Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Monday, July 09, 2007
Jennifer Roback Morse :: Townhall.com Columnist
Get the Government Out of Sex Ed
by Jennifer Roback Morse
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


If you need an operation and the doctor tells you that overall, seven-eighths of patients have a successful outcome, you might think that was a pretty good deal. But suppose the operation failed. While you’re in the recovery room, the doctor tells you, “Oh, by the way, for people like you, the operation only succeeds 30% of the time. But we’ll sell you the solution to the botched operation.” You’d be furious. You’d sue that doctor for malpractice if you didn’t punch him first.

Yet this is precisely the situation Congress supports by funding Planned Parenthood and its allies to provide “comprehensive sex education” in secondary schools.

This is no exaggeration. Look at contraceptive failure rates, using Planned Parenthood’s own data. Two studies, (listed below, with website addresses) use this definition of contraceptive failure: the percentage of women who experience a pregnancy at the end of one year of using a particular contraceptive method. Somewhere between 12% and 13% of all contracepting women experienced a pregnancy within a year. In other words, about seven-eighths of women use contraceptives successfully. Two of the most commonly used and widely promoted methods are oral contraceptives and the male condom. Of all women using the Pill for one year, somewhere around 8% will experience a pregnancy. Between 14% and 15% of women who use the condom will become pregnant within a year.

But these statistics, while technically correct, don’t tell the whole story, not by a long shot. These are the “overall” statistics that our hypothetical doctor used in our opening story. The “for people like you” statistics paint a very different picture. These studies break down the population into age groups, income levels, marital status and race.

A poor cohabiting teenager using the Pill has a failure rate of 48.4%. You read that correctly: nearly half of poor cohabiting teenagers get pregnant during their first year using the Pill. If she kicked her boyfriend out of the house, or if she married him, her probability of pregnancy drops to 12.9%. At the other extreme, a middle-aged, middle-class married woman has a 3% chance of getting pregnant after a year on the Pill.

Over 70% of poor, cohabiting teenagers using condoms, will be pregnant within a year. By contrast, the middle-aged, middle-class married woman has a 6% chance of pregnancy after a year of condom use.

These figures cast new light on the debate over contraception education. The commonly quoted failure rates of 8% for the Pill and 15% for the condom are inflated by the highly successful use by middle-aged, middle-class married couples. Yet, the government promotes contraception most heavily among the young, the poor and the single. The “overall failure rates” are simply not relevant to this target population.

Planned Parenthood and its allies in the sex education business have had conniptions over federal funding for abstinence education. But at least abstinence actually works. If you don’t have sex, you won’t get pregnant. It works every time.

With contraception, we can absolutely predict that some sexual encounters will result in pregnancy. The young, the poor and the unmarried are the most likely to experience a contraceptive failure. For these groups, pregnancy is not a rare accident, but highly likely. When the inevitable pregnancy occurs, guess who is ready to help solve her problem? That’s right: Planned Parenthood will sell her an abortion. The same people who teach sex education, which increases the demand for purchasing contraception, also sell the “solution” to contraceptive failure, which is abortion. Yet the federal government spends about $12 on contraceptive-related programs to every $1 spent on abstinence education.

We don’t give federal grants to tobacco companies to teach students “low-risk” forms of smoking on the grounds that “kids are going to smoke anyway.” We shouldn’t be giving federal grants to groups that sell contraception, to teach kids to use contraception. Continued...

1 2
| Full Article & Comments | Next >
Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author

Jennifer Roback Morse, Ph.D., is the author of Smart Sex: Finding Life-long Love In A Hook-up World. She blogs at jennifer-roback-morse.blogspot.com

Be the first to read Jennifer Morse's column. Sign up today and receive Townhall.com delivered each morning to your inbox.

Whew
The above post was written at the end of a long day. The result is numerous misspellings. For this I apologize. Heck, it's the substance that matters anyhow.

RD

Bananaphone
Firstly, you may want to read this thread again, as you will clearly see that naked paga addressed almost noen of my points (and there were many many).

--"I would argue that "Abstinence only" training, which has the only sexual education available to my students recently, has created this problem. Under abstinence training, I have heard such viewpoints as "I heard you can't get her pregnant if you rub it against her", "Are Siamese Twins punishment for doing it too early?", and "I used Saran Wrap from my mom's kitchen. It worked." "

Abstinence only sex ed is not available at ANY public school in the US. See the reason abstinence ALWAYS works, 100% of the time, is that no preganancies, STD transmission, or abortions EVER result from it.

Any teaching method for any social behavior, must be accompanied by a larger cultural component to be effective at a high rate. So as long as we encourage the termanation of unwanted unborns, the acceptance of pre-marital or extra-marital sex, the thought process that says: oral sex isn't sex (you no who),sodomy is nromal sexual behavior or any other immoral sexual behavior, kids will be participating in all of these behaviors.

If we as a society make an effort to return to the above things being 'taboo' they will still occur (they always have at some level), however they will occur in very small numbers.

There was teen sex, teen preganancy, teen abortion, teen sodomy, and teen STD transmission prior to 1960, it was just very rare.

Then the teaching methods for sex ed that you and the "naked pagan" espouse to began to be instituted. As a nation, by the end of the sixties we began to embrace birth control methods beyond the condom. Drinking and drug use became prevalant throughout our culture, leading of course to all sorts of sexual debauchery.By the middle of the 90s, not only did we have a US Surgeon General advocating the use of bannanas to demonstrate oral sex in the classroom, but there were no more public school cirricula which taught abstinence only.

Since that generation will not as a whole accept guilt or take responsibility, they will not admit mistakes, or sins. So we then have justifications. '"Sodomy is normal." "I'm not killing my baby, I'm excercising my reproductive right!." "I can do whatever I want with my body" "it's only sex" "Oral sex isn't sex" etc......

See, liberal ideology has near destroyed what was good about American culture. The traditions that were celebrated by America came with some taboos, but we have since learned that they were not only sensible, but an integral piece of what allowed us to have a cohesive, proper and safe society.

Liberals "freed" us from those taboos, and now kids don't have two parents anymore. Mothers just do away with their babies so they don't put a cramp in their lifestyle. People put ballons on their genetallia, and are told that they can have sex with anyone of anysex, and they will not get disease, or unwanted pregnancies. Or they get high or drunk, and do it sans ballon.

If these items, and their relationships to each other, and to the way we set out to teach our kids, don't make sense to you, you'll probably never understand societal evolution. Cultures are firmly based in traditions. Change of any sort (bad or good) that is major, can be directly traced through cause and effect.(read up on Amish culture when you get a chance, and compare their teaching methods to ours, and then compare their teen sex problems with ours, and you might understand what is possible with a moral approach to life)

Liberals rarely see this, and they just grab at solutions and ideas that make them feel better, as long as they can feel a litlle rebellious at the same time. When their ideas eventually prove to to nothing but detriment, and they ALWAYS do, they blame someone else, or deny their failure, or both, and learn nothing.

--"If you prefer to educate your child yourself on this point, you need only sign the form and I will not expose your child to my teachings on this topic (this right is protected by law)."


There is no such form (or law) Mr/Ms phone. All public schools decide, without parental input what and when to teach our children. And all of them teach sex ed. None of them should, ever, even at parental request. This is far outside of their scope, and squarely within the sole scope of parents' duties.

"What does bother me is that this opens a child to a variety of different abuses. Parents of a child can choose to expose their child to damaging religious practices that harm their child's natural sexuality, or choose to provide no education to the child. While I may not agree to this practice, I have no right to oppose this practice, nor will I support any legislation that gives me that power. I do, however, worry that your right to educate (or mis-educate) your child as you see fit will impact the life of another person. Sexual intercourse, after all, includes two different people."

See this type of thinking is what is needed. The naked pagan, and other liberals would never agree with you. Your fears expressed here make very little sense to me, but you are not advocating the removal of my parental obligation, and replacing it with your own ideas. This article, and this entire thread would never exist, if people could just see the wisdom you and I share here.

Btw, thanks for offering to defend my right to speak, and believe differently than you. I believe "narrow minded" was unfair of you, since I have merely been advocating that parents should have sole discretion on when and what their children learn in regards to sex. This is the only way to honor the various and diverse beliefs that are held by all the different peoples of this great nation. That's not narrow minded, that's American, and that's protecting the rights and liberties of all, while infringing upon NONE.

Naked pagan's view of forcing all children from anywhere in America (regardless of their traditions and beliefs) to learn what the government wants (plus Planned Parenthood, et al) and when to learn it, with regard to sex, that is "narrow minded", and un-American.



Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.