It depends which country you are referring to.
Oral contraceptives do not protect against AIDS
Contraceptives are not perfect and can fail! People also make mistakes while using them.
Contraceptives were initially perfectly legal. The Comstock Act of 1873 prohibited the delivery of contraceptives, prophylactics, and "marital aids" through the US mail. That was probably the first federal law against contraception, though there may have been some state laws against the practice predating the Comstock Act. Connecticut was one of a handful of states that prohibited contraceptives in the 1960s. In 1965 the US Supreme Court ruled that state laws against contraception were violations of our cherished and beloved bill of rights. So for ALL states contraception was legal by 1965, though many (if not most) states had no laws against contraception prior to that.
Apparently not.
Hopefully, the avoidance of pregnancy.
Women who are breastfeeding should check with their physicians before using oral contraceptives
The Roman Catholic Church opposes the use of artificial contraceptives, teaching that it is morally wrong and goes against the natural law. The Church promotes natural methods of family planning, such as the use of fertility awareness and periodic abstinence, as these methods do not interfere with the natural procreative aspect of sexual intercourse.
is against the law.
No. They work until you stop using them.
ConTraCeption ~Contraceptives!~ "Against Conceive(ing!)"
no but i love limes
no it is not