And this is one of the reasons I homeschooled and paid for private education for my children, for this statement alone send shivers up my spine but hey to each his own, you have the right to allow government to control what goes in your children's ears as I have the right to say no thanks.
It is not a matter of "allowing government" to do anything, but rather of being aware of the fact that there will be others interacting with my hypothetical children. Not only other people, but also their very own hormones.
There is little to no hope of convincing youngsters of having no interest in sex by
denying them information. Quite on the contrary, efforts in that direction are a sure-fire recipe for having them learn that the parents are not worthy of being let in their doubts and dilemmas. The results are very much a disaster, typically in the form of early, unplanned pregnancies.
Besides, losing one's own children confidence to the point that he or she won't share such an important part of their development is a terrible loss in and of itself.
There are many children who are strong enough to not be swayed by the liberal agenda in the public school system,
I don't know anything about any liberal agenda, but I sure fail to see how repression, secrecy and their consequences are worth fighting for.
and then there are those who are followers and incorporate these ideals into their lives and those of future generations.
So you are stating a belief that youngsters experience sex because they are told to, and that they might be reasonably expected to, I don't know, "behave" if they were taught such an anti-natural thing as abstinence?
Sorry, but I must say that such a belief is a dangerous bet at best, and most likely a full tragic mistake. Children shouldn't be taught to feel guilty simply because they want to follow their biological urges. They
need information, acceptance and support if they are to handle such challenges at all well. To deny them such a fair chance is fully irresponsible from any parent.
Granted, some parents will not be up to frank talk about those matters. That is what uncles, grandparents and, yes, schools are for.
Passing out condoms is condoning destructive behavior that increases promiscuity and all the effects therein.
No, Lady B; encouraging them not to use condoms, and not to admit that they are sexual beings, now that is condoning destructive behavior - and lots of teen pregnancies.
I do not see what you find so wrong about teaching our kids abstinence and not giving them free easy condoning access to protection when they need to push the boundaries.
For one thing, that simply has no chance of working. Such an approach breeds duplicity and secrecy, not abstinence.
But to say no, you cannot do this period and If you do there will be consequences. I am speaking about children, not consenting adults, I am saying we parents should be doing more to prevent sex from happening while our kids are home, not giving them all a plan b for when they disobey us and do it anyways.
So you are relying on
obedience to stop them from experiencing sex?
That is a very dangerous approach, I fear.
I hope that you at least make them aware of what they should guard against. Ignorance is no protection from malicious people, you know.
I am not saying or assuming it works in all cases, sure kids will rebel and break the rules, but do we need to trash the rules because they rebel?
We should abstain from having rules that presume to tell when or how they should want to have sex in the first place. They are a terrible waste of energy in the best of cases. Your concept of "rebellion" seems quite odd to me.
Or keep them and hope they choose rightly.
OP I am sorry for going off-topic, The topic is bcp being over the counter, not teens being led astray by a condoning education system, If anyone would like to open a new thread about schools involvement in our childs sex life, I would be happy to debate and see your views as well as explain mine.
Sure.