February 8, 2012

Books, News/Commentary

Red Sex…Blue Sex…Why Do So Many Evangelical Teens Get Pregnant?

Cheree Cleghorn | October 30, 2008

News

“The “sexual début” of an evangelical girl typically occurs just after she turns sixteen,” says this story.

The article explores the differences between “red state” and “blue state” parents, their teenagers and their attitudes toward sex among young people.

Anti-sex ed. Pro sex-ed.

Contraception is good. Contraception suggests you are bad, you planned this.

What horrifies red state parents is the opposite of what horrifies blue state parents.

….”A handful of social scientists and family-law scholars have recently begun looking closely at this split. Last year, Mark Regnerus, a sociologist at the University of Texas at Austin, published a startling book called “Forbidden Fruit: Sex and Religion in the Lives of American Teenagers,” and he is working on a follow-up that includes a section titled “Red Sex, Blue Sex.”

Read quickly, adults.

There is no time to waste.

The New Yorker

“In early September, when Sarah Palin, the Republican candidate for Vice-President, announced that her unwed seventeen-year-old daughter, Bristol, was pregnant, many liberals were shocked, not by the revelation but by the reaction to it. They expected the news to dismay the evangelical voters that John McCain was courting with his choice of Palin. Yet reports from the floor of the Republican Convention, in St. Paul, quoted dozens of delegates who seemed unfazed, or even buoyed, by the news. A delegate from Louisiana told CBS News, “Like so many other American families who are in the same situation, I think it’s great that she instilled in her daughter the values to have the child and not to sneak off someplace and have an abortion.” A Mississippi delegate claimed that “even though young children are making that decision to become pregnant, they’ve also decided to take responsibility for their actions and decided to follow up with that and get married and raise this child.” Palin’s family drama, delegates said, was similar to the experience of many socially conservative Christian families. As Marlys Popma, the head of evangelical outreach for the McCain campaign, told National Review, “There hasn’t been one evangelical family that hasn’t gone through some sort of situation.” In fact, it was Popma’s own “crisis pregnancy” that had brought her into the movement in the first place.”

Source:  The New Yorker, November 3, 2008

Topics: Books, News/Commentary

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