Co-Inventor Of Birth Control Pill Now Calls It 'A Catastrophe'
By Susan Brinkmann, For The Bulletin
Published:
Friday, January 9, 2009
A co-inventor of the birth control pill, Austrian chemist Carl Djerassi, now says his creation has led to a “demographic catastrophe.”
In a personal commentary published in the Austrian newspaper Der Standard, Mr. Djerassi, 85, said that in most of Europe there was now “no connection at all between sexuality and reproduction.” He said: “This divide in Catholic Austria, a country which has on average 1.4 children per family, is now complete.”
He described families who decided to use the pill rather than reproduce as “wanting to enjoy their schnitzels while leaving the rest of the world to get on with it.”
Mr. Djerassi called the subsequent declining birth rate an “epidemic” far worse, but given much less attention, than obesity. He said young Austrians were committing “national suicide” if they failed to procreate.
He said “intelligent immigration” policies would be the only other alternative, and must “at least be part of the solution.”
Mr. Djerassi was one of three scientists whose formulation of the synthetic progestogen Norethisterone marked a key step toward development of the earliest oral contraceptive pill. Cardinal Christoph Schonborn, the head of Austrian Catholics, reminded the press that the much maligned encyclical forbidding the use of artificial contraception, Humanae Vitae, warned the world 40 years ago that the pill would lead to a dramatic fall in the birth rate in the West.
“Somebody above suspicion ... is saying that each family has to produce three children to maintain population levels, but we’re far away from that,” he said.
Cardinal Schonborn said when he first read Humanae Vitae he viewed it negatively as a “cold shower.” However, his views were altered over time as the document proved to be “prophetic.”