Sounding Board -- Joel Faris
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On May 16, Joseph N. Bell wrote about what he perceived as the failure
of abstinence education in public schools (The Bell Curve, “New studies
tell troubling tale”). He cited studies that convinced him that there is
a problem with teenage pregnancy and its prevention.
Bell was right, there is a teenage pregnancy problem. In fact, the
Planned Parenthood study he cited seemed to highlight Costa Mesa’s
southwest corner as perhaps the worst area in Orange County. However,
Bell could not have been more incorrect in his reaction to those
findings. He seemed more than ready to run irresponsibly from abstinence
education without even considering that it itself was not the problem.
(By the way, should it be surprising that the zip code with the highest
teen pregnancy rate -- 92627 -- is also currently home to a Planned
Parenthood?)
Sex education, ideally, would perhaps best be taught at home by either
a mother and/or father or at a place of religious teaching. Honesty would
be the overriding guide to follow and the welfare of the child would be
the primary goal. Unfortunately, this type of family situation is
becoming more and more rare.
Even in the 1980s, when I was a fledgling teenager, my single mom did
the best she thought she could do to help me along (a subscription to
Playboy and the book, “Where Did I Come From”). Increasingly, single
parents are becoming more sophisticated with their less-embarrassed
teens, however, common sense still suggests that two parents would
provide the favorable balance.
In response to the current public school approach to sex education,
Bell quoted a teenager as saying, “We want our schools to teach
contraception and how to deal with relationships.” Believe me, most
teenagers (and many preteens) already know exactly how to get pregnant
and just how to prevent it. What they actually need is to stay at home
under the watchful eye of an adult.
There is really no reason to be surprised that so many teens are
getting pregnant, considering the lax attitude to sex and the
overwhelming freedom of teenagers. Too many young women are becoming
pregnant too young and hinder their opportunities at higher education
and/or better career choices. This, while the young men who participated
in the baby-making process are often off free from those burdens and,
perhaps, continuing to spread their DNA.
Sex is as old as Eve’s entrance in the Garden of Eden, but humans are
not without the capacity to control themselves. In the May 18 issue of
World magazine, Janet K. Museveni, wife of Uganda’s president, was quoted
as saying, “The young person who has been trained to be disciplined will,
in the final analysis, survive better than the one who has been
instructed to wear a piece of rubber and continues with ‘business as
usual.”’
She said this in response to the United Nations’ approach of “tossing
condoms to kids.”
World reported that Uganda has experienced a two-thirds decline in the
rate of new HIV infection cases since it adopted an abstinence approach
in 1995.
Whatever Bell wants to teach his offspring is his family’s business.
I, too, expect and demand that right over my children.
Abstinence is the only method guaranteed not to result in pregnancy or
being infected with a sexually transmitted disease. To teach otherwise is
to take a chance I am not willing to take for the welfare of my future
teenagers and any future grandchildren.
Allow the schools, with parental approval, to teach the science of
human reproduction and the dangers and blessings thereof, but let the
moral decisions be made at home.
* JOEL FARIS is a Westside resident and activist.
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