Kakav ba muškarac?Riddle wrote: ↑22/03/2023 02:56Radije bih da se nikad ne moram uvjeriti, nema zajebancije oko toga.Tito_i_Partija wrote: ↑22/03/2023 01:37Vazektomija je sasvim reversibilna. Nema potrebe za maštanjem o jadnoj muškoj žrtvi.
Uostalom, više smisla ima da to uradi žena. Pošto ima prirodnu odgovornost začeća i nošenja djeteta i toliko više prava od muškarca u donošenju određenih odluka po tom pitanju, logično mi je da se sama za sebe pobrine ukoliko ne želi tu odgovornost.
Uvijek se isto ponavlja. Imamo problem, neka muškarac pomogne ili riješi.
Ne vidim da je neki pritisak na muškarcima kad su žene te koje moraju svakodnevno uzimat' pilule koje im često pojebu hormonalni balans samo da ne bi zatrudnile. Ili jebeni IUD u maternicu koji se mora regularno mijenjat' kod doktora.
Il' ako zatrudni, valja joj tražit' doktora koji će izvršit' abortus, što je kriminalno djelo u nekim državama, samo što se neki šupak nije znao kontrolisat' il' nije htjeo koristit' kondom jer "ne osjeća ništa". A ona u većini slučajeva ostaje sama, jer će joj muškarac reć' "boli me kurac, nije moj problem, snađi se sama".
Il' evo imamo i pilulu za muškarce, koje je dokazano efektivna i sigurna, i u čemu je problem? Neće muškarci da je koriste.
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/2023 ... re-scorned
"Imamo problem, neka muškarac pomogne ili riješi. " O čemu ti pričaš majke ti?Cue many years of research and development – that is, until the therapy hit a major snag.
Though a safe, effective male pill would have the potential to finally unburden women of the responsibility for contraception, and prevent millions of unwanted pregnancies every year, some men found the idea of an invisible orgasm distinctly unappealing. For a proportion of men, the so-called "clean sheets" pill was seen as emasculating. The method eventually lost its funding, and researchers went back to the drawing board (more on this later).
Today the male contraceptive pill is still yet to materialise. This week, research in mice identified a promising new target – a molecular switch that can stun sperm for two hours, rendering its taker temporarily infertile. But though the protein has been hailed as a game-changer, it still has a long way to go before it is approved for use in humans.
In fact, finding effective drugs has never been the problem.
Over the last half century, numerous possible methods for male birth control have been proposed, including some that have made it to clinical trials in humans. However, each one has eventually met a brick wall – even those that are safe and effective have been written off due to undesirable side effects. Several male pills have been rejected on the grounds that they lead to symptoms that are extremely common among women taking female versions.