To be honest, that sounds rather monstrous to me. Permitting the state to directly determine who can and cannot reproduce--even only temporarily--strikes me as an exceptionally dangerous slope to begin sliding down.Tortoise wrote: For those of you who feel that a woman should have the right to choose an abortion for reasons other than rape or risk to her life, how would you feel about chemical sterilization of that woman (either forced or at least strongly encouraged) for a certain number of years afterward?
After all, the woman clearly doesn't want to have children--at least not right now. Why not help her achieve that goal through chemical sterilization, since more traditional methods of contraception don't seem to be working very well for her?
Perhaps the sterilization could be lifted after a few years, after the woman has had time to (hopefully) develop a bit more maturity and perhaps be in a better situation in her life where she's willing to have a child and be a responsible, loving parent?
And from a utilitarian perspective, anybody who publicly expresses such an opinion is likely to lose the support of approximately 100% of women who hear it. This is, I believe, one of the problems that the Republican party is having right now. There is a wing composed of people who say things of that nature that make big honkin' alarm bells go off in the mind of any woman who hears it.