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Uh, yeah, because when I think of a romantic evening with a guy, I think of him suggesting that we prevent pregnancy after our little tryst by me taking high doses of hormone pills, rather than him suggesting he wear a condom.
Most women are not totally stupid and *are* looking, very hard, for some sign that a man has any consideration for them whatsoever before they will sleep with him. We all understand that most men don't like condoms very much, so when a guy brings along condoms he says "I care enough about your welfare -- as well as me getting laid -- that I offer up a means of protecting you from pregnancy that really isn't ideal for my pleasure." If, however, he brings along pills for *us* to take, he's saying "I really don't care about you at all, I just wanna stick it in you and then not have to pay child support." Most women are just not stupid enough or desperate enough to fall for that. Even if it's not widely known that the morning-after pill has side effects (and I have seen several posters point out that the side effects I experienced, and many other women have experienced, was because we weren't actually using Plan B, but fudging it with megadoses of birth control pills, so I can't actually say what the side effects of Plan B are), few women like the idea of *all* the risk and *all* the responsibility in sex falling on *them.* Which is what happens when Mr. Lovegod shows up with Plan B instead of condoms.
Besides, condoms protect me from Mr. Lovegod's diseases, too. Plan B doesn't.
So, let's see. Greater sacrifice on his part and greater protection for me, vs. greater sacrifice on my part and less protection for me. If he's the one trying to make the argument, how is the second argument going to convince me nearly as well as the first? And *men* are not stupid and will quickly realize that bringing condoms along is a better guarantee of getting laid than bringing Plan B (not to mention that *if* Mr. Lovegod's intended *objet d'amour* really is one of these rapacious bitches who likes to get knocked up so she can scam child support out of a guy for 18 years that people like Brightstar apparently know so many of, Mr. Lovegod isn't protecting himself at all, because she doesn't actually have to take the pills he gives her; he can only be sure of protecting *his* interests if he wears the condom... and what if she's the one with the disease?)
So no, sad but true, I don't think we'll see an epidemic of men toting along Plan B to their romantic evenings. It just won't work to get them laid nearly as reliably as toting condoms along will. (Yes, some women are stupid and desperate, but many of those are probably already having completely unprotected sex. And most of them aren't the kind of women men actually want all that badly, else they wouldn't be desperate.)