kokonut
New Member
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2006
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Posts #28, 29, 39, 50, 77, 90, and 91. Also evidenced by your refusal to answer why you aren't promoting the same sort of incentive for boys to keep their penis in their pants.
My, my, my....still insecure over the $1 thing?
Post 28 - first line of defense for girls is to say "no" rather than risk pregnancy. You CANNOT get any simpler than that. Unless you are saying, Jillio, that this shouldn't be an option for girls to have??
Post 29 - talks about the program and how it helps girls to be independent thinkers. Unless you are saying that girls should not learn to be responsible and make critical decisions on their own??
Post 39 - I bascially re-iterated post #28. Again, you seem to be objecting that girls should not have the option to say "No" which is really their first line of defense against pregnacy. After all it is they who risk getting pregnant. Completely understable if they choose not to risk that. Do you?
Post 50 - I clarified here further.
"First line of defense, a girl says "No."
Second line of defense if sex is decided by both is to have protected sex but even that is not a 100% guarantee that pregnancy."
"...no means no, and not "Yes, I want to have sex." If she says, "Yes" then responsibility falls on them both the girl and boy."
There are two possible decisions here. Either the girl says "no" to sex, or if both decides to have sex then protected sex would be the best option in reducing the risk for pregnancy. Unless you are saying of course that this decision process is wrong and irresponsible?? Seems like it.
Post 77 - Basically a re-iteration of post #50. I also clarified again.
"If she so *decides* to have sex, then she should understand the potential risk (as well as her partner) weighed against wanting to go to college "unecumbered." That is, both share the responsibility of sex.
Post 90 - Makes a point about self-esteem. You seem to have a problem for girls to have greater self-esteem and self-reliance when it comes whether one wants to have sex or not?
"Learning to say "no" or learning to make crucial and critical decisions regarding to having sex is a message of self-esteem, greater responsibility and self-reliance. Nobody, especially teen girls, should feel the pressure to have sex.
Post 91 - talks about responsibility of sex falls on both boy and girl. It also talks about that the girl does have the option to say "No" to have sex. Seems like you are somehow advocating that a girl's first decision (e.g. first line of defense) shouldn't include the word "no" when it comes to sex??? What you want her to say, Jillio? Yes to having sex? What exactly your message on the girls' part when it comes to deciding on sex? Especially if they have the desire on wanting to go to college, presumably so unencumbered.
"If *both* decide to have sex and the teenage girl gets pregnant then *both* female and male teens are equally responsible for the pregnancy result. And not just the teenage girl. That's been made clear numerous times in this thread. I have three girls, one is 15 soon to be 16. I encourage my oldest daughter to think critically and think ahead first should she ever decide to have sex and risk pregnancy. She is very college bound and seeks to work in the legal field someday. It's a simple matter of whether she wants to risk the chance to ruin or delay going to college because she decided to have sex or that she abstain and reap the opportunity of going to college unecumbered. It's about thinking critically and using common sense.
Hey, I'd rather have my girls be critical of their own decision process as far as consequences go, especially if they want to go to college someday. It's better to fear getting pregnant for the chance to go to college unencumbered. Don't you agree? So, who is the better person to say, "no" first when approached the decision to have sex or not?

Right.

Be thankful that the program was able to produce teens who were able to think independently, criticallly and be accountable only to themselves. Else, without the help they probably would have never gotten to college. A step in the right direction. But people here sounds more like they'd be content in seeing that this doesn't happen. And that's a shame.
Puyo!!!