Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Why is it so important to you to expose children to sexual content?
DP. Why do you feel the need to make bad faith arguments to support your position? Do you not have any meritorious ones?
How is that a bad faith argument? That’s literally the point of this discussion.
Are you against sex ed in schools?
NP. By Planned Parenthood or anyone else with an agenda? Yes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Why is it so important to you to expose children to sexual content?
DP. Why do you feel the need to make bad faith arguments to support your position? Do you not have any meritorious ones?
How is that a bad faith argument? That’s literally the point of this discussion.
Are you against sex ed in schools?
NP. By Planned Parenthood or anyone else with an agenda? Yes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Why is it so important to you to expose children to sexual content?
DP. Why do you feel the need to make bad faith arguments to support your position? Do you not have any meritorious ones?
Do you have an issue with public tax dollars being used to purchase books that depict pedophilia (with illustrations) for school libraries?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Why is it so important to you to expose children to sexual content?
DP. Why do you feel the need to make bad faith arguments to support your position? Do you not have any meritorious ones?
How is that a bad faith argument? That’s literally the point of this discussion.
Are you against sex ed in schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Why is it so important to you to expose children to sexual content?
Lol. Have you seen American tv and Hollywood films of the past 3 decades? Do you live in a bubble where teenagers know nothing at all about sex and don’t think about sexual attraction?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Why is it so important to you to expose children to sexual content?
DP. Why do you feel the need to make bad faith arguments to support your position? Do you not have any meritorious ones?
How is that a bad faith argument? That’s literally the point of this discussion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Why is it so important to you to expose children to sexual content?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Why is it so important to you to expose children to sexual content?
DP. Why do you feel the need to make bad faith arguments to support your position? Do you not have any meritorious ones?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Why is it so important to you to expose children to sexual content?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
I seem to remember conservatives squawking about how “nobody has a right to not be offended” every time Trump said something awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.
It' not the "conservative perspective" rather the one that offends the fewest stakeholders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am absolutely troubled by children viewing pornography.
Any and all.
I can see where there is a time, age, and place for this.
Young people need to have a place that is safe to ask questions.
I would like to her from child psychologists on this.
It’s really weird that you keep calling it pornography, which the internet says is “printed or visual material containing the explicit description or display of sexual organs or activity, intended to stimulate erotic rather than aesthetic or emotional feelings.” I don’t look at that book and those images and think that’s erotic. What about a bundle of grass looks erotic to you?
There’s an image of a bl@wjob. Sorry, most people would consider that NSFW and not appropriate in school.
It’s a book. A comic book. FFS. Can guarantee most teenagers have seen way more explicit stuff
And what about sex ed. Do you want to ban images there? Are you the sort of parent who thinks non-reproductive sex shouldn’t be discussed in sex ed classes?
Clearly we’re not going to agree on this issue. I’d like to think, in the absence of an agreement, that typically one would err on the side of caution. If there is a significant segment of parents who don’t want sexual content available to kids in school, wouldn’t it make sense that it’s appropriate to not have these materials available? We eliminate Halloween celebrations, mentions of Christmas and Easter out of respect for different people’s religious viewpoints. Why is the same consideration not given for sexual content in schools?
No. I am afraid the default position cannot be that the conservative perspective wins in the absence of agreement.