Yeah, this no sex ed in the schools is really working out well.
A growing number of teenage girls say they use the rhythm method of birth control, and more teens also said it is all right for an unmarried female to have a baby, according to a government survey released Wednesday.
About 17 percent of sexually experienced teen girls told researchers for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that they had used the rhythm method — timing their sex to avoid fertile days to prevent getting pregnant. That figure is up from 11 percent in a similar survey in 2002.
And then there’s this:
The students at school-sponsored dances, he told them, weren’t exactly doing the fox trot.
“There would be a tight cluster of students . . . and in the center we had no idea what was going on,” said Susan Nolen, copresident of the Parent Teacher Group and mother of two students at Penncrest. “Clearly, there was inappropriate touching; that was obvious during the cleanup of the dances.”
Whoa – wait. What?
“The custodial staff were,” Nolen explained, uneasily, “cleaning bodily fluids off the floor.”
The parents were speechless, too.
Here’s a news flash for high schools: the vast majority of people that go to dances want to get laid by meeting someone at the dance. They don’t really want to dance. Shocking I know. Yes, there are some people that “just want to dance” and for that we have theatre and dance. A percentage obviously just want to dance but most see it as a means to an end: to hookup with someone. If someone told you as a HS student about a party where there was no booze (but there are people that will demand breathalyzers tests), no drugs and no suggestive dancing (all enforced), you’d think you were in Utah. Might as well dish out Jello while they are at it.
#12 There WAS Sex Ed 50 years ago. They called it “Health” to meet the standards of the time.
Tight-knit groups so you couldn’t see what they’re doing.
Sounds like bukkake to me. A japanese import I never expected to become popular.