The original oral contraceptive …show more content…
At the time in the mid 1900s, religious groups were tightly tied in with the United States government. This caused not only social rejection and disapproval, but also legal cases. A good example of this is the supreme court case Griswold v. Connecticut in 1965. This landmark case made it unconstitutional to prevent married couples from acquiring oral contraceptive. This resistance came from religious organizations that believed that it was sinful to use contraceptive to prevent pregnancy. The social implications of the oral contraceptive were also difficult for the American woman to deal with in the 1960s. Women were secretive in their use of oral contraceptive as to not be ostracized by others who disapproved.
Personally, I see the effects of the pill in my own life. My grandparents had four children and my parents only had two. My grandparents began having children as soon as they were married in their early twenties while my parents only began having children a few years after being married in their mid twenties. I think the oral contraceptive benefitted my parent’s generation by allowing them more time to financially and emotionally mature before having