or the study) and spends most of the time speculating that men are incapable of taking any kind of responsibility and practically blames them for all the problems that women face with contraceptives. Which might a fair assessment occasionally, but it’s hardly a universal truth and has more to do with the availability of contraceptives that are controlled by corporations and healthcare providers not by the decisions of average people.

    • vibinya@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      I didn’t see a name…Also, not really a fan of how this article is written. I can’t tell you much on the pill, but I can tell you how this author feels about men and their supposed unwillingness to participate in preventing pregnancy…

  • aelwero@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Misandric AF.

    Male birth control pill is easy fucking math for a male brain. $20/mo copay, or half your paycheck for 18 years to a random girl at the bar…

    “They aren’t going to want the responsibility” is a reason they WILL get on the pill…

  • BrotherL0v3@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I can say from personal experience, rhetoric like this about men will spread like wildfire among all the wrong people. Those ““anti-sjw”” types will hold things like this up as emblematic of feminism as a whole, and impressionable young men who don’t know any better will believe them. Barely concealed contempt for heterosexual men isn’t exactly winning hearts and minds.

    I also can’t help but notice the similarities these jabs at men share with a bunch of conservative talking points: “heterosexual men don’t help out enough around the house and should grow up” fits right in with “fat people should just diet and exercise” and “poor people should just go to college and learn to code”. Villifying a demographic by interpreting a structural problem as simply a million individual failures doesn’t leave you with a ton of options for solutions, other than “they all need to be better people.”

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    I’m doing anecdotal here, so if that’s not your bag, skip this comment.

    But most of the guys I know are willing to at least try it. Single guys are less into the idea because they’ll still need condoms anyway, so why bother with the added hassle (of getting a prescription) and expense? There’s some that want it as a backup protection source, but they’re a minority.

    But married guys? Yeah, they’re down with the idea of it as an added layer of prevention along with whatever their wife is using. For the folks where the uterus owning partner/spouse can’t use hormonal birth control, it’s a big hell yes because a male pill decrease the hassles involved in using the other options.

    Me? Ehhh, I’m never an early adopter of anything medical, and by the time the beta testing that is a medication being offered to any and all is done, I doubt my wife will still be fertile. She’s already showing signs of early menopause. But if I was a younger guy? Yeah, since we don’t want another kid, hate condoms (both of us), she can’t use hormonal methods, and don’t like the margin of error with other methods, we’d at least try it.

  • TIN@feddit.uk
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    11 months ago

    I was about to say I’d absolutely take it, as a mid 40s single guy with no interest in having more children.

    Then I remembered I’ve already had a vasectomy so probably a bit superfluous at this juncture.

  • CJOtheReal@ani.social
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    11 months ago

    There already was one… But no market…

    Guys, just use a condom, it also protects against STDs

  • Tommasi [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    That’s sounds pretty promising. How does it actually function? I’m asuming it can’t be hormonal considering how hard it is to block sperm production that way, which could maybe mean less (or at least different) side effects than hormonal birth-control.