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bedub1 wrote:A school district in Maine - United States has started offering birth control, mainly "the pill" to students in 6th through 8th grades, and will not be required to tell the parents about it.
I live here in the US...but sooo many of these people are fucked up in the head that I just want to get out.
Where should I move to? Should these children be on birth control? Should the school be forced to tell the parents about it?
Maxleod wrote:Not strike, he's the only one with a functioning brain.
got tonkaed wrote:To every single poster who has basically said oh my how can they do that.
What would you prefer, they give out birth control in cases where it may be needed, as discreetly as possible
or
6th to 8th graders keep getting pregnant and as some are, leading to all the complications that arise from it.
Its the schools trying to take responsibility for an issue that is increasingly getting out of hand.
Maxleod wrote:Not strike, he's the only one with a functioning brain.
strike wolf wrote:got tonkaed wrote:To every single poster who has basically said oh my how can they do that.
What would you prefer, they give out birth control in cases where it may be needed, as discreetly as possible
or
6th to 8th graders keep getting pregnant and as some are, leading to all the complications that arise from it.
Its the schools trying to take responsibility for an issue that is increasingly getting out of hand.
That's even more f*ck'd up.
got tonkaed wrote:To every single poster who has basically said oh my how can they do that.
What would you prefer, they give out birth control in cases where it may be needed, as discreetly as possible
or
6th to 8th graders keep getting pregnant and as some are, leading to all the complications that arise from it.
Its the schools trying to take responsibility for an issue that is increasingly getting out of hand.
riggable wrote:got tonkaed wrote:To every single poster who has basically said oh my how can they do that.
What would you prefer, they give out birth control in cases where it may be needed, as discreetly as possible
or
6th to 8th graders keep getting pregnant and as some are, leading to all the complications that arise from it.
Its the schools trying to take responsibility for an issue that is increasingly getting out of hand.
How about this. 6th grade girls have not had developed enough brains to understand the consequences of having sex. They aren't aware of the consequences, at least not enough.
While i won't condone preaching absitnence, I would liek this: The schools showing a video or have a speaker of some sort come and show and PROVE all the shit that teen parents have to go through. No college, less pay, a higher cost of living, less likely insurance, basically a fucked up life. Make it very CLEAR to those 11 year olds that having sex and getting pregnant is not 'cool' and not 'popular'
Yes, i appreciate to an extent that school systems are trying to take responsibility. BUT IS NOT TELLING THE PARENTS OF AN 11 YEAR OLD GIRL THAT SHE IS/WAS HAVING UNPROTECTED SEX BEING RESPONSIBLE?
riggable wrote:I am NOT against teen sex.
I AM against teen pregnancy.
Yes, this video would be shown to everyone. God knows its probably 60-70% the little horny perverted boys' fault that there are pregnent 11 year olds anyways.
Sticky issue my ass. Do 11 year old girls count as women? Personally? I'd say not.
muy_thaiguy wrote:My problem is, why don't the parents talk to their kids about it instead of teachers? After all, it IS a family issue.
got tonkaed wrote:riggable wrote:I am NOT against teen sex.
I AM against teen pregnancy.
Yes, this video would be shown to everyone. God knows its probably 60-70% the little horny perverted boys' fault that there are pregnent 11 year olds anyways.
Sticky issue my ass. Do 11 year old girls count as women? Personally? I'd say not.
thats fine, and thats the current stance which has led to teh problem main is trying to address. The simple notion is not that anyone is in any way condoning more sex for children. The fact they are taking on such a probably unpopular program is evidence to the fact something probably needs to be done.
Instead of wishing the problem would go away, maine has tried to come up with solutions to the problem. I wont sit here and say i know how things should work in every situation, since im not that talented, nor can i appreciate the subtle dynamics of those young girls lives. You on the other hand, are apparently an expert.
riggable wrote:got tonkaed wrote:riggable wrote:I am NOT against teen sex.
I AM against teen pregnancy.
Yes, this video would be shown to everyone. God knows its probably 60-70% the little horny perverted boys' fault that there are pregnent 11 year olds anyways.
Sticky issue my ass. Do 11 year old girls count as women? Personally? I'd say not.
thats fine, and thats the current stance which has led to teh problem main is trying to address. The simple notion is not that anyone is in any way condoning more sex for children. The fact they are taking on such a probably unpopular program is evidence to the fact something probably needs to be done.
Instead of wishing the problem would go away, maine has tried to come up with solutions to the problem. I wont sit here and say i know how things should work in every situation, since im not that talented, nor can i appreciate the subtle dynamics of those young girls lives. You on the other hand, are apparently an expert.
heh, thanks, i wouldn't say expert, but perhaps above-averaglly knowledged.
I dunno, I have a sister in 6th grade, and this really hit home. And I never really implied that you were in the wrong. You made it clear that you were just stating the probable reasons the Maine school system would give, and i was more yelling at them.
got tonkaed wrote:riggable wrote:I am NOT against teen sex.
I AM against teen pregnancy.
Yes, this video would be shown to everyone. God knows its probably 60-70% the little horny perverted boys' fault that there are pregnent 11 year olds anyways.
Sticky issue my ass. Do 11 year old girls count as women? Personally? I'd say not.
thats fine, and thats the current stance which has led to teh problem main is trying to address. The simple notion is not that anyone is in any way condoning more sex for children. The fact they are taking on such a probably unpopular program is evidence to the fact something probably needs to be done.
Instead of wishing the problem would go away, maine has tried to come up with solutions to the problem. I wont sit here and say i know how things should work in every situation, since im not that talented, nor can i appreciate the subtle dynamics of those young girls lives. You on the other hand, are apparently an expert.
lalaland wrote:This is what I love about Spamalot... you click on a title to a thread, and you have no idea what you'll find inside...
And that's my problem. Parents NEED to talk to their children about it, instead of a teacher at school. Schools are supposed to be for math, science, language, and a couple other things. They were not ment for Sex Ed.got tonkaed wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:My problem is, why don't the parents talk to their kids about it instead of teachers? After all, it IS a family issue.
parents are not notoriously good at talking to their children about sex.
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