An article and a poll came out (today & yesterday respectively) that got me thinking about this. The article talks about how NC's move towards comprehensive sex ed is starting right now with the start of this school year. And the poll could mean the end to this move towards comprehensive sex ed.http://www.amplifyyourvoice.org/u/dandaman6007/2010/9/3/Comprehensive-Sex-Education-Coming-To-NC-but-Not-Without-Challanges
9/3/2010 10:14:23 PM
I just don't understand how or why people oppose giving sexually mature, though not mentally mature, teenagers accurate information about sex, pregnancy, sexually transmitted disease, contraception, and disease prevention.That'd be like if you passed out gasoline to half the kids, matches to the other half, told them not to use either and then just hoped for the best.
9/3/2010 10:20:17 PM
^I guess as a parent some people want the right to be able to tell their kids about this shit on their own. Some kids mature WAY faster and others are a lot slower to develop, so a child that is hitting puberty early probably needs to be talked to much sooner than a kid that is late developing sexually. God forbid parents be able to decide what their children should be exposed to, and at what age. I would hope they know their children better than DPI and a curriculum book. Not that I don't think that kids don't need that info, or that abstinence only is very narrow minded. But as a parent, I would prefer to have to deal with that uncomfortable situation when it arises on my own, not at some arbitrary age that is determined by the state.Forgot to mention that some parents may have very strict religious views on when this shit should be told to kids, and what they should be exposed to. I have no idea what Islam and other eastern religions say on the matter, but I know some of the more conservative churches are against that kinda thing. Again, not that it their kids don't need to know, but religious belief is apparently a valid reason for parents to withhold medical care deemed unclean, and other "science" that is beneficial to children, so how is this any different?[Edited on September 3, 2010 at 10:41 PM. Reason : ]
9/3/2010 10:38:43 PM
^My understanding is that this move towards CSE included parental opt out, and still teaching all about abstinence until marriage first, but tacks on a follow up saying that if you're going to ignore that advice at least do it safely & this is the info you need to know to do that.The bill also said that the teachings, provided the 'rents don't opt their kids out, must be "objective and based upon scientific research that is peer reviewed and accepted by professionals and credentialed experts in the field of sexual health education." Basically it gives 'rents the option of having their kids proper health ed (with an opt out), and that is what the NC GOP unanimously opposed.[Edited on September 3, 2010 at 11:20 PM. Reason : .]
9/3/2010 11:18:09 PM
When I first read about this it resolved some confusion I've had for a long time. I went to a public school in NC and didn't get abstinence-only sex ed, so I always wondered what everyone was fussing about. Now I gather that Guilford County Schools has had a much more comprehensive sex ed program than most of the rest of the state for a long time now. The only thing we didn't get that's in the new program was info on planned parenthood and the morning-after pill, the latter of which I'm not sure even existed at the time (in this country).And, unless I'm mistaken, the big three -- homosexuality, outright abortion, and masturbation -- are still off the table. (I admit I've never understood the masturbation one being off-limits, given its relative safety and the fact that everyone figures that out on their own anyway.)
9/4/2010 12:57:58 AM
"I admit I've never understood the masturbation one being off-limits, given its relative safety"I doubt if safety concern has anything to do with political opposition to it.Fri Sep 3, 2:06 pm ETTea Party Express hopes to repeat Alaska win in Delaware Senate primaryhttp://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upshot/tea-party-hopes-to-repeat-alaska-win-in-delaware-senate-primary
9/4/2010 1:13:05 AM
No, I understand of course that it's religious. But why they decided to make masturbation the topic on which they would not yield is beyond me. If I were hardcore about this sort of thing I'd rather them teach kids how to beat off than how to fuck each other.
9/4/2010 1:47:57 AM
Question. If you are married and jerking it thinking about the wife, then its not a sin, AMIRITE?? So see, jerking off can be without sin.Also I take issue with the stance of some conservatives that say beating it is bad because Onan disobeyed God. He did that after having sex, which is also used as the interpretation that contraceptives are against God. My reading of it is that God told him to get his dead brothers wife pregnant, and he disobeyed by not completing and getting her pregnant. But he was given a direct command, so I'm not sure how this is a blanket statement that every time we have sex or masturbate we have to be trying to make a child, and to do anything otherwise is a sin. Last time I checked, that wasn't the damn 11th commandment, just like most Baptists think that "Thou shalt not drink alcohol" was on the golden tablets.
9/4/2010 12:04:17 PM
so wait, Nighthawk's argument is that they want to be the one's to tell them the truth when the time is righteverything in my own experience and from what i see on tv/the movies tells me that usually parents are going to be some of the last people to find out that the time has come to hear that talk. and probably too late to do anything about it. you know, after you waited over a decade to tell your kid.
9/4/2010 1:48:21 PM
Gee look, it's religion not affecting anyone.
9/4/2010 2:40:08 PM
9/4/2010 2:55:39 PM
I guess it's better to cling to a ideal where humans voluntarily refrain from engaging in something we're programmed to do, while teens are getting diseases or having children that they can't adequately care for.
9/4/2010 3:02:42 PM
as long as a parent could opt their kid out I see no problem with it at all.
9/4/2010 3:04:38 PM
9/4/2010 3:19:37 PM
I found this today on CNN:http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/03/how-christians-spoil-sex/?hpt=C2Relevant quote:
9/4/2010 4:09:35 PM
9/5/2010 7:41:02 PM
WE ARE GOING TO BE TALKING ABOUT THE PENIS! WE'LL BE TALKING ABOUT THE VAGINA!DO YOU FIND IT AMUSING THAT WE'LL BE TALKING ABOUT THE TESTICLES?...AND WE WILL DEFINITELY BE SPENDING A LOT OF TIME TALKING ABOUT MASTURBATION!
9/7/2010 12:44:25 AM
A+++ POST WILL DO BUSINESS AGAIN. FAST SHIPPING. A+++++ SATISFACTION
9/7/2010 12:55:01 AM
^^AHA^AHAHAHAHAHASeriously though, we gotta get the kids the information. I, for one, plan to have lots and lots of sex with college-aged men when I get older, and I would like them to understand the basics of sex and sexual health. It'll just make things a whole lot easier on me.
9/7/2010 1:16:03 AM
9/7/2010 2:53:54 AM
^well the anti-sex-ed movement is at its core an attempt by the repressive patriarchy to subdue the natural sexual urges of children until they can be expressed in a manner approved by the Wholly Babble
9/7/2010 5:17:04 AM
Religion isn't the cause of stupidity. It just focuses everyone's stupidity in one direction.
9/7/2010 8:50:23 AM
9/7/2010 9:21:58 AM
I do not see what all the whining and bitching about is by the religious right. One has two options if they don't want their innocent slut of a daughter hearing about sex in school. 1.) Don't sign the waiver for their kids to take sex ed (not sure if you parents can still pull you out of sex ed).2.) Send them to private christian school
9/7/2010 11:16:38 AM
My sex ed class was absolutely wretched and did more to spread misinformation than to prevent it. It was taught by my 6th grade teachers and I highly suspect one of them was only able to have children using the "I'll lay here and be still until you're done; now turn off the lights so you can't see me cringe" method of procreation.I can only hope that more information also comes with more training for the teachers.
9/7/2010 4:38:01 PM
9/7/2010 4:48:45 PM
It's not ambiguous that Christian fundamentalism is behind every abstinence-only organization and initiative in America.The fact that "some people are stupid" or "some people wouldn't change" is no where near enough of a good reason to follow faith-based mystical bullshit that is absolutely counter to science that is beneficial to our society.
9/8/2010 11:09:15 AM
9/8/2010 2:04:27 PM
You can't possibly be serious. All secular medical organizations support comprehensive sex education. If there were no religious nutbags pushing "no sex before marriage" you don't think abstinence-only education would be "diminished by much?" You've got to be fucking with me here.
9/8/2010 2:49:26 PM
All secular medical organizations vehemently point out that smoking cigarettes will fucking kill you, and that doesn't stop millions of people from taking it up every year. Last I checked there wasn't a religion that demanded nicotine consumption. Again, you seem to think that in the absence of religion we will all promptly come under the sway of logic, reason, and purest science. Again, I think that's preposterous.
9/8/2010 7:28:51 PM
Nicotine is addictive.Not doing the nasty isn't.
9/8/2010 8:41:26 PM
actually, some people do have a sex addiction...
9/8/2010 8:47:12 PM
Not doing the nasty isn't.
9/8/2010 8:53:04 PM
lol, sorry
9/8/2010 9:05:07 PM
9/9/2010 2:54:59 AM
So....because people smoke cigarettes....we shouldn't teach teens how to use condoms? You lost me. Or is this another one of your "some subset of humanity will continue to be stupid without religion so religion is OK" bullshit arguments?This line of reasoning is not only tired, it's absolutely flawed. There are significantly more than 0 people on this planet that would switch from abstinence-only advocacy to comprehensive sex education if they didn't have a religious reason to push abstinence-only. Abstinence-only is objectively worse than comprehensive sex education.Also, I'll go so far as to submit that if faith wasn't so ubiquitous in our society, people would trust scientists and doctors more and even fewer people would smoke. Granted, some people would still smoke, but the value of scientists' findings would increase somewhat and more people would take them more seriously.Not only that, but if more credence were put into scientific advancement (which if religion wasn't around it assuredly would be) we could advance medical technology and mitigate the effects of cigarette smoking. As it stands right now, we have fundamentalists bickering with scientists and undermining their position as an authoritative source of information. This would go away too, except of course for the retards you like to summon that would still counter science based on some warped conservative values that would persist without religion.[Edited on September 9, 2010 at 9:21 AM. Reason : .]
9/9/2010 8:56:39 AM
9/9/2010 1:16:29 PM
9/9/2010 1:24:26 PM
Religion aside, since we don't get a vote on people's religion, I think the focus should be on whether we want to keep this policy (with an option of moving even closer to comp sex ed) or risk its repeal (since no GOP voted for it & many heavily advocated against it).Yes votes on this move towards comp sex ed:Democrats
9/9/2010 2:41:10 PM
Didn't think it was worth starting a new thread over this one link, but since this thread is where I've discussed general assembly elections the most, I figured I'd add it here:http://www.conservationcouncilnc.org/our-work/scorecards/scorecard_2010.pdfIt rates the General Assembly members on environmental efforts. You can see how they responded to specific efforts, or just look at their summary ratings on the right.
10/12/2010 3:03:03 PM
^I'll get on reading that later, but for now...
10/12/2010 4:34:57 PM
http://www.wral.com/news/state/story/8609861/
11/11/2010 4:52:26 PM
^^I wasn't being patronizing, I was explaining what I said -- in large part because there was some subtlety involved.
11/12/2010 1:07:01 AM
the "ultraliberal social agenda" thing is a major laffwhat qualifies as "ultraliberal" IMO is discussion of LGBTQ starting in elementary school and BDSM in high school (in addition to the typical course of comprehensive sex education), stressing the acceptability and normalcy of both queer and kinknot a bad idea IMO
11/12/2010 1:21:15 AM
In accordance with their parents wishes, Rod and Todd will now step outside in the hallway and pray for our souls."Hi, I'm Troy McClure. You may remember me from other such sexual education films as Debbie Does Abstinence and What's the Fuss About Syphilis?..."So that's sex. And now that you know how, kids, don't do it!"
11/12/2010 1:41:36 AM