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New Hope for Reality and Truth

Rachel Hart,
Reproductive Freedom Project
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April 3, 2007

Yesterday, Wade Horn, Assistant Secretary for Children and Families at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, . Horn, a 2001 appointee, oversaw the dramatic increase in federal funding for abstinence-only-until-marriage programs under the Bush Administration. Federal funding for these programs, which in the last decade has topped over a billion dollars, mirrors the government鈥檚 obsession with legislating morality. Instead of encouraging teens to postpone sex until they are mature enough to make healthy decisions, these programs drill teens with a singular message: Abstain from sex until you are married or suffer the consequences.

Indeed, these programs must teach that abstaining from sex outside of marriage 鈥 鈥 is the expected standard of human activity, and that sex outside of marriage is likely to have harmful psychological and physical effects.

The problem with this 鈥渟tandard鈥 is that the vast majority of Americans don鈥檛 abide by it, and haven鈥檛 for decades. By the age of 20, 75 percent of Americans have had premarital sex 鈥 by age 44 that percentage jumps to 95 percent.

Unfortunately, dealing with reality isn鈥檛 the only thing lacking in abstinence-
only-until-marriage programs 鈥 they also struggle with the truth. Not only are programs encouraged to tell teens that condoms fail (in fact, recipients of federal dollars may not advocate contraception use or teach contraception methods except to emphasize its failure rates), but found that some of the most widely used federally funded curricula exaggerate contraceptive failure rates and include misinformation.

And just when you thought it couldn鈥檛 get worse, it does. Abstinence-only-
until-marriage programs often discuss gender stereotypes as if they are scientific fact, address same-sex sex behavior only within the context of promiscuity and disease, and, as in the case of the Silver Ring Thing, use taxpayer dollars to promote religion.

Abstinence-only-until-marriage programs raise a host of serious civil liberties concerns, but more importantly, they put teens鈥 health at risk in the name of pushing a particular moral agenda. Teens deserve better. One can only hope that Mr. Horn鈥檚 successor will understand the importance of replacing such medically inaccurate, misleading, and biased curricula with programs that provide teens with real information about protecting themselves against unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.

Rachel Hart, 老澳门开奖结果 Reproductive Freedom Project

To learn what you can do to combat abstinence-only-until-marriage programs in your community visit the "" campaign Web site, or send an to your member of congress urging them to support the "Real Education 老澳门开奖结果 Life Act," a bill proposing the first federal program devoted to providing states with funding to teach age-appropriate sexuality education that includes medically accurate and complete information about abstinence and contraception.

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