From: Walpurgis (walpurg@myrealbox.com)
Date: Tue Jul 30 2002 - 18:09:15 MDT
[Mermaid] You just dont want a curious 14 
year old playing a game without knowing the rules. 
What rules? Whose rules? 
[Mermaid] You especially dont want 
unsavoury characters manipulating their curiosity.
Or their genitals.
[Nurgle] I'm with Herm on this, good sex. ed. is the best way.
Dare to consider more than sex ed. An "ars erotica" is lacking in our culture. 
Teaching people of all ages how to create pleasure in themselves and in 
others seems to be rare. 
As a culture "we" are rationally concerned/wary/fearful of children having 
sex - intercourse with others. If we taught children that (how?) they could 
pleasure themselves- or at the very least let them know that masturbation 
(something they do anyway) was not wrong/naughty/dirtydirtyboy! then there 
would be a positive sexual/pleasurable outlet that would stimulate 
imagination and free children from negative ideas regarding pleasure, 
genitals & onanism. This would also redirect sexual emphasis from 
penetration.
Of course it wouldn't fulfil other need (anothers body, interacting/relating 
to/pleasuring another).
Why can't children's masturbation something that is taught about or at least 
looked upon with a beneign (or even indifferent!) eye? Something considered 
normal? Healthy? Fun!?
Are there health or biological reasons why you must intrude on and stop 
children from masturbating? Do they go blind? Does it make you vote 
conservative? Be anti-social? 
Or perhaps its the pleasure that is seen as wrong?
Relatedly see:
http://www.upress.umn.edu/HarmfultoMinors.html
[Mermaid]13-18 = teen. 8-12 = pre-teen. younger than 8=child. IMO: I would 
definitely put the pre-teen category as work-in-progress as far as sexual 
maturity goes. 13-15 are definitely ready for sex,
Generalisations. Character, not age, is the measure, young or old.
[Mermaid] but should refrain from 
sexual activity.
Do you mean just penetration (most people do when they say "sex")? Or 
everyting? Like touching or looking at each other? (playing doctor?) 
Masturbating? Fantasising? Wondering?
[Mermaid]  Anyone who understands the need for 
safe sex and is familiar with safe sex procedures is ready for sex.
Right. So where does age come into this? Age is just a rule of thumb and says 
nothing about individual character/understanding
[Mermaid] All 
these are sadly lacking amongst most of our children.
So it seems. And the adults that teach them.
[Mermaid] The ones who loudly 
cry out for the sexual freedom of children do not take the same interest in 
the welfare of these youngsters.
A lot like anti-abortionists do calling for the life of foeti then letting the 
result live in poverty.
[Mermaid] Being the cynic that I am, I see it all as 
the wolf being too concerned about the sheep.
Indeed. The wolf often wears a dog-collar.
[Nurgle]You know what they say about Catholic Girls....
And Catholic priests. (sorry, poor taste but I'm high).
[Mermaid]Isnt 16 the legal age for street walkers in the UK?(Lets not even 
consider age of consent)
If by street-walker you mean prostitute, then I believe prostitution is illegal in 
the UK.
[Nurgle]I have no idea where to find these stats, or what they are, but I'd 
expect to find that countries which expose people to sexual education at 
younger ages will have lower rates of STD infections, while conservative 
states will have much higher STD rates, as well as higher teen pregnancy 
rates. Of course, this hypothesis doesn't include states that have limited 
access to contraceptives (both barrier and oral).
Or abortion. Its frightening to have sex when you know you'll get no help or 
sympathy if your contraception fails and conception occurs. 
[Mermaid]I can look, but that will have to wait. As far as I saw from the 
one quick search(www.populationaction.org), Netherlands is doing very well 
wrt sex education. HIV infection, teen pregnancy and incidence of STDs are 
very low. The Dutch are not shy about sex. Americans lag far far behind the 
Dutch because of the lack of proper sex education.
[Mermaid] From my point of view, given that 
the mess it is, abstinence actually makes sense in the United States. 
"However, children are still having sex before they are legally allowed, and 
their ignorance of contraception, or their instilled belief that such methods 
are useless, have resulted in a teenage pregnancy rate and HIV infection rate 
much higher than countries like the Netherlands, where sex ed. starts at a 
young age and involves teaching children about a wide variety of 
contraceptive and abortive methods, as well as making these things easily 
available. In Europe, where teenagers have as much sex as their US 
counterparts, pregnancy rates are a fourth as high than the US rates of 4.96 
births per thousand girls. In the Netherlands, teenage pregnancy is virtually 
absent. Levines study makes it very clear that abstinence education is 
teaching children nothing about sex. Worse though, this education is lethal, 
leaving children ignorant about a practice they are likely to engage in and 
open to pregnancy, disease and exploitation. George Bush's recent efforts to 
http://www.observer.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,710335,00.html enforce 
abstinence education outside of the US instead of comprehensive sex ed. 
illustrate how urgent a debate around this issue is."
http://virus.lucifer.com/bbs/index.php?board=7;action=display;threadid=2582
4
[Mermaid]There is absolutely no point to fighting for teenager's sexual 
needs without educating them first. 
And educating adults too.
[Mermaid] Boy! am I glad that I am an old fart..{PRIVATE "TYPE=PICT;ALT="}
Yeah, my girlfriend says the 70s sex revolution in the US when she was a girl 
was great, but I wasn't born then - shit.
[Mermaid]
<snip>
"There is a misconception that sexual and reproductive health education will 
encourage sexual behavior and lead to higher rates of abortion, unintended 
pregnancy and STIs among youth," says Ms. Coen. "The Dutch experience 
proves that talking openly about sexuality
Also about nudity too.
 "Concepts of morality and tradition and the taboos associated with sexuality 
prevent the kind of healthy exchange of information and open 
communication that young people desperately need to educate themselves," 
says Dr. Greene. "It is unfortunate that some in the international community 
are bound by the same taboos, as it is young people who pay the price."
What's the source for this please? It looks interesting.
Walpurgis
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http://www.noumenal.net/exiles
Take the following two scenes enacted in a shopping mall, say, or on the street or in the park: in the first 
an adult is striking a screaming child repeatedly on the buttocks; in the second an adult is sitting with a 
child on a bench and they are hugging. Which scene is more common? Which makes us uneasy? Which 
do we judge to be normal? Which is more likely to run afoul of the law? A society, I believe, which 
honors hitting and suspects hugging is immoral. 
http://www.tc.umn.edu/~under006/Library/Antisexuality.html
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