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CONDOM DISTRIBUTION IN SCHOOLS CONDONES PROMISCUITY AND INCREASES TEEN PREGNANCIES

Posted By Media Hits On 7:56 AM Under
CONDOM DISTRIBUTION IN SCHOOLS CONDONES PROMISCUITY AND INCREASES TEEN PREGNANCIES
A majority of high schools in the United States do not distribute condoms to students. Those few schools that do provide condoms state their reason that in doing so, they will safely decrease the number of teen pregnancies and cases of sexually transmitted diseases. But if students are exposed to condom distribution, they will get the idea that premarital sex is okay,and will do it without consideration. Statistics showing the condom failure rate turn the belief of reducing teen pregnancies around. Distributing condoms in schools condones promiscuity and
increases teen pregnancies. Condoms were invented to provide a barrier for protection against pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases. Since then, other forms of birth control have been introduced and proven more reliable than condoms. Depo-Provera, "The Pill", and Norplant are such methods.
Every day, sex education classes promote condoms as means of safe sex or a least safer sex. But research on condoms provides no such guarantee. Texas researcher Susan Weller reports that condoms are only 87 percent effective in preventing pregnancy. Condoms do appear to be effective in preventing pregnancy when used "correctly and consistently". Most individuals,however, do not use them "correctly and consistently". In a municipal hospital family planning
clinic, 36 percent of 106 people experienced condom breakage, and five percent of the women's
unplanned pregnancies were attributed to broken condoms. A high school student cannot afford the risk of becoming pregnant.
The Catholic Church states that sex exists for means of expressing love between two
people and creation only, and frowns upon premarital sex or sexual intercourse without using a contraceptives. Catholic values state that abstinence should be practived and is the safest method of birth control there is.
Sexual promiscuity should not be taken as lightly as it is. Movies, songs, and television give messages that sexual promiscuity is "cool and attractive". If condoms are distributed in school, students would be living the life of a soap opera star. They see it as a way to be cool and protected at the same time. First, reputations and feelings are at risk, and second, students are risking teen pregnancy.
Today's teenagers face many pressures in their life including school, parents, friends and attitude. Society has been sending mixed messages to teens on sex. Parents tell their children to wait, while the media says "Go ahead and do it". If parents and sex educators teach students that they should wait, providing condoms in schools will pressure teens into sex earlier, increasing the number of sexually active students.
Sexual promiscuity should not be taken as lightly as it is. Movies, songs, and television give messages that sexual promiscuity is "cool and attractive". If condoms are distributed in school, students would be living the life of a soap opera star. They see it as a way to be cool and protected at the same time. First, reputations and feelings are at risk, and second, students are risking teen pregnancy.
Surprisingly, many schools throughout the United States adopt abstinence-only programs.
The enthusiasm for these programs is well evident. Although the message of abstinence is criticized by some as inadequate, there are good reasons for promotion of abstinence. Teenagers want to learn about abstinence; not "everyone's doing it". In 1992, Center for Disease Control found that 43 percent of teenagers ages 14 to 17 had engaged in sexual intercourse at least once.
This is less than half, which means that a majority of teens are not doing it. Abstinence prevents
pregnancy. For example, the San Marcos Junior High in San Marcos, California, adopted an
abstinence-only program developed by Teen-Aid. The curriculum dropped the school's
pregnancy rate from 147 to 20 within a two-year period.
America faces a long road ahead of them in fighting disease and poverty. The battle may never be won, but our children, the future leaders of the United States, need to be set on the right path before we can begin our road to victory.
RipnRoll - America's Condom SuperStore
August 16, 2009 at 5:02 PM

Wow, you sure have a lot of statistics there. I agree that condoms need to be used consistently and correctly but not using them at all opens up a whole new era of diseases and problems.

In the old days you just had STd's to worry about, now there are 3 different varieties of AIDS and a forth strain of AIDS just discovered this month. If parents don't take the innitiative to teach their kids about safer sex, who will?

I think condoms in schools is good as long as their are counselors, nurses or peers teaching the correct use and the possible dangers of unprotected sex. Former U.S. Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders said condoms are more likely to protect teens against sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy than vows of abstinence.

"Many of our children don't use condoms because we don't teach them about condoms," she said. "Our government tells them that condoms will break. I always say, the vows of abstinence break far more easily than latex condoms."

Condoms, as far as I'm concerned are an essential part of todays world. It is our duty to educate the youth of tomorrow of the dangers of unprotected sex and the value of safer sex practices

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