Let me say that again,
The Abortion / Birth Control industry is the one lobbying for Comprehensive sex education in schools across the United States.Just like their other campaigns, birth control /abortion advocates use compelling words & phrases. In the case of sex education, the key word is SCIENTIFIC. Here are some Quick Scientific Facts about the Teenage Brain from a recent study:
- The brain is still developing during the teen years ...the teen brain is not a finished product, but is a work in progress.
- the greatest changes to the parts of the brain that are responsible for functions such as
self-control, judgment, emotions, and organization occur between puberty and adulthood - So you see a lot of this in your teens, right? Poor decision-making, recklessness, and emotional outbursts
- Psychologically, teens are big children.
So, how well do you think your reckless teen will handle the barrage of sex information (where abstinence is not emphasized, mentioned for 1 day & sex, sex, sex, sex, sex, sex, sex, sex the remaining days)? How would YOU have handled it when you were a teen? Ahhhh...
One more interesting fact, majority of teens are prolife according to a Gallup survey so this is a way for the multimillion abortion / birth control industry to expand to an even bigger market. Interested to know how much "nonprofit" abortion/birth control giant Planned Parenthood is already making?
It is also worth nothing that more than 50% of abortions are due to birth control failure. Yes, you read that right. In the US, according to pro-abortion Alan Guttmacher Institute,
- "54% of women who have abortions had used a contraceptive method", AND
- 48% of induced abortions are repeat procedures!
BOTTOM LINE: Please protect your teenager from the abortion / birth control industry. Protect their future.
Suggested Reading:
Study Links Depression and Suicide Rates to Teen Sex
Teen Sex Linked To Regret and Abortions in Later Adult Life
Contraception and Sex Education: A Trojan Horse for Abortion
The Pitfalls of Sex Education
Behavior: A Snapshot of Teen Sex
CDC: Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance - United States, 2007 (PDF)
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