This'll probably get down voted as for some people can't seem to distinguish the difference between sex ed and pedophillia.
But the average age for girls to hit puberty is 11 and in boys it's 12, I'd say it's perfectly fine to teach them about -reproduction- and how babies are made. But normalising sex in minors is completely wrong, because it can lead to horrible situations.
Sex ed and safe sex should be taught at the legal age of consent, but they still need to be made aware of it and the repercussions at least.
I'm not defending pedos, those fucks can burn
Tldr; teaching kids about reproduction at a young age good. Normalising sex to minors bad.
I don't disagree about the importance of sex ed, but this flyer is less about exploring the dangers of sex and why it's important to wait and use safe practices, and more about excusing or enabling young teens and children having sex. The only information presented is ways to prepare for/have sex or deal with the consequences. Nothing about the dangers of STD, pregnancy, or potential damage to underdeveloped bodies. I suppose the argument would be that it's a smaller part of a larger curriculum that talks about that, but the framing of the flyer certainly seems more about enabling sex than simply teaching safety.
This'll probably get down voted as for some people can't seem to distinguish the difference between sex ed and pedophillia.
But the average age for girls to hit puberty is 11 and in boys it's 12, I'd say it's perfectly fine to teach them about -reproduction- and how babies are made. But normalising sex in minors is completely wrong, because it can lead to horrible situations.
Sex ed and safe sex should be taught at the legal age of consent, but they still need to be made aware of it and the repercussions at least.
Tldr; teaching kids about reproduction at a young age good. Normalising sex to minors bad.
I don't disagree about the importance of sex ed, but this flyer is less about exploring the dangers of sex and why it's important to wait and use safe practices, and more about excusing or enabling young teens and children having sex. The only information presented is ways to prepare for/have sex or deal with the consequences. Nothing about the dangers of STD, pregnancy, or potential damage to underdeveloped bodies. I suppose the argument would be that it's a smaller part of a larger curriculum that talks about that, but the framing of the flyer certainly seems more about enabling sex than simply teaching safety.