Answer:
The answer to the question, in what ways did the birth control pill help liberate women?, would be: first, it gave women back control over when and how they would get pregnant, second, it made women more aware of the worth of their bodies as separate entities from those of men and their husbands, third, birth control opened up the gates for women to enrol in different activites other than motherhood, and finally, it gave women control over who they were as women, apart from the ever-expected role of mothers and wives.
Step-by-step explanation:
Since the initiation of the contraceptive pill, in the 1800´s, and which was campaigned for by Margaret Sanger most ardently so that the U.S would stop trying to oppose it being advertised and used in the country, many were the changes that took place, in favor of women. Most importantly, it made them aware of the power they had as decision-makers on their role as mothers, wives, or something else. It also freed them from those two roles and opened the gates for women to choose to look outside the home. Finally, it gave women power over their own bodies and the choice to conceive or not, outside of men control.