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at age fifteen? When they become reasoning adults, say age 30, the vasectomy would be reversed.
I think most young men would be willing, all fun, no DNA test results to worry about, what do you think?

2007-12-13 09:49:31 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

Sperm could be frozen before the procedure to insure availability in the future, if needed.
Tubal ligations are not usually reversible which is why I did not raise that part of the question.

2007-12-13 10:04:09 · update #1

4 answers

GREAT IDEA! Unfortunately, most males, especially Hispanic males, seem to feel that vasectomy is equal to castration for some reason. Many cultures equate infertility to castration, and it bodes ill for their women. In those cultures, women are often degraded, or at least treated as lesser beings.

It would probably reduce the demand for abortion by about 98%, though...

2007-12-13 09:57:56 · answer #1 · answered by correrafan 7 · 2 0

It would be great except for two things:

1. Most men think they are sexual experts, yet they have a very poor sexual education at best. Many don't know what a vasectomy is. They think it means getting your testicles removed.

2. Vasectomy reversal is an expensive scam. For the most part, it does not work. But this is not so bad because humans are way too populous.

2007-12-14 00:57:33 · answer #2 · answered by Marvin 7 · 2 0

At 15? Well, all vasectomies can be reversed, but it is a medical procedure and things can go wrong. What if you fell in love with one of those guys and married him only to find out that something had happened and you couldn't bear his children because of it?

2007-12-13 17:54:02 · answer #3 · answered by Neescousin 5 · 1 0

YES! And even more improvement would be seen, particularly in the area of welfare payments, if all females between those same ages had their tubes tied.

2007-12-13 17:55:06 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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