(Original thread.)
Okay Ben, here it is. I'm going to give this one more try before returning to the safe confines of my boring office work.
My claim: Since the late 1980s and early 1990s, sex education in the United States has changed to include safe sex programs in response to the AIDS epidemic. The result of the push for safe sex has been a decrease in the percentage of teenagers who are sexually active, a decrease in the percentage of teenagers who are pregnant, a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers with STDs, an increase in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who use contraceptives such as condoms and birth control, and an increase in the percentage of pregnant teenagers who receive abortions.
Premise A: Condoms and other forms of birth control are generally effective and have contributed to the decrease in the percentage of teenagers who are pregnant or, for condoms alone, have STDs. (Read this study by the American Academy of Pediatrics, using data from the CDC. This study shows the decrease in STDs among adolescents.)
Premise B: Both abstinence-only sex education programs and comprehensive sex education programs reduce the percentage of teenagers who are sexually active, but only comprehensive sex education programs increase the use of condoms, other forms of birth control, and abortions amongst sexually active teenagers. (This study, along with the above study shows that condom usage has gone up in the past two decades.)
Premise C: States that employ abstinence-only programs show a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers, a decrease in the percentage of pregnant teenagers who receive abortions, and an increase in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who are pregnant or have STDs. (This study , which loin posted and you agreed with, gives the statistics for pregnancies and abortions by state, whereas this study shows which states have abstinence-only programs, and this study shows that states in the South, which are usually abstinence-only states, have higher rates of STDs. The data correlates very well.)
Premise D: States with comprehensive sex education plans show a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers (but not as great a decrease as those states with abstinence-only programs), a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who are pregnant, a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who have STDs, and an increase in the percentage of pregnant teenagers who receive abortions. (All of the above studies demonstrate this.)
Premise E: States with comprehensive sex education programs show a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who are pregnant or have STDs beyond that which can be attributed to the decrease in the percentage of teenagers who are sexually active. (Teen pregnancy rates have dropped by ~35% since the early 90s whereas sexual activity has only decreased by ~12% as shown in this study.
Premise F: Factors outside of sex education that reduce the percentage of teenagers who are sexually active cannot account for the increase in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who use condoms or other forms of birth control. (This is self-evident.)
There's more evidence. More data. More charts. If this doesn't convince you, I don't know what will.
Now, I don't actually expect this to convince you of anything, but I'd like to offer this: Given that there is a paucity of data to indicate that abstinence-only programs have been effective, and given that your religious inclinations would lead you to believe the religious option is the more effective one, would you please acknowledge that the data does not support your position and that you rely on faith when it comes to sex education?
Okay Ben, here it is. I'm going to give this one more try before returning to the safe confines of my boring office work.
My claim: Since the late 1980s and early 1990s, sex education in the United States has changed to include safe sex programs in response to the AIDS epidemic. The result of the push for safe sex has been a decrease in the percentage of teenagers who are sexually active, a decrease in the percentage of teenagers who are pregnant, a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers with STDs, an increase in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who use contraceptives such as condoms and birth control, and an increase in the percentage of pregnant teenagers who receive abortions.
Premise A: Condoms and other forms of birth control are generally effective and have contributed to the decrease in the percentage of teenagers who are pregnant or, for condoms alone, have STDs. (Read this study by the American Academy of Pediatrics, using data from the CDC. This study shows the decrease in STDs among adolescents.)
Premise B: Both abstinence-only sex education programs and comprehensive sex education programs reduce the percentage of teenagers who are sexually active, but only comprehensive sex education programs increase the use of condoms, other forms of birth control, and abortions amongst sexually active teenagers. (This study, along with the above study shows that condom usage has gone up in the past two decades.)
Premise C: States that employ abstinence-only programs show a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers, a decrease in the percentage of pregnant teenagers who receive abortions, and an increase in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who are pregnant or have STDs. (This study , which loin posted and you agreed with, gives the statistics for pregnancies and abortions by state, whereas this study shows which states have abstinence-only programs, and this study shows that states in the South, which are usually abstinence-only states, have higher rates of STDs. The data correlates very well.)
Premise D: States with comprehensive sex education plans show a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers (but not as great a decrease as those states with abstinence-only programs), a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who are pregnant, a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who have STDs, and an increase in the percentage of pregnant teenagers who receive abortions. (All of the above studies demonstrate this.)
Premise E: States with comprehensive sex education programs show a decrease in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who are pregnant or have STDs beyond that which can be attributed to the decrease in the percentage of teenagers who are sexually active. (Teen pregnancy rates have dropped by ~35% since the early 90s whereas sexual activity has only decreased by ~12% as shown in this study.
Premise F: Factors outside of sex education that reduce the percentage of teenagers who are sexually active cannot account for the increase in the percentage of sexually active teenagers who use condoms or other forms of birth control. (This is self-evident.)
There's more evidence. More data. More charts. If this doesn't convince you, I don't know what will.
Now, I don't actually expect this to convince you of anything, but I'd like to offer this: Given that there is a paucity of data to indicate that abstinence-only programs have been effective, and given that your religious inclinations would lead you to believe the religious option is the more effective one, would you please acknowledge that the data does not support your position and that you rely on faith when it comes to sex education?
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