Inside TVC
Stay Connected
Must Read
- Our Battle Plan
to take back the courts from the ACLU and the anti-God Left
Worth Reading
Search TVC
|
Executive Director Andrea Lafferty and Founder Rev. Louis P. Sheldon
The Traditional Values Coalition is an inter-denominational public policy organization speaking on behalf of over 43,000 churches. |
|
Printer Friendly Page |
Email To A Friend |
Get Our Newsletter! |
Want to take action about what you have just read?
Then write a letter to your local newspapers, television stations and radio stations. Click on your state below.
Please note, the article will NOT be automatically inserted or referenced in your letter. You must copy and paste it or give them the web page URL yourself. (The easiest way is to copy and paste the entire Printer Friendly Page in to your letter, right below your comments.)
|
Rutgers University Sex Web Site Encourages Teen Promiscuity
May 5, 2005 –“Sexetc.org” is a web site for teenagers hosted by Rutgers University. The web site includes sections on condom use, locating contraceptives without parental knowledge, homosexuality, and more.
The web site says: “We hear from many teens who want to know how their state’s laws affect their right to sexual health care and confidential services. They ask, Can I get the Pill without my mom finding out? Do I have to be a certain age to buy condoms? Can I get an abortion without getting permission from my parents? They also want to know if they will be protected from harassment from school if they are a gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender teen, etc.” The site includes a colorful map with detailed information on each state’s laws dealing with abortion and contraception.
A current poll on the web site asks the question: “Have you ever felt like the gender you were born with isn’t who you really are?”
The site also attacks a U.S. government web site for parents on teen issues. Sexetc.org says: “…the government carries a conservative and potentially damaging stance against balanced sexual health education, opting instead for the abstinence-only sex ed approach that belongs to the American time period when men wore buckles on their shoes and women’s favorite pastime was churning butter.”
|
|
|
|
|