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Kazimiera
10-14-2013, 11:03 PM
A Brief History of Sex Ed: How We Reached Today’s Madness

Once upon a time, sex education was a simple biology lesson. Students learned the facts of life, and, with those facts, that sex is part of something bigger, called marriage. Teachers explained that this was the moral and healthy way to live.

In those days, people understood that men and women are different, and that their union is unique, unlike any other relationship. It went without saying that boys grew up to become men, and girls, women.

There were only two sexually transmitted diseases, and having one was a serious matter. Certain behaviors were not normal; individuals who practiced them needed help, and a child’s innocence was precious.

Things have changed.

Now we have comprehensive sexuality education. It includes discussion of identity, gender, reproductive rights, and discrimination. Children learn that they’re sexual from birth, and that the proper time for sexual activity is when they feel ready. They’re taught that they have rights to pleasure, birth control, and abortion.

The terms husband and wife aren’t used, the union of man and woman is one of several options, and morality? Well, that’s judging, and judging is not allowed.

You won’t find much biology in sexuality education, but there’s voluminous information on the varieties of sexual expression, the pros and cons of different contraceptives and abortions, and the harms of gender stereotypes.

Gender itself is a complicated matter. A boy might turn into a man, a woman, or something else. A girl might feel she was born in the wrong body, and want her breasts removed. This is all normal, children learn.

There are over two dozen sexually transmitted diseases, and infection with one of these “lovebugs” is considered by some to be a part of growing up. A doctor declares on YouTube, “Expect to have HPV once you become sexually intimate. All of us get it.”

And childhood innocence? Forget it! Material created for children makes most adults uncomfortable. On websites recommended to students, nothing is taboo—sadomasochism, polyamory, and what were once called “deviant” behaviors . . . they’re all good. When I first discovered this, I was astonished. What do these bizarre behaviors have to do with health, I wondered? How can responsible adults allow this? How can they fund this?

As a physician and a parent, it really bothered me. I wanted to understand: where did this come from? How did we reach this madness?

So I looked at the history of sexual education, and I wrote a book called You’re Teaching My Child WHAT? This is what I discovered.

Modern sex ed began in the sixties. It was based on Alfred Kinsey’s model of human sexuality. Thanks to the brilliant and courageous work of Dr. Judith Reisman, we now know that Kinsey was both a fraud and a deeply disturbed individual.

For Kinsey, it was anything goes when it came to sexuality, and I mean anything. He believed, for example, that pedophiles were misunderstood, and their punishments unjust. “Sexuality is not an appetite to be curbed,” Kinsey insisted. He taught that, and he lived it.

His official biography documents the beliefs on which he based his work, and his personal life: the “human animal” is pansexual. Traditional morality is destructive. Sexuality is not an appetite to be curbed.

When I say that Kinsey was a deeply disturbed individual, it fails to capture the level of his psychopathology. I’ve been a psychiatrist for thirty years, and trust me, I’ve met some very strange people. I am not easily shocked.

But when I began to read Kinsey’s official biography…what can I tell you? He was—please excuse the technical jargon—a real mental case.

Kinsey was afflicted at his core. He was a depraved human being, and his emotional illness expressed itself through his sexuality. He was consumed by a grotesque, debilitating obsession with a wide range of abnormal behaviors—I’ll spare you the details, but I doubt very much that in all the 62 years of Kinsey’s miserable life he knew even one day of what we would consider healthy sexuality.

Alfred Kinsey had a dream. He would prove to the world—and himself—that his lifestyle was normal. Average. Typical.

It was society that was at fault, with its religions, moral codes, and restrictions. Society made people feel guilty for following their natural urges, and that was unhealthy. Kinsey’s dream was to free people from those destructive institutions—to free the “human animal.” He did thousands of interviews, crunched the numbers, and concluded that most people practiced forbidden sexual behaviors. The average mom and dad were living a double life, just like he was.

His conclusions were widely questioned by leading scientists, but the criticism didn’t seem to matter. The popular press accepted Kinsey’s reports, and his books were best-sellers. A revolution was spawned and western culture transformed.

But his research was fundamentally flawed. His samples were too small and the demography was badly skewed. He excluded some populations and focused on others—most notably, imprisoned felons. His subjects were preselected, since he relied on volunteers for his data.

The whole nefarious scheme has been exposed in a number of books and videos by Dr. Reisman. I urge you to check out her work at drjudithreisman.org for yourself, if you’ve got a strong stomach.

Kinsey died in 1956. This was a time in America when, thanks to antibiotics, venereal diseases were being obliterated. With one shot, syphilis and gonorrhea were cured. It was believed that this was the end of STDs, the end of all infections. The 1960 winner of the Nobel Prize in medicine said “we are seeing the virtual elimination of infectious diseases.” Can you imagine?

Also in 1960, birth control pills became widely available. With STDs easily cured, and pregnancy preventable, the only obstacle to Kinsey’s anything-goes model of sexuality was Judeo-Christian morality.

It was in this context that in 1964 Dr. Mary Calderone founded the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS). This is the group behind the sexuality education guidelines published by UNESCO, aggressively promoted to nations all over the world. Calderone created SIECUS with seed money provided by Hugh Hefner.

Like Kinsey, she was on a crusade to change society. Sex education has too much negativity, she insisted, too much focus on unwanted pregnancy and diseases. The real problem, she insisted, following Kinsey, was that society is puritanical and repressed.

There were too many nos in sex ed. The approach of SIECUS, Calderone promised, would be based on yesses. Proper sex ed would teach children that from the day they’re born they are sexual beings, and that the expression of their sexuality is positive, natural, and healthy.

She told parents, “Children are sexual and think sexual thoughts and do sexual things . . . parents must accept and honor their child’s erotic potential.” She also told them, “Professionals who study children have recently affirmed the strong sexuality of the newborn.”

What did it mean, exactly, to be open and positive, and to replace the nos of sex education with yesses? What did it mean to “break from traditional views”?

It meant more than premarital and extramarital sex. Much more. Modern sex ed was about breaking boundaries. There were officials within SIECUS who were so radical that they argued publicly for relaxing the taboos against adult/child sexuality, even incest. Wardell Pomeroy, for example, a disciple of Kinsey’s who served as president of SIECUS, argued, “It is time to admit that incest need not be a perversion or a symptom of mental illness.”

TIME magazine described Pomeroy as part of the “pro-incest lobby.” He wrote a book, Boys & Sex, for grades six and up. There he argued that “our sexual behavior…is like that of other animals….There is essentially nothing that humans do sexually that is abnormal.” Calderone provided a blurb for the book jacket: “As I read your manuscript, I kept saying to myself, ‘At last it is being said…’”

Another figure to know is Dr. John Money. In 1955, he introduced the radical concept that maleness and femaleness are feelings, separate from anatomy and chromosomes. He was convinced we are born without gender, then conditioned by society to identify either as male or female.

Money was a prominent psychologist; he’s well respected to this day. He described pedophilia as “a love affair between an age-discrepant couple.” Money was also part of the incest lobby: “For a child to have a sexual experience with a relative,” he wrote, “was not necessarily a problem.” Like Kinsey, Money had deep emotional wounds. His identity as a man was troubled, and he molested young boys.

What’s so astonishing is that these men, these very disturbed men, using fraudulent data and theories that have been discredited, succeeded in transforming much of society. Today’s sexuality education is based on their teachings.

Once I understood who the founders were—Kinsey, Calderone, Pomeroy, Money, and others—I understood how we got to today’s “comprehensive sexuality education.” I knew how we had reached today’s madness.

It came from disturbed individuals with dangerous ideas—radical activists who wanted to create a society that would not only accept their pathology, but celebrate it!

These men were pedophiles. It was in their interest to see children as miniature adults who enjoyed sexual contact, and had the right to consent to it, without other adults, or the law, interfering.

Why would they value childhood innocence? They didn’t believe that children were innocent to begin with. They also thought that restricting sex to husband and wife was unnatural and destructive. They weren’t fighting disease, they were fighting ancient taboos; they were fighting biblical morality.

The bottom line: sex ed began as a social movement, and it remains a social movement. Its goal is for students to be open to just about any form of sexual expression. Sex ed is not about preventing disease, it’s about sexual freedom, or better—sexual license. It’s about changing society, one child at a time.

You don’t have to be a physician to understand the dangers of this ideology. All you need is common sense. While the founders of sex education are long gone, their vision is alive and well. The obligation to fight it rests on the shoulders of every responsible adult.


Source: http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2013/07/10408/

Liac
10-20-2013, 11:35 AM
Condoms/sex pills are evil. Individual who doesn't want to have kids doesn't deserve to have sex.

Corvus
10-20-2013, 12:35 PM
The big myth which is still taught to young boys is that for women sex is not as important as for a men.
So in other words, it is a prime urge for males but more or less secondary for females.

Truth to be told quite the opposite is true. For 90% of women it is extremly important to have decent intensive sex.
I would even go so far to say that this is a main criteria when it comes to selection of a partner.
A man can have certain flaws regarding face symmetry, even only have a body far from beeing aestheticly beautiful and can still be regarded attractive if he shows good skills and stamina when it comes to making love.
Even if I would say a good physique is also more important than facial beauty for any men, because it also an indicator for sexual abilities.
Man on the other hand often have this kind of romantisized vision that women prefer kissing or hugging or just romance in any form to sex. This can be discarded to the land of fairy tales or holywood love movies.

MINARDOWICZ
10-29-2013, 07:16 PM
Dr Money was the worst of all... sick man... Pro pedophilia? SICK BASTARDS!

Óttar
10-30-2013, 02:46 AM
Freud wrote that one's sexuality develops in the formative stage between 3 - 5 years old. I had orgasms when I was 6. I really don't see anything outlandish or strange about Kinsey at all. This dickhead talks about "Judeo-Christian" morality which was a phrase that didn't exist prior to the '60s. He also mentions "biblical morality" which is an oxymoron if I've ever heard one.

:thumb down2

Kinsey was right. Society is puritanical and we would do well to cast off our sexual repression and "Judeo-Christian" morality. Good riddance. As a matter of fact, sexual repression is the number one factor keeping people from being happy.

Anglojew
10-30-2013, 03:25 AM
Kinsey's parents were devout Christians. His father was known as one of the most devout members of the local Methodist church

Methodist plot

rhiannon
10-30-2013, 06:50 AM
Oh God (pun intended lol) don't even get me started on our bass ackwards American viewpoint of sex ed. UGH!

Suffice to say my own approach would be more in line with Northern Europes'

Incidentally, an excellent new Cable Television series premiered this Fall on Showtime which deals with the Sexual research (and the interpersonal bullshit that went on as well) done by Masters and Johnson back in the late 50s. Fascinating program about a topic near and dear to my heart lol

larali
10-30-2013, 07:02 AM
My daughter learned the "basics" the other day.

She was watching a cartoon about chickens. She asked me (because like a good lazy parent, I was sitting next to her on the computer) "so how does the rooster and the hen mate if the eggs are inside the hen?" Very intelligent question if I may say so.

I said, "you know how girls have that little thing in front? Boys have one too but it's bigger. He puts it in the girl and that's how it happens. Same with chickens."

She just gave me a funny look and that was the end of it :p

So that's how sex ed happens in our house.

rhiannon
10-30-2013, 07:07 AM
My daughter learned the "basics" the other day.

She was watching a cartoon about chickens. She asked me (because like a good lazy parent, I was sitting next to her on the computer) "so how does the rooster and the hen mate if the eggs are inside the hen?" Very intelligent question if I may say so.

I said, "you know how girls have that little thing in front? Boys have one too but it's bigger. He puts it in the girl and that's how it happens. Same with chickens."

She just gave me a funny look and that was the end of it :p

So that's how sex ed happens in our house.

Little Johnny learns sex:


One day a kid asks his mom if he can take a shower with her. She says, "Sure son, but don't look up and don't look down."
So they're taking a shower and the kid reaches up for the soap and he says, "Woo mama! What are those?"
She says, "Those are my headlights." The kid says "Ahh."
Then he drops the soap and bends down to get it and he says, "Woo mama! What is that?" and she replies back with, "That is my garage." The kid says "Ahh."
The next day he asks his dad if he can take a shower with him. The kid does. As he's scrubbing himself with the soap, he drops it. When he picks it up he says, "Woo daddy! What is that?" The father replies back, "That's my limousine."
That night he asks his parents if he could sleep with them and they say, "Sure, just don't look under the covers."
Then in the middle of the night he decides to take a peek. And he says "Mama, mama, turn on your headlights! Daddy is parking his limousine in your garage!"

Sarmatian
11-01-2013, 01:35 AM
...
Society is puritanical...

Which society you're talking about may I ask? If you mean the one Kinsey grew up at and lived all his live, which was Protestant world of post-Victorian puritan Anglosphere, then I'll agree with you. In this specific part of the world sexual restraint and suppression reached such a grotesque forms that people were unable to see the difference between sexual perversion and normal expression of libido anymore. But it's just one part of the world, the others had no such problems with sexual repression.


...and we would do well to cast off our sexual repression and "Judeo-Christian" morality. Good riddance. As a matter of fact, sexual repression is the number one factor keeping people from being happy.

Getting rid of sexual repression is a good idea... so long as it doesn't take one into the opposite extreme of sexual anarchy. It seems to me that way too many, while relieving themselves of the chains of puritanism, went all the way to throw out the healthy normal traditions of mating and reproduction and ended up in misery of chaotic copulation with no chance of growing any sort of emotional affinity to so called "the special one". It's the way to extinction.

Shah-Jehan
11-01-2013, 01:37 AM
It's awkward as hell, you have to take it from middle school to the end of highschool here:picard2:

MINARDOWICZ
11-01-2013, 01:43 AM
Kinsey is an idiot... Humanity is not born "pansexual" hahaha! Some people are, yes. But it is foolish to say this is the way we are naturally! How is this SCIENTIFIC at all? Pseudoscience.

blklady2013
11-01-2013, 01:52 AM
I would love for schools and teachers to be able to have real and meaningful conversations with students about the relationships they are forming with others their age or older and the sexual human body. I feel like there are generations of shame attached to discussing sex, all while inundating young adults with it. It's such a dangerous paradox to immerse oneself in something you can't have healthy discourse about. Because discourse is how you learn and bounce ideas off others. But our current climate is one where a young adult is surrounded by sexual stimuli and experiencing those urges, but are reproached for wanting to discuss or ask about them. Just more proof for me that our world is nuts!

Prisoner Of Ice
11-01-2013, 01:57 AM
I would love for schools and teachers to be able to have real and meaningful conversations with students about the relationships they are forming with others their age or older and the sexual human body. I feel like there are generations of shame attached to discussing sex, all while inundating young adults with it. It's such a dangerous paradox to immerse oneself in something you can't have healthy discourse about. Because discourse is how you learn and bounce ideas off others. But our current climate is one where a young adult is surrounded by sexual stimuli and experiencing those urges, but are reproached for wanting to discuss or ask about them. Just more proof for me that our world is nuts!

It's like they are trying hard to make sure no one forms any relationships.

McCauley
11-01-2013, 02:15 AM
"There are over two dozen sexually transmitted diseases, and infection with one of these “lovebugs” is considered by some to be a part of growing up. A doctor declares on YouTube, “Expect to have HPV once you become sexually intimate. All of us get it.”


Lol wut

blklady2013
11-01-2013, 03:04 AM
"There are over two dozen sexually transmitted diseases, and infection with one of these “lovebugs” is considered by some to be a part of growing up. A doctor declares on YouTube, “Expect to have HPV once you become sexually intimate. All of us get it.”


Lol wut

Oh hell naw! Geez, now a guy will REALLY look at me like I'm insane if I add: "must have an STD test before riding this ride"
to my requirements. God dang it! I give up. LMAO!