Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
It’s The Day Of The Girl Again; Are We Doing Any Better?
It’s The Day Of The Girl Again; Are We Doing Any Better?
Jul 4, 2026 12:20 AM

Every year on October 11, the United Nations celebrates the Day of the Girl. This year’s theme focuses on technology and education. Many of the U.N.’s goals for highlighting education are admirable; after all, we’ve seen recently in the news how Malala Yousafzai, the 16 year old Pakistani, was shot in the face by the Taliban for promoting education for girls and women.

Cultural prejudices are not the only issues facing the education of girls. There are problems with transportation, family priorities (being able to afford to educate only one child – typically a boy), sanitary issues (girls missing school due to the lack of sanitary supplies for their menstrual cycle), and marrying off girls at young ages. It doesn’t take any leap of intellect to know that by educating girls, poverty recedes.

But how are girls and young women faring overall today? Are we doing a better job protecting them, ing their feminine contributions to the world, seeing them as valuable and precious? Unfortunately, the answer is no.

For instance, while it is illegal for sex-selective abortions to take place in Great Britain, ministers there admit they do.

Earl Howe, a Tory health minister, disclosed the government’s preliminary findings last night in answer to a parliamentary question by Lord Alton of Liverpool, a crossbench peer and former MP who campaigns against abortion.

He said: “For a very small number of countries of birth there are indications that birth ratios may differ from the UK as a whole and potentially fall outside of the range considered possible without intervention.”

e to know that China has, for years, practiced sex-selective abortions, and that country is now suffering from a gender imbalance in the millions.

In India, young women are hired as surrogates in an exploding industry. Couples (mainly from the U.S. and Great Britain) pay tens of thousands of dollars (of which the surrogate gets about $8500) for an Indian woman to carry a baby for them. One surrogate said bluntly, “I need the money,” as she and her husband struggle to raise two children, wanting them to have the education the parents did not. One writer bluntly calls the Indian surrogacy industry, “gestational serfdom.”

For the United Nations, any education for girls must also contain education about “reproductive health,” which translates to birth control and abortion. Just as Planned Parenthood here in the U.S. focuses on reducing birth rates among minorities, the U.N. wants to make sure that birth rates in the developing world are controlled, even if it means risking women’s health.

A push to increase spending on contraceptives in developing countries by the United Nations Population Fund is at best misguided and at worst harmful to women and families,” Dr. John Brehany, executive director of the Catholic Medical Association…

UNFPA [United Nations Population Fund] included some population-control advocacy and depicted access to family planning as a “sound economic investment.” It also claims that the use of contraceptives will “improve” global health.

Brehany countered, however, that oral contraceptive pills “negatively impact women’s health in significant ways — by increasing the incidence of breast cancer, strokes and STDs.”

He also pointed out that an article in the January issue of The Lancet Infectious Diseases found that the use of injectable contraceptives in Africa has been shown to double the risk of HIV infection.

“Women’s greatest needs,” Brehany said, “are for education and health-care resources for prenatal care, safe childbirth and general health. Providing resources for natural methods of fertility awareness and regulation are not only cheaper than artificial contraceptives; they are better for women’s health and for the stability of marriages.”

As Carroll Ríos de Rodríguez, a Guatemalan development economist puts it,

It is extremely offensive that someone in an office in Europe will decide that no more black babies should be born or no more Latin American babies should be born, or that only one baby should be born.”

Girls as young as 12 are routinely trafficked into the sex trade, all over the world, including the U.S. It is estimated that females account for 75 percent of trafficked persons throughout the world. The state of Michigan is ranked as a “Tier 2” state, meaning the state has received a ranking of 2, on a 1-4 scale (one being the best), in dealing legally with trafficking. It is also a state that sees a relatively high amount of trafficking, yet local police are often reluctant to see girls as victims of trafficking. Even the law enforcement agencies with the most experience in this area admit that more training is needed bat human trafficking.

We use sophisticated medical technology to identify and get rid of girls before they are even born. Once they are here, our world seems bent on reducing females to their “usefulness” or to objectify them: they produce babies, provide sexual pleasure, and earn money for others. We deny them education, but allow them to be used for sexual pleasure and reproduction for those who can afford to pay.

It’s the Day of the Girl; are we doing any better?

[product sku=”1297″]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
When bookshops were miraculous, romantic places
Not even Amazon can put the original “Shop Around the Corner” out of business. Now, as for the remake … Read More… I began a series of essays on Christmas movies last week with The Bishop’s Wife (1947), a story about church, munity of the faithful, and spiritual responsibility. This week, I’m writing about a less lofty subject, munity of the workplace and the life merce, but a much better movie, The Shop Around the Corner (1940), one of the...
The problem of the atheist economist
Entrepreneurs, to be truly successful, must know more than basic economics. They must also have a higher purpose, one not reducible to mere productivity. Read More… There is much in the classical liberal economist that I find attractive. By classical liberal, I do not mean the sort of political liberalism that defaults to certain presumptions of big government. Rather, I mean one who adheres to a more libertarian adoption of free market principles. Yet the classical liberal economist without faith...
What the Kyle Rittenhouse trial taught America about assumptions, keeping peace
While questions of police brutality, persistent racism and criminal justice reform should concern all citizens, we must realize that violence and disorder provide no path to a more just future. Read More… On Nov. 19, Kyle Rittenhouse was found not guilty on all charges related to the fatal shooting of two men and the wounding of another on the third day of widespread rioting and civil unrest in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in August last year. The trial had for many Americans...
China and Russia don’t know why they were excluded from the “Summit for Democracy”
Should you tell them or should I? Read More… Presidential summits tend to focus on PR rather than substance. The Biden administration’s “Summit for Democracy” looks no different. Its objectives were worthy. Asthe State Departmentexplained it, President Joe Biden planned to “bring together leaders from government, civil society, and the private sector to set forth an affirmative agenda for democratic renewal and to tackle the greatest threats faced by democracies today through collective action.” However, most of the topics probably...
Christmas 1991: The birth of freedom in the death of the evil empire
Whether the work of Providence, a pope and a president, or the inner contradictions of a bankrupt ideology, the collapse of the USSR meant hope of a free and democratic Russia. Has that hope been fulfilled? Read More… “You can have a very quiet Christmas evening,” wished Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev to American President George H. W. Bush. “I am saying good-bye and shaking your hand.” It was a long-distance handshake, done via telephone. And it came on Christmas Day,...
Advent lifts the veil of judgment and mercy in the divine economy
Christians in the marketplace are motivated by more than profit. They seek also to be worthy of the public trust so as to avoid divine judgment. Read More… One of the more disturbing aspects of the way the market economy works is the ability of, at least some, participants to avoid responsibility for their decisions and actions. The manner in which this works is through the concepts of corporate personality and limited liability. The corporation is deemed to have a...
Hong Kong drops 62 places in “press freedom” by country
The effects of the National Security Law are being felt by journalists in Hong Kong, as the city suffers a terrible slide into a totalist state to match China’s. Read More… Reporters Without Borders (RSF) released this year’s World Press Freedom Index, ranking countries based on press freedom, from the most to the least press. In 2002, for example, Hong Kong was ranked 18th. This year, it fell to 80th out of 180 countries, while China landed at #177, only...
The social responsibility of business is still to its business
Do corporations have an obligation to address the needs of the larger society? Or was Milton Friedman right, that their only clear obligation is to their shareholders? Read More… Most people have intuitions about moral issues of consequence, but we often find it difficult to put these intuitions into words. Something seems to us to be right or wrong, but we struggle to express our ideas accurately and to explain why our intuitions are reasonable pelling. As Peter Drucker used...
Pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai found guilty over Tiananmen Square Massacre vigil
Lai and two co-defendants were convicted on charges related to their participation in the annual Tiananmen Square Massacre vigil, another Beijing-inspired blow to free speech and free assembly in Hong Kong. Read More… Hong Kong media tycoon and outspoken pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai has been convicted for his involvement in a memorating the Tiananmen Square Massacre. On Dec. 9, Lai, along with two other prominent Hong Kong activists, Gwyneth Ho and Chow Hang Tung, were found guilty of incitement and...
Inflation is real and we’re experiencing the costs and consequences
Don’t believe that increasing the money supply or jacking up federal spending costs nothing. Blaming corporate greed for rising prices is just a diversion from poor economic policy. Read More… Generally, the topic of inflation is considered dry and uninteresting, but it is one that has garnered much attention and debate over the past year. There peting narratives as to what inflation is and why it matters, and even whether the U.S. economy is experiencing inflation or not. Inflation is...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved