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4 juin 2010

incidents-creative

In the U.S., a Washington-based non-profit called the Coalition for Positive Sexuality provides information, resources and an online forum to teens, advising them that access to candid sex information is their right. Its "Just Say Yes" campaign says, "we're tired of people telling us what we can and can't do. There's no preaching. No moralizing. Just the facts." In addition to all the standard safer-sex information, CPS's website offers suggestions for safe and fun ways cheap silver jewelry can "get off." The idea being that if you want to steer kids away from the riskiest types of behaviours, you have to provide them with fun, creative alternatives. (Among its suggestions: "suck, kiss, touch, bite, fondle, nibble, squeeze, and lick" and "look at sexy pictures and videos." The list gets more explicit from there.) One of CPS's promotional posters features three teenage girls whispering to each other, one of whom is holding an open binder filled with little plastic bottles. "The secret to great sex ..." the tag line reads: "water-based Jube!" The vast majority of Canadian parents-more than 85 per cent-agree that some type of sex education tiffany jewellery be mandatory in schools. But what's harder to agree on is content-the what, the how and the how much. In the past two years, a spate of high-profile incidents-creative flourishes of individual educators- has had more parents wondering what actually goes on in the tiffany necklaces for sale. In Winnipeg, for instance, parents were irate after a public health nurse allegedly introduced 12-year-olds to flavoured condoms. More recently, a teacher in Cambridge, Ont., sent Grade 9 boys to the local drugstore to buy condoms, and then had them race back to be the first to affix one onto a wooden penis. Speed is, after all, of the essence in the real world, too. But perhaps no one has caused more of a ruckus over pleasure-focused sex ed than the British government. InJuIy, Britain's National Health Service published a pamphlet for teens called "Pleasure"- featuring the slogan, "An orgasm a day keeps the doctor away"- that made headlines around the world. The pamphlet advised youth that they have the "right" to a pleasurable sex life, and that regular intercourse can be a good cardiovascular activity: "Health promotion experts advocate five portions of fruit and veg a day and 30 minutes' physical activity three times a week," it says. "What about sex or masturbation twice a week?"

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