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Archives for 2009

Who should be talking about sex to whom?

June 29, 2009 by Tanya Zaleski Leave a Comment

Crossed this article:

Sexual coercion and “reproductive control,” including contraceptive sabotage, are a common, and devastating, facet of dating and domestic abuse.

The article basically links pregnancy among teens to partner abuse. So what is the prevailing belief over at RH Reality Check? “We need to get even more dating-violence education into the schools.” They acknowledge:

Researchers, including Teitelman, are also studying exactly how parents can best educate their kids, not just about the birds and the bees, but also about standing up to sexual coercion. (In one study, Teitelman found teen girls whose mothers had talked to them about resisting sexual pressure were twice as likely to delay sex, or use condoms during sex; when fathers did the same, they were five times more likely to have safe sex.)

I suppose if RH Reality Check is going to allude to the idea that parents should encourage abstinence, it is only fitting that the info be shrouded in brackets toward the end of the article. And yet they insist the focus should be on getting more sex ed “in the schools.”

In this same article, a nurse practitioner points out, “We’re giving teens all this information about prevention in the clinic, and yet I see them back all the time for STI testing.”

So in this article we’ve outlined that the parent thing works well, and that learning about condoms from a stranger (even if they’re a medical professional) doesn’t work well. So we need to elaborate sex ed in schools. Something about not being able to see the forest for the trees…

(Though I’m being a bit critical here, the article is worth a read. It sheds light on a topic we don’t hear enough about.)

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Rebecca adds: “Contraception sabotage” – this is an area ripe for study. I’ve never had a male friend own up to deliberately sabotaging his partner’s birth control, although I don’t suppose many men ‘fess up to it, especially to female friends. I do, on the other hand, know women who’ve quite consciously lied about birth control (explicitly, as in claiming to be on the pill when they’re not; or implicitly, when they stop taking it or “accidentally” miss a week; or say “it’s a safe time” when it’s not, or might not be) and think it was a perfectly fine thing to do, because the guys wanted to marry them, just needed a nudge, ya know? And there are many other situations where I suspect something similar might have happened.

A lot of these relationships ended badly. Not a surprise, given how little trust must exist for those shenanigans to take place. A couple of them are still married a decade later. Still doesn’t justify that kind of lying, in my opinion. At any rate, tricking a guy into fathering a child is as despicable as coercing or intimidating your girlfriend into having a child. And it’s something a lot of people condone, or turn a blind eye to, in my experience.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Pregnancy, teen, Violence

Hey, as long as we have the best interests of the child in mind…

June 29, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin 4 Comments

Some village is missing its idiot:

June 29, 2009 (LifeSiteNews.com) – In an interview with newspaper Svenska Dagbladet in March, a Swedish couple said they are refusing to disclose whether their two-and-a-half-year-old child, called “Pop” in the media, is a boy or a girl. They said that their decision, made at the time of the child’s birth, was based on the feminist theory that “gender” is a “cruel” “social construct” that forces children into artificial roles.

“We want Pop to grow up more freely and avoid being forced into a specific gender mould from the outset,” Pop’s mother said. “It’s cruel to bring a child into the world with a blue or pink stamp on their forehead.” The parents say they never use personal pronouns, referring to him or her only as Pop.

“I believe that the self-confidence and personality that Pop has shaped will remain for a lifetime,” said the mother.

While we’re here debating cruel social constructs, I’d like to ask one question: Why does Pop have both a mother and a father?

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Discouraging stats

June 28, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin 5 Comments

Sorry to ruin your Sunday:

More than 450 teenagers below the age of 14 terminated pregnancies between 2005 and 2008, including 23 girls aged 12, the statistics from the Department of Health disclosed. Over the same period, 52 teenagers terminated four or more pregnancies before they reached their 18th birthday, as the total number of “repeat terminations” hit record levels across England and Wales.

[…]

The Government data disclosed that 64,715 repeat abortions were carried out across all age groups last year — the highest level on record and a rise of 22 per cent in a decade. They included 46 women who terminated at least eight pregnancies.

A proposal to reduce the legal limit for termination for abortion from 24 weeks was defeated last year following a fierce parliamentary debate and the new figures showed a sharp rise in terminations after at least 26 weeks. There were 241 between 2005 and 2008, a rise of 16 per cent from the previous three years.

A Department of Health spokesman said the Government had invested almost £50  million in efforts to prevent teenage pregnancies and that the rates of abortions for teenagers as a whole had fallen by 4.5 per cent in the past year.

Well. Forgive my crusty old goat reaction, but I’d say that was money wasted. Trying to “educate” girls about sex does not (repeat: NOT) lead to better sexual practices. By which I mean less sex and fewer pregnancies – and therefore, fewer abortions. The challenge is not how to figure out what kind of contraception would work best on 13-year-old girls. The challenge is trying to convince 13-year-old girls that they ought to busy themselves with a great many things other than sex.

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And now for some real discrimination against women

June 27, 2009 by Patricia Egan Leave a Comment

According to this report, thousands of Indian women took to the street this weekend to protest sex-selection abortion. Good for them. India is described as the heartland of sex-selection abortion and the numbers certainly are disheartening. For example, in 2001, there were 921 girls born for every 1000 boys in India; in some Indian states, the ratio was lower still — 793 girls for every 1000 boys in Punjab. A IDRC co-authored report found 300 girls born for very 1000 boys among high caste urban Punjabis! And census data from 1901 to the present show that in recent years the disparity has been getting worse, not better. One would have thought it was getting easier to be a woman and therefore to raise a daughter in India. But apparently not.

I think that most women, pro-choice or not, realize that there is something wrong with aborting a baby just because it’s a girl. But if sex-selection abortion is wrong, because it undermines the value and equality of girls, isn’t eugenic abortion just as wrong, as it undermines the value  and equality of the disabled? Is it worse to have an abortion because you’re expected to bear sons for your husband and family or because this just isn’t the right time to have a baby?

This must be a tricky path for the abortion advocate to navigate. It must be hard to argue that abortion is a purely personal matter when it can result in more than 5 million missing Indian baby girls.

Filed Under: All Posts

It’s not exactly apples and oranges

June 27, 2009 by Tanya Zaleski 2 Comments

(Irrefutably off) pro-life activist commits violent crime against abortion doctor, and it’s in the news for over a week.

However, a man tries to bowl over a pro-lifer with his ’91 GMC and the only place you can read about it is in an online newsource so credible that it insists on calling Chicago “Chico.”

A man who allegedly used an SUV in an attempted to run over an anti-abortion protester Wednesday outside of the Planned Parenthood office, has been charged with assault with a deadly weapon.

Matthew R. Haver, 40, was arrested by Chico police for allegedly trying to hit James Cantfield, 69, of Chico.

That’s right, friends, Chico.

I’d love to be wrong but I’m guessing we won’t read about this one in the Times.

Update: Oh, Chico, California. *blushes*  Well that does add some credibility, then. Mind you, the readership just significantly plummeted. Chico’s population isn’t quite 90,000. Chicago’s just shy of 3 million. Now we really won’t read about it in the Times.

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Awesome idea

June 26, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin 1 Comment

This is such a cool idea:

Pregnant women are being given the chance to hold life-size models of their unborn babies, thanks to an invention that converts data from ultrasound and MRI scans.

[…]

The technology is being trialled at a clinic in Rio de Janeiro. “It’s amazing to see the faces of the mothers. They can see the full scale of their baby, really understand the size of it,” said Dr Lopes.

[h/t]

Filed Under: All Posts

When ads go stupid

June 26, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin 5 Comments

Burger King puts its foot in it. Dumb!

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Andrea adds: Your title could have been “When ad companies are run by 16-year-old boys”… Remember when Telus decided they would package porn and make it readily available to their customers? What bothered me was not so much that porn would be available (it already is) but that some group of prepubescent ad execs (and I don’t care how old they actually are) thought this was a good idea.

However, my boycott of Burger King will have little effect–I’ve never eaten there in my life. Apparently with good reason.

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Tanya adds, regarding the boycott: Don’t panic!  The veggie burger at Harvey’s is just as good AND you get to pick your toppings.  I know you were all worried ’bout that.

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Indeed

June 26, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

ProWomanProLife isn’t the only group out there to have fun T-shirts. Just saw someone wearing one that said:

A city built on rock and roll would be structurally unsound

Indeed.

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The King of Pop is dead

June 25, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin 1 Comment

Gosh, what a day, eh? First, Farrah Fawcett, then Michael Jackson. I for one will try to remember the good things about him – at least for today. RIP

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJL6YjjK0c8]

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Andrea adds: Not everyone is inclined to be so charitable, and I have to admit, my thoughts are more in line with this commentary.

Filed Under: All Posts

Farrah Fawcett dies

June 25, 2009 by Brigitte Pellerin Leave a Comment

A 1970s icon disappears. Logan’s Run would not have been the same without her. RIP

Filed Under: All Posts

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