Archive for the ‘sex drugs porn alcohol abstinence morals’ Category

Sex and drug education – does it work?

August 3, 2007

02/08/2007 –
credit: Communitycare.co.uk – the website for social work and social care professionals

(this is remarkably close to the mildgreen hypothesis – creating in ever younger children the illusion that all their peers are doing it, and they cant b******y wait!. What is fundementally broken are the artificial redlines surrounding ‘age of consent’ issues. We need to enable and not mask self responsibility. /Blair)
Children as young as eight years old are taking drugs. Britain has the highest teenage pregnancy rate in Europe.
So how effective is our sex and drug education?

There are reports in the press this week that according to experts, children as young as six are being treated for addiction to cannabis and are presenting symptoms including paranoia, anxiety, depression and even schizophrenia.

It also emerged last September in Scotland that children aged 10-years-old were dealing drugs.

Dr Michael Fitzpatrick will suggest in Community Care next week that the rise of drug abuse among young children has coincided with the increase of drugs education.

He says: “Gordon Brown has endorsed the fashionable “drugs education”, particularly favouring its extension to primary schools. Here is another policy immune to the evidence of failure.

“Never mind that the spread of drugs education appears to coincide with a dramatic increase in drug taking by school students – the government believes that we need more of the same, extended to even younger children.”

At the same time, Britain has the highest teenage pregnancy rate in Europe despite numerous government initiatives designed to take the problem.

Given that children taking drugs are getting younger and Britain has the highest teenage pregnancy rate in Britain, is sex and drug education in Britain effective at educating children or does it merely fuel the curiosity of young people?

Dr Michael Fitzpatrick suggests: “Why not instead teach children something interesting and inspiring, that might give them the truly radical idea that culture and society have more to offer than drug-induced oblivion?”

Porn, Prohibition and Just say No.

June 4, 2007

The increased sexualization of girls and women in our culture is troubling as is the blurring between pornography and mainstream entertainment. What’s sad is the underlying message girls are getting and believing, in part because it’s true — it’s a way they can feel powerful instantly and it can lead to a certain kind of fame and celebrity. And for girls whose parents never talk to them about embracing their sexuality and feeling comfortable in their own skin (vs. just preaching abstinence), the allure of being sexy in this way can be very compelling. The ‘Porn Effect’ Online

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/anastasia-goodstein/the-porn-effect-online_b_50463.html

This psychosocial dynamic reads a lot like systemic failed drug policy. Ban it and increase the problems and prevalence.

The intersect of sex and drugs remedial adjustments is ‘at parenting level’ not perverse policing of a moral tautology, the ‘means, ends and the enforcing of abstinence’.

[Its illegal because its immoral, its immoral because its illegal.]

Stanton Peele captured this forbidden fruit in his treatise on alcohol, abstention and binge drinking. Others have written on virginity, loss there of, poor health outcomes and religious doctrine. Oops, its that ‘looks like drug policy, smells like drug policy’ double standards and parents again.

Those who treat sex as a moral issue and fail to educate younger folk reality-based solutions get the very outcome they least desire. What is it about religion that it requires temptation and failure. Those who profess theisms virtues can be of this world but not in it.

Fears loves a Moloch like those who sell ambulances, love disaster.

Blair Anderson
http://blairformayor.com/