Originally posted by escapeUK
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At college, someone in my class had a caution for USI. He met a girl in a bar (that we shouldnt have been in because we werent 18). He was led to believe she attended the same college, she didnt, she was in secondary school. Only a gap of three years.
If you have worked in bars, you will be aware at the amount of 14 year old girls that look like they are in their early twenties. A push up bra and makeup really does deceive quite well.
(The reason why I have only targeted your post is because I have watched this thread from the start and feel the very notion of sexting is a subject one would be best staying out of!)
Originally posted by escapeUK
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By almost permitting kids to have sex, you show that by giving them condoms, sex is acceptable, hence the problem. Conversely, telling a head-strong child abstain and nothing else, doesnt work either.
They are two extremes. Instead, lets look at something you said:
Originally posted by escapeUK
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Let's look at the dutch. They have some of the lowest rates of teen pregnancy in Europe and the western world. What makes them so special? They dont threaten their children with one extreme of abstinence, or allow sex by leaving condoms around the house.
Instead they treat sex much like a fine wine the way our parents did. It is not uncommon for their families to sit down and talk about sex frankly and openly. A child should be made aware of more than just infections and the legal age of sex, but the emotional and physical obligations and consequences of it. That can only be done through open conversation, explaining what could happen such as preganancy, being kneecapped by the girls father, feelings afterwards and the complexity of relationships, etc etc.
Originally posted by escapeUK
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We have a drink problem across society from the very young, to the very old. Last time the OH and I were out, one man bumbling about, throwing up and being a drunken fool, was a local council official over 60 years old. Alcohol abuse isnt just kids on the corner with a cider bottle. It is a large subset of modern society across all ages and class divides.
One could argue that people like you and I, may be more responsible with alcohol because of our upbringing. Perhaps to some small degree, but that doesnt apply to elders.
Also one cannot cite the price of alcohol. In Europe (e.g. France, Italy, etc.) the price of alcohol is much lower, so why do they suffer far less than us or the states?
One can look to society. Look to the way media influences us. Media tells us you have to drink to socialise, to have women flock around you, to be interesting, to party and have fun on the beach with bikinis. That is the destructive corruption of western media.
Then look at our lifestyles. We may work less hours than some EU countries, but look at the social burdens placed upon us in public, the work ethic and immense socialism that borders on totalitarianism of the UK and US governments. Is it any wonder why people drink and abuse drugs, working in a futile effort during the week, just to get some kind of sweet release at the weekend. We have been programmed that partying is the way we should let our hair down.
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