By Alan Caruba
In the 1940s and 50s, what passed for
sex education was literally about the birds and bees as metaphors for inception
and child birth. The emphasis was on waiting until marriage to engage in sex.
There were instructional books with a mostly medical orientation to the
information they provided but whether they could be found in the schools is
anyone’s guess.
Somehow that generation (and earlier
ones) managed to learn enough about sex to engage in it within the context of a
society that regarded sex outside of marriage as sinful. By the 1960s, the
generation fathered in the wake of World War Two told everyone not to trust
anyone over thirty and that sex, drugs and rock’n roll were the only things that
really mattered in life.
In 1979, with Jimmy Carter’s blessing,
the federal government took control of the nation’s educational system via the
Department of Education, but the real takeover began much earlier. It has been
in serious decline ever since with huge dropout rates and failures to learn
reading and math that put us well behind when compared to other nations.
Traditional American values have often been
abandoned.
Eugene Delgaudio, president of Public Advocate of the United
States, recently emailed members and those who follow the organization’s
issues about “a little first grade boy (who) asked his mother if he was
‘transgender,’ and if he could be ‘a girl in love with a girl.’”
His school, Mitchell Primary School in
Maine was teaching about the “transgender” lifestyle. His mother was upset to
learn about this, but as is frequently the case, parents are the last to learn
about sexual information and attitudes being taught. In this case, isn’t first
grade just too damn early for transgenderism to be a part of the
curriculum?
Delgaudio is largely focused on “the
radical Homosexual Lobby and their allies in the education system (that)
routinely refuse to give parents any options that threaten their anti-Family
agenda. And, fearing retaliation…the school administrators and superintendent
ignored the parents’ outrage.”
The pro-family MassResistance recently informed
members and those who follow their issues about “unbelievable surveys given to
children in Massachusetts and schools across America” in public middle schools
and high schools during school hours. The surveys are “officially” anonymous and
voluntary, but are administered in the classroom with pressure to
participate.
The major survey is “Youth Risk
Behavior Survey” put together every two years by the National Centers for
Disease Control. State and local education departments can modify it if they
wish. These surveys are now ubiquitous.
Among the questions students must answer was whether they were heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual or "not sure."
Among the questions students must answer was whether they were heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual or "not sure."
"Have you ever had sexual intercourse
(oral, anal, vaginal?)"
"How old were you when you had sexual
intercourse (oral, anal, vaginal) for the first
time?"
"During your life, with how many
people have you had sexual intercourse (oral, anal,
vaginal)?"
There were nine pages of the questions
and answers to be provided. I was astounded at how personal and intrusive the
survey was. And I seriously wonder whether such information would have any
impact or influence regarding the behaviors involved. Indeed, the survey went
far beyond the topic of sex.
I don’t like having the government
involved in such intimate areas of student’s lives. These are questions and
issues parents should address with their children, determining the right time to
do so and providing whatever information they deem
appropriate.
Having said that, it would be naïve to
suggest that today’s youth from a very early age cannot access tons of
information about sex from the Internet. A 2010 study of 177 sexual health
websites by the Journal of Adolescent Health concluded that 40% of those
addressing contraception and 35% of those addressing abortion contained
inaccurate information.
In early April, Cosmopolitan
posted “11 Facts About Sex Ed in the U.S. That Might Surprise
You.”
“While teen pregnancies are on a
decline,” said the article, “teens are having more sex—and contracting more STIs
(sexually transmitted illnesses) than ever before. The problem, according to a
new report by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is that sex
education isn’t happening early enough.”
Cosmopolitan noted that only 22 states
and the District of Columbia require that public schools teach sex education. In
addition, 33 states also mandate HIV/AIDS education, and 35 states let parents
opt out on behalf of their child.
Does it surprise anyone to learn that
the 1981 Adolescent Family Life Act which promoted “chastity and
self-discipline” was ended by the Obama administration in 2010? We have all
being living with an administration which dismissed enforcement of the Marriage
Defense Act and is the most pro-homosexual administration in the history of the
nation.
We are a sex-drenched nation in terms
of popular entertainment. It is experienced from the earliest years of any
child’s life. This means parents have to be pro-active to ensure their children
get the education they need to avoid the STIs and more importantly not to
impregnate or get pregnant.
In the meantime, there is no knowing
what they are learning, for good or ill, in school.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
2 comments:
"June and Ward's bedroom is seen for the first time in the Pine Street house. They have their own bath, sleep in twin beds and have a portable TV in the room." [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leave_It_to_Beaver#Pine_Street_house]
Gee but I miss "Leave it to Beaver".
Seems to be, anything that talks of vaginal, anal or oral intercourse is hardcore pornography. Check the history of how the left support child sex.
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