Yep, Still hate them

I loathe Millennials, I laugh at them, mock them and in the future will go out of my way to avoid them and since I am going forward with my Silent Vow that will eliminate the need to have an idle chatter with them at all.

Why I hate them – they are arrogant and ignorant. This group of coddled, group hugged and safe spaced to death bore the shit out of me.  The young women are either sluts or prick teases. And no they are not flirting they have no clue what that is thanks to sex education that came via the internet and social skills that are again emojis.  My favorite is their need to break their sexuality down to numbers. That is a good plan how human of you. Spock beam me up!

 They are sure that by fucking anything of any gender makes them au courant.  No you are a slut.  Yes I am shaming you.  As they say it takes one to know one and I certainly was but I kept my mouth shut, (well as I mean verbally discussing my sex life)  practiced safe sex, was #MeToo and sexually harassed and I made a lot of mistakes and I grew up. Then we have the prick teases, these are the girls who are sure if they withhold sex, only practice oral or anal then talk endlessly about nothing to no one in particular about the relationship they have when they are not really having any kind of relationship.  You know where you fight, you negotiate, you compromise, you walk out and back in, have make up sex, meet their family, their friends and have full exchange of life. Nope you have your friends and never the twain shall meet until you get a ring on it and then they become your “best friend” for life and everyone else is fucked off.  Well until a child comes then it is your childhood, lather, rinse, repeat.  My fucking god you are boring.

It should also explain the idiocy of Silicon Valley from Uber to WeWork.

I read this in The Guardian today and thought: Yes, how true. Especially this:

 Two years ago, research published by the Royal Society for Public Health found that a quarter of people aged 18-34 believed it was normal for older people to be unhappy and depressed – and across all age groups, nearly a third of people surveyed agreed with the statement “being lonely is just something that happens when people get old”. Strikingly, two-thirds of the respondents said they had no friends with an age gap of 30 years or more.

And this speaks volumes:

To make things even worse, the insecure realities of 21st-century life for younger people have fostered the idea that if older people have been lucky enough to buy their home and receive a half-decent pension, that somehow characterises them as the recipients of unjust luxury. These things have fed into a dysfunctional mess of stuff that resonates with where we have ended up: the key issue right now may be the rank incompetence of people in government, but our attitudes to older people are relevant, at least.

Now as we enter the election year it is not lost on me that both candidates are white men over 70 and that Bernie Sanders, the Millennial man of the year was as well.  Go figure but women who were all over the age and race gap were dutifully ignored.  Mother issues much?

Now the ugly truth about the way we warehouse the elderly and shove them into facilities that do anything but provide substandard care and in turn how the Covid virus devastated their residents. That all of this supposed lockdown was to prevent the elderly of which I am one from the Covid virus.  Okay then and where is my free lunch on wheels then?

One thing I learned in Nashville was that the supposed Christian youth were not very Christian. They had massive drinking problems, were prodigious liars and fucked like bunnies while professing to be good Christians.   Dump, Fuck, Hump, Suck all week and Thump on Sunday and lather, rinse, repeat on Monday.  I only met one individual whose Christianity was genuine and well practiced and he truly found love and joy from his dedication to Christ, the rest not so much.  Ben has since left Nashville and has a coffee shop in North Carolina and I hope his business succeeds as he deserves it.

This in contrast to my one friend whose obsession with the Bible is bizarre to the point of extreme and wants to be a Minister. Really? I have yet see him finish anything to completion and has waves of anger and rage that are well not very Christian, chase girls to the point of extreme almost like a 14 year old as this was his first time away from home so that led him on the pussy patrol in the most unhealthy way.   And he lies like no one I have ever met in my lifetime.

And what is more hideous is the Bible born misogyny and that hate of women is vested in scripture and what a way to validate and shame.  This essay in Medium sums up that quite horrifically. 

Misery loves company and no one loves misery more than a Millennial. They are the social media scolds, the endless outers and tattlers of their generation. They want everyone to feel their pain so have at it and I feel it alright, all right up my ass like anal warts.  They are sheep down to their Billie Ellish obsession who is pretty not good.

But OK Boomer!  What.ever. The ageism that will result from this will be a tsunami as the Millennial has to blame, point fingers and decry anything that shakes their world view and this is a quake sized shake.

 Get Woke you narcissistic morons you are the reason we are on lockdown as you ran amok for weeks ignoring the virus, having brunch and playing contact sports.  Dr. Brix was the first to even comment about that in the early days.  It is your fault assholes. Live with that.

And I am not alone with my thoughts on exactly what Millennials are – lazy fuckwits.  From the Atlantic:

So we dug into the data. The resultsfor civic engagement were clear: Millennials were less likely than Boomers and even GenXers to say they thought about social problems, to be interested in politics and government, to contact public officials, or to work for a political campaign. They were less likely to say they trusted the government to do what’s right, and less likely to say they were interested in government and current events. It was a far cry from Howe and Strauss’ prediction of Millennials as “The Next Great Generation” in civic involvement. 

Millennials were also less likely to say they did things in their daily lives to conserve energy and help the environment, and less likely to agree that government should take action on environmental issues. With all of the talk about Millennials being “green,” I expected these items to be the exception. Instead, they showed some of the largest declines. Three times as many Millennials as Boomers said they made no personal effort to help the environment. 

I found this in Entrepreneur Magazine and this I agree with and even the Boomer comment at the end.

1. They have a sense of entitlement.

Maybe we should blame social media and the Internet. The stereotypical millennial is addicted to immediate gratification — and it’s not usually deserved. Straight from their entry-level positions, millennials demand from their employers to be inspired and entertained, to be immediately recognized for their work and made to feel as though they are changing the world.

I don’t think I sound like a fuddy-duddy when I say: get real. Employees don’t automatically receive these things. You earn recognition. You earn more meaningful projects. You have to go above and beyond what is expected. You don’t get awards and high-fives for just showing up.

2. They have a tendency to overshare on social media.

We know that young people have a problem sharing naked pictures of themselves on Snapchat. But workforce-ready millennials apparently also have a problem oversharing their important thoughts on sites such as Medium.

Take, for example, the 2,400-word blistering missive a young woman named Talia Jane wrote about the poor wages paid to entry-level types at Yelp/Eat24, where she worked. She addressed the post specifically to Jeremy Stoppelmann, Yelp’s co-founder and CEO. Unfortunately, Jane’s many, many passages about the high cost of living in San Francisco didn’t elicit the sympathy she presumably was hoping for. Nor was the very public post appreciated by her managers. (Jane was fired following her anti-Yelp rant.)

Related: 3 New Truths About Millennials and Their Careers

This weekend’s NYT article talked about Joel Pavelski, director of programming at Mic, a news site created by and for millennials. He told his bosses that he needed a week off to attend a funeral back home in Wisconsin. You can imagine how confused and disappointed they were when they discovered an essay he wrote on Medium describing how he spent his time off building a treehouse — not attending a funeral. He even started the post this way: “I said that I was leaving town for a funeral, but I lied.”

Unlike Jane, Pavelski was given a second chance. But what compelled these individuals to write these public posts? Social media is a wonderful means to communicate ideas, but it can be costly without a filter and a healthy dose of common sense.

3. Frankness verging on insubordination.

The NYT article also highlighted a few situations where entry-level millennials approached their company leaders to say or do things their bosses deemed inappropriate for the workplace. I’ve had similar experiences with millennial-age employees that left me to think, “Did they really just say that? To their boss? In public?”

Speaking your mind is one thing. It should be encouraged. But it’s detrimental without the filter of respect.

Millennial reality check.

It seems that a lot of traditional media have it out for millennials. The Atlantic hypothesized that millennials might be the most narcissistic generation of all time. The New York Post proclaimed that millennials need to “put away the juice boxes and grow up.”

In a February article, the NYT suggested that millennials are so lazy they’ve stopped eating cereal because they can’t be bothered to wash the bowl when they’re done. Just, wow.

These stories, and the descriptions above, feed into the millennial stereotype. Sure, some millennials think and behave this way. But they don’t all fit the stereotype. Many understand that big rewards require hard work and sacrifice.

Poor workplace decisions aren’t the product of one generation. There are plenty of gen Xers who act like idiots, too. Baby boomers aren’t immune to poor judgement either.

Dear Millennial

I blame you and your generation for this all. The failure of Democracy to protect us during a pandemic, for your obsession over safe space, pronouns, sexual abuse, opioid addiction, the police state we now live in, for Silicon Valley, social media and basically for being over educated under employed fuckwits.

In my book Conversations with Morons you will be featured predominately as you are the most narcissistic group of assholes I have ever met and I have me a lot of assholes in my 60 years of living. Okay with that says the Boomer.

You are snarky morons who are constantly afraid of your shadows, whose Mommy’s picked your friends, set up your play dates, did your homework, made you hyper competitive, who became your carpool//soccer mom who baked organic treats and taught you how to be super snobby and arrogant while not being anyone or doing anything of import.  Well if you consider re-branding Taxi’s as “ride sharing” and adding an A to BnB. Yes you are super smart and important.

Your sex life are non-existent or they are sick and ripe with weird commitment issues so you veil in in Polyamory, Asexuality or some other word to avoid any intimacy of any kind.

The idea of social media appeals along with the idiocy of being an Influencer as that just means you go to someplace, somewhere where someone else went and take a better picture.  You are measured by your followers who may or may not be real or be even more self involved and stupider than you as their parents did not get them the right tutors or pay the right bribes to get them into the right schools to pay excessive tuition in which to enter life in an assload of debt. Even Twitter was hijacked by the old crazy grandpa in the White House. Take that and shove it.

You are right now surely afraid or utterly oblivious to the pandemic and pretend to think that this is all a game and you are the reason the Daddy’s have come down hard and closed parks, slipping the noose around are necks by having curfews and telling us all to STAY HOME.  For your generation the idea of personal responsibility is an anathema as you have no concept of others and what it means to respect them as you should yourself by not sneezing or coughing everywhere or simply staying home when sick.    By being upset when someone stands in front of you without asking you for permission and of course giving you the side eye which leads to drunken violence that leads to more crackdowns on behavior.  Daddy punishes all the children because of the acts of one.

Serious morons you need the Government to tell you how to wash your hands? And do you wash after wiping your ass or do you need instructions on that? Well you are hoarding toilet paper which tells me again, Mommy issues!

You are secretly scared and yet competitive with friends as you want to be the one who crushed Covid but you just lost your stupid fake tech job and now have no health care and you soon won’t be able to afford the overpriced apartment you live in to prove how cool you are.

You are the reasons public transport has collapsed as you want it all green and cool so you pretend to be green by buying a hybrid or an electric Tesla despite there are no charging stations so you actually cannot go anywhere but then that would require you to actually think and do something on your own and that Millennial is impossible.  You are sheep and sheep are stupid.  No wonder we eat lambs at Easter as that young meat tastes fresh like spring.  But we cannot have spring because we are prisoners in our homes thanks to your disregard of warnings and of course reading and stuff that would have told you what was waiting around the corner. You are the reasons newspapers and magazines have collapsed because you refuse to do anything that anyone else did as it is not meaningful in your vacuous lives.  Reading is so UNessential.

OK Boomer I will stay home comfort in the knowing you are bringing me all my food and booze and other essentials and I will stay healthy and you will get sick and I don’t care as there are more of you where you came from and you are replaceable.  You are meaningless and I don’t give one flying fuck about you either.

The New Millennium

I have no problem admitting I struggle with Millennials and while they are the largest cohort I communicate with in Nashville I often blame the South/Nashville/Education or lack thereof as the primary reason behind my issues with them.  To say age is a factor is something I struggle with as I love kids and until I moved here never had a problem communicating with younger people or so I thought.  And that was after observing  children behave in manners that were truly disturbing and troubling and most if not almost all the children were faces of color and that color was largely black.  The violence and aggression crosses color lines here but again as they are the largest cohort in the dumpsters I call schools here it made me wonder what this all meant.    As a result, I went on a self examination and introspection that had me questioning my attitudes toward race, religion, gender and what I thought was poverty.  And since that time I have found that yes I have changed towards all of those things and mostly just a hyper awareness of it and in ways that does affect how I interact and engage with those who I decide to communicate with.   So in other words I self isolate and upon occasion share a thought or two, often regret it but still try to manage a positive sense of being in which to rescue myself from self hate as I don’t want to become a different person from this but it may be too late. 

So no I cannot blame Millennials solely for most of my failures to communicate as I have tried to communicate with those closer in my peer group and that too was largely a dud so now I just put on the happy face and talk about “stuff” like free concerts or other bland observations that frankly is boring but better than nothing.  But I still look to the largest population cohort in the U.S. and shake my head as this is not a good thing. 

But again I spend most of my time lecturing, scolding and reminding the millennial to register to vote and in turn vote.  Here in Tennessee they don’t do either and it shows.   But there is more to it here than age it is a type of resignation and frankly laziness that dominates the culture here.  I have never met so many people so marginalized and so unwilling to ask questions, seek resolutions or grow in their pursuit of knowledge. The fear that dominates the landscape here is like the endless dark that dominates Iceland for several months of the year and yet they seem to function fine and why those without such isolation cannot boggles the mind.

I was watching CBS Morning News and they had sponsored a survey with Refinery 29 about Millennial women and voting patterns and the answers were surprising.  Well if you actually knew the real ones that you don’t work with but the ones who work in the community you live, that hold marginal jobs and are partnered in relationships that they play at unconventional but are as conventional as the ones the generations before had then no you would not know how conservative, pedantic, dogmatic and provincial they really are.

This from Refinery 29 regarding Politics:

Right now that is an open question. According to the Refinery29/CBS News poll, the women of this generation hold the most negative views of the Trump presidency of any age group. By more than 2 to 1 millennial women want to see Democrats win control of Congress. And yet: While 70% of millennial women said they are “dissatisfied” or “angry” with the direction of the Trump Administration, only 30% said they will “definitely” vote this fall.

 I am not sure what to make of this other than laziness and complicity that I find throughout Nashville which now at least makes me feel slightly better about Nashville as I blamed the city for what is a larger scale problem statewide but the new folks migrating here only further exacerbate the problem.

Again I meet many people and again the Doctor who I encountered and was looking for love in all the wrong places seemed to be oblivious to his own City and well anything going on in his own backyard.  That did not seem to stop him however from wanting to get into my backyard so again his behavior led me back to Nashville as a city in flux and the people even more confused as a result.  What dominates is the concept of opportunism and in turn that struggle with what that means and in America it means one thing – wealth.  An absurd concept linked to the lottery mentality of Meritocracy. 

The other day I met a family that have never set foot in the public library located in Downtown Nashville despite the fact that their daughter lived in the apartment building right next door.  Intellectual curiosity much?   They were from St. Louis and have lived here two years and were nice people but stupid, they fit in well.  This is America.  As I have come to learn the illiteracy that dominates this culture comes from history where oral stories and histories compensated for the laws that prevented many from reading and writing.   Well this is the new millennium and that time is gone but history like the water runs deep with the blood of the past. 

And now this area of the country has money pouring into it thanks to legislative acts to give as many tax breaks and perks for companies to relocate here and in turn exploit the ill educated workforce to pay them substandard wages and in turn make the states “right to work” to prevent union organization securing low wages indefinitely.   And now we have a growing city and people commuting hours to minimum wage jobs as they have relocated here from their varying shitholes to find work.  When you move from Minneapolis and Florida to get a waiter’s gig here you must have been living in a shithole as that makes no sense.  But sense is for Horses clearly here.

Millennials will follow sheep as long as its cool. The ones who are ill educated and ill informed need this and they do little to change the reality.  It’s thumbs up or down and a world of like or followers is what matters, they see the immediate not the long term and hence they don’t give a flying fuck.   Anything that is done to improve the quality of life doesn’t.   I am seeing it here with one business opening one after another and I wonder who is funding all this.  I see major issues coming if these businesses cannot sustain the loans or payments to investors in reasonable time frame as we are seeing with regards to Gibson Guitars what can happen.  So you see why they don’t want change as change only brings the small kind and that doesn’t trickle down.

We have a wealthy adjacemt county that I keep hearing about and supposedly should go teach at struggle with funding education and in turn their students in need of hygiene products. Really you are that wealthy and can’t get a girl a feminine napkin or tampon?  Interesting.

And it appears the bloom and the rose are meeting to discuss when those petals will fall as the growth is on the decline which means more low paying jobs and more businesses shuttering. But that is okay as another will open in its place with no more logic or reason.  And try discussing this with Millennials – crickets.  For the supposed enlightened ones they are in need of new bulb.  I have no energy anymore as how can you rationalize with people who don’t see the need to be rational.   And to prove this I had a discussion about kids with a young woman who informed me she hates kids and when she has kids she will make her husband raise them.  There is so much wrong with that statement it was hard for me to even try to explain that loving your own children is not a healthy thing as you want your children to be well adjusted socially and if you hate other children how does that work when it comes to school, to social settings and other times when you must mix with other families in which to enable your kids to participate?   She had not thought of that.  Okay then.

This is just one of many conversations I have had since relocating here.  They have no value of education and the outgoing Governor’s Drive to 55 pledge goes with him.  There is no way 55% of the population here will have some type of post secondary education. They haven’t needed it now and they see no need for it for the future as clearly they don’t have a Magic 8 Ball in which to see what happens in the new Millennium.

  

See It Say It

 I watched the nationwide recognition efforts by citizens and groups across the country honoring those who have died in military service for America.  I do believe it should be across the services as we forget that there are many others who have been in service to our country that led to the end of their lives.  Start with Teachers who were killed in Public Schools or other innocents who were only trying to serve the country by attending school, going to a movie or even shopping.  Yes we have many causalities thanks to gun violence and war is one way, living in a country that enables anyone to get a gun and use it to wreak havoc another.

Here in Nashville they wet themselves over Military and Police and there was a what I expected – nothing.  Some of the outlying areas did acknowledge the day but here we covered another stabbing and murder of a man who rented a room to another who decided to memorialize him in a plastic bin in a closet.  

It has temporarily quieted down as school is just out and I suspect the crazy will ratchet up in the next few weeks.  I was away in Pittsburgh for a few days and came home to find my planter box thrown half way down the street and a package stolen.  I love that my neighbors noted none of it.  Gee you did not see the planter sitting in the middle of the sidewalk there?   This is Nashville – stupid and a lot of it.

I have said repeatedly that the children are the reflection of the population at large – violent, angry, stupid.  It colors my entire world view of the city and places me in a distinct position of trusting no one nor respecting anyone for their role in enabling this via their simple lack of engagement.  The local Mayor “election” took place and the current Mayor who assumed his role was naturally re-elected by 53% of the vote.  This seemed to surprise the local paper as his closest contender was a strange woman who is a Fox commentator, Carol Swain, with 23% of the vote.  The entire opposition was largely members of the black community and of course that split the vote and frankly was for reasons unclear as the gig is for 18 months and why spend the money and time unless this was a feeler to see if they should run in in the major election.  The answer is no.  Of course here in Nashville that is racist speak as how dare you say anything critical about a Black person as you must be racist. For the record there was another right wing white dude who go 0% so what.the.fuck.ever.  Again this is Nashville – stupid and a lot of it.  

So Friday brought another school shooting and a Teacher took the kid out with a basketball and tackling him. Wait for that to be the next solution, arming Teachers with sporting equipment and learning martial arts.  Beats the rock idea or eliminating doors which have all been mentioned. Gun control? Fuck no.  Here is where America is a lot like Nashville – stupid and a lot of it.

The increasing violence will have lasting affects.  I can’t stress that enough.  As I have been exposed to the most damaged children I have ever met in my 20 years in schools, I have had enough. I like living and after being out of Nashville for four days I found myself appreciating living and walking and talking to normal people in a normal city that embraces working class and moves to the future with a measured affect.  I am so appreciative of Darryl the Lyft Driver who made my last hours in the city memorable.  Thank you for being a gracious host. 

Come to Nashville and meet what poverty has wrought – violence and stupidity.  Great deadly combo.  From now on I am going to say it as I see it.  Life is truly too short to do otherwise. 

Have You Ever Seen Someone Be Killed?

A single data point that complicates how we think about who is in prison.

By Emily Badger
The New York Times
May 25, 2018

Researchers with the Boston Reentry Study were one year into their interviews, following 122 men and women as they returned from prison to their neighborhoods and families, when they asked the kind of question that’s hard to broach until you know someone well.

They prompted the study’s participants to think back to childhood. “Did you ever see someone get killed during that time?”

Childhood violence, including deadly violence, kept coming up in the previous conversations. The references suggested a level of childhood trauma among people leaving prison that standard survey questions don’t capture. And so the researchers wanted to be methodical — to ask everyone, directly, just like this.

The answers, among hundreds of other questions the study explored, give insight into the life trajectories that precede prison, and the limitations of the criminal justice system that places people there. In total, 42 percent of the study’s participants said “yes.”

That shocked even the investigators.

“I’ve never seen anyone be killed; I’m 54 years old, and I think I will probably not see that in my life,” said Bruce Western, a Harvard sociologist who describes the study in the new book “Homeward.” “And it was incredibly common in the lives of the respondents we talked to.”

Among these children — many who would later commit violence themselves, enter prison and struggle to re-enter society — some witnessed a killing more than once. So the statistic is an understatement, Mr. Western said.

Across their entire lives, the people in the study variously acted as offender, victim, participant and witness to violence, sometimes multiple roles at a time. That reality is messier than the one the criminal justice system recognizes.

“There is an unstated assumption deep in the DNA of criminal justice jurisprudence that the world divides into two categories, and there are victims and offenders,” Mr. Western said. “And the system delivers a certain kind of accountability by punishing offenders on behalf of victims.”

That clear line disappears, though, in the life histories of these former prisoners. Most of them were raised in poverty, in chaotic environments where routines and adult supervision were rare, and where their families were under stress.

Violence was common, not because poor people are more prone to it, but because poverty shapes social interaction in a way that makes violence more likely, research suggests. Anyone dropped into the same environment, Mr. Western said, could be swept up by violence, too.

Studies show that children who experience trauma are more likely later in life to suffer from asthma, depression, unemployment, and they’re also more likely to use drugs. The more trauma a child faces, the higher these odds. Children perform less well on standardized tests right after violent crimes have occurred in their neighborhood — even if they didn’t personally witness the violence.

The typical measures of trauma — “adverse childhood experiences” that include growing up in a household with physical or substance abuse — don’t gauge anything quite like witnessing lethal violence. That distress alters the picture of the population the Boston Reentry Study followed: These adults in the criminal justice system were once children exposed to awful things.

What, then, is to be done with the knowledge that four in 10 prisoners typical to the Massachusetts state prison system saw someone killed as a child?

Mr. Western argues that this should force us to reconsider the simplified model of offenders-and-victims, and to allow more second chances to people we peg in the first category.

“The whole ethical foundation of our system of punishment I think is threatened once you take into account the reality of people’s lives,” he said. In the study, the people who had experienced the most extreme childhood trauma and violence also struggled the most in adulthood with drug addiction and mental and health problems. The line between the two is not straightforward. But it’s also not irrelevant.

Mr. Western is not proposing a sentencing formula — say, additional mercy for each adverse childhood experience. But there is some precedent for the philosophy he describes: When well-off, otherwise successful young adults get into trouble, we often take the entirety of their lives into account in punishing them. Supporters say “but he’s a good kid,” and lawyers argue “but he has a bright future.” We consider counselors and treatment programs, not just prison.

By contrast, for the poor, Mr. Western said, an entire life is more often reduced to the criminal event at hand: “There’s neither a past, nor a future.”

We are Screwed

I came to the conclusion yesterday while at the hairdresser in conversation with her about the state of the union in relation to current events that there are no solutions, there will be no change when it comes to the issue of guns, race, mental health or well any issue that divides the country.  We can only do our best to live by the Golden Rule and teach our children or model the behavior in a way that enables us to be happy with our life and our life choices.

She is trying to find a public school here in Nashville that will enable her daughter to be expressive and learn in her own manner.  She has evaluated all the testing results of school in her area and is worried.  My first comment: “This is Kindergarten how do tests affect that?” But this Nashville and the reality is that is how the choose to define children here.  They are not precious snowflakes but data.  How healthy!   I directed her to a Charter school that may be a good fit but again all schools here are enrolled by lottery.  Once again it explains quite a bit as education here is a game of chance.

Then I walked home and my neighbors were outside as it is 80 degrees in February so thank you Global Warming and we had a brief discussion on the current division in politics.  And I added that this will only get worse as we are further isolated and divided from speaking to each other in a civil open minded manner that at least enables us to hear another individuals perspective and they ours and find a common ground that we could agree upon and in turn resolve conflict or at least find common ground.

I said that my feelings about Nashville has always been conflicted by my health issues as when you struggle with ongoing treatments that your focus is always on that and my relationship with Vanderbilt still remains on shaky ground.  I trust the primary care givers but everyone else I don’t and it is those whom I contact and deal with most often and in turn it affects my perspective on how to pursue my long term needs.   And that goes for the city itself.  I see everything through the prism of children.  I have a hard time saying anything positive about any of the children I have encountered.  Almost every attempt and encounter is marred by children and their hostile bizarre behavior that truly disturbs me professionally and personally.  I actually go into a classroom with the ultimate goal of not speaking at all or the bare minimum.  I think I managed Friday speaking for two minutes. I did not bother with attendance, I threw it in the trash and after the last class I put a sign on the door to direct them to the Auditorium for a performance and in turn walked out the door.  As I left I heard a Teacher talking at the top of his voice (to some screaming but it is tone I am well aware) to shut up sit down and a door slam and directions that were utterly hostile.  I kept walking and burst out laughing.

And I have said and said this to my neighbors that no I am not a human shield and I have no super skills to protect kids, secure doors or even remotely know what to do here and in turn could given the problems I have had communicating with both kids and staff here so I would literally walk out the door and direct maybe one kid to do his best helping his classmates and walk out.  They seemed shocked but again I have explained that I have been through this many times in Seattle and there are no winners in these scenarios only dead people.  I am into flight not fight. And I said you have to ask yourself what that means.  I have no full time employment in the schools here, few know me by name, the kids ignore me in the best of times.   And unless you scream like that Teacher I overheard and have done myself and experienced you get nothing.  But what I amusing that even while sitting there they are completely oblivious to me or think I am deaf or invisible or that disengaged as the conversations I have overheard are disturbing and led me to barricade myself in a class once during lunch as I was scared shitless after hearing a conversation to the point I asked an passing Teacher what I should do with this info and his response, “What color are they?”  Okay then nevermind

So really you expect me to take a bullet?  At one school, I became afraid  when kids were following across the classroom with a laser pen to the point I felt it was akin to target practice.  When I asked to leave I ignored and shoved into a holding room until end of day. Finally I walked out asked for an Administrator  and she she was at the buses for dismissal and it was there was told I could leave – on the same metro buses!   Okay, so I refused that offer and said I will call an Uber.  She  then berated for complaining and not understanding “their” kids.   At that moment a block away an un-realted shooting occurred. Good thing I did not walk in that direction!   Then two weeks ago at the same time this same school was getting out a kid was shot and killed, two hours later another shooting two blocks away. Retaliation? Again do you think I would take a bullet?  When I walked several blocks that day I was texted by the Uber driver that he would come but I would be charged premium and I needed to be in front of a residence nowhere near the school. 

And I have many many more examples of incidents that I observed or occurred in adjacent areas in schools I have been in.  So no I am not staying to save anyone’s life.  They have no interest in mine in the best of situations I don’t want to test the worst.

The rise of social media assists in this divisiveness.  It makes it easier to find like minds to reaffirm your beliefs.   The issue of Trump’s campaign rallies and others staffed with actors and others to generate a positive image is well known so even when he elected to have a “listening” session with victims, parents and others affected by school shootings he had a set of notes in his hand to direct him how to respond.  So much for listening. But what was appalling is the accusations that children were accused of being actors in this situation and one boy who attended the town hall meeting CNN held also accused of bearing a script.  But a Father who was given a sound bite replayed on all news stations was invited by Trump himself.  He had already met and spoken to Trump privately, he had said his piece and in turn was very effusive and supportive of Trump and pro guns and shared that with The New York Times in an interview. He is then by Trump invited to the bigger session undoubtedly I am sure in true Trump protocol to stack the deck, however like guns this may have backfired as this grieving father’s  passionate declaration about his daughter became the focal point of the news as a type of summary about grief felt by the parents; however, what media failed to mention that he was the dad mocked for wearing a Trump shit the day of the shooting nor was it mentioned his stance on the issue or the private meet/greet and invite. So while the mass movement is asking for gun laws and restrictions there was one voice who did not agree and he should have had the chance to clarify why and sit among those people to defend said views.  Funny how that did not happen.  Why?

I would have had more respect for all involved to hear this and in turn allow people to truly understand the complex issues surrounding guns.  But nope the NRA shuts that down and in turn they are just as afraid that they don’t want to hear the truth about how people really feel about guns.

We don’t want anyone’s truth but ours.  Trumps volatility has given tacit permission for others to act upon their anger, to name call, to belittle to demean others with whom you do not agree.  I have been mocked of late, verbally demeaned for referring to children with the generic moniker “precious snowflake.”  Yes all children are super humans who must all be revered and coddled and allowed to do whatever they need to do to find their true self.  True self is the other side of my truth, so we have a lot of what I used to call individualism and having a personality.  It sounds better!

When I read this idiotic quasi threat in The Washington Post, my first reaction was what a load of crap.  The article was one man’s opinion on another man’s opinion.  Again do I care? Well I read so I guess sorta kinda not really. But what fascinated me was the comment section and many people had great thoughts and comments and offered “their truths” on the subject.  But again they were either lauded or hated depending on the reader’s perspective. Hey it is just their opinion, agree, disagree but you will have no ability in which to affect it by attacking people and accusing them of idiocy, etc.   I was attacked for my snark in which I did not address the article other than the “snowflake” comment and steered those to watch Chris Rock’s Tambourine.    Does it make me a bad person, one without reading comprehension skills as the response said?   No, I just chose not to address the article but mock it.  So instead I actually looked at all his comments and found out that he trolls and this is what it has become of late. Anonymity brings out the best of us.  Nope.

But the article frankly was again the Author’s own issues about another persons opinion. That is what op-eds do in newspapers but of late that seems to be often what news is.  Sorry but sometimes snark is the best response.

And in my truth –  I just don’t care anymore about kids.  I had to be honest and come to terms with that.  I am not the lady on the plane ranting and demanding a new seat but I get it and apparently she lost her job as a result of that incident going viral.  And now the 19 year old Mother of the unruly child admits that it went to far and she wished that would not have happened.  Hey then why did you film it?

Speaking of films (rolls eyes for the non-sequiter) so many great ones this year, but Lady Bird is one that all parents and children and mothers and daughters and anyone and everyone needs to see.  In the movie the Mother says to Lady Bird, “I want you  to be the best version of yourself that you want to be.”  And Lady Bird responds, “What if  is the best version?”

We all both in public and private say and do stupid shit.  I recall when I said that once a super adorable innocent, aka middle schooler,  said in response, “Did you call me stupid?”  My response was, “Did I call you stupid? What is your name? Did I address you specifically? And what exactly did I say? Are you taking my words out of context and for what purpose?” (This was a famous Obama quote about not doing stupid shit but this again is highly politicized so I did not name the source of the quote.)  I watched the wheels turn and she said, “No.”  So case closed. But today we could just roll tape and still taking it out of context and using an edited version of the events anyone can look stupid or smart.  Ever watched the Cop body cameras? Funny how those seem to work when shooting someone they perceive as a “threat.”

So let’s just arm up shall we.  We have Cops in schools now and most of them have tasered, cuffed and abused the students so adding more to the mix means those discipline problems will be resolved, So much for restorative justice!  But as we also know that under duress where actual lives are being threatened Cops don’t shoot.  Interesting.

People lie and by people I mean children, I mean adults, I mean everyone and anyone.  Get over it. And because of it and the climate we are in (well other than the one thanks to Global Warming) we are fucked.  So live your own truth, be your best self and don’t do stupid shit.   I will let you figure out what those are. 

So hey about Guns.. do we really need them as clearly they are not working out as the founding fathers intended are they?

And so it begins

Well that was a whopping what a week before the national grieving period came to an end and the attack dogs were released.

My mother used to say: Sticks and stones can break your bones but names will never hurt you. She would have to update that to bullets and today’s youth think that words are kinda sort painful and need trigger warnings.  But then the new generation has arrived and they are the product of lockdowns, drills, gun violence and social media endless trolling. They are a new breed.  

So when I saw the name Dinesh D’Souza trending on Twitter I thought he was dead, no such luck.  He was running amok with he and his other right wing crackpots accusing the kids of Parkland of being actors and puppets for Adults who were scripting them to get action on gun control.

Let’s see Gabby Giffords, Steve Scalise were victims of shooters and let us not forget their Voodoo idol Ronald Regan was shot and no less by a man with long standing mental health issues who managed to get a gun and took out his Press Secretary and Regan, permanently disabling the Press Secretary and hard to know with Regan given his own mental acuity issues at the time.  Gee what if it was Sean Spicer and Trump?  Well we know one of them we would all laugh and applaud, hmm let you decide which.

But the GOP loves Guns.  They love Guns.  As the children stood in the Capitol in Tallahassee the Florida legislator ignored their pleas and found that this may not be an easy battle.

(CNN)If local Florida officials want to pass firearm restrictions in response to the latest mass killing with an assault weapon, they risk being suspended from office, fined and sued personally for damages.
Nicholas Cruz, 19, killed 17 people last week at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School ln Parkland, Florida, with an AR-15 rifle he purchased legally. The massacre has again pushed the gun control debate to the national forefront.
Florida has fewer rules about guns than some states, and a broad state statute gives the state sole authority to regulate firearms. It prohibits any local gun ordinances and allows for personal punishment of officials through fines of up to $5,000, lawsuits and removal from office.

That law has to be ACORN written funded by an NRA check.  Dinesh was thrilled that the kids efforts were squashed but then again he must not have children which would make sense as what woman would fuck and breed with a felon.  Good thing he is Indian he can have an arranged marriage.  The Big Sick could have a sequel.

Then the trolls, both Russian and American, kicked into high gear.  What is offensive is that we have Facebook still in denial, then retracting said denial but still collecting rubles from the same group currently under indictment in the Muller investigation.  Which is why apparently the shooting occurred according to the Big Sick President.   But now like Facebook he is retracting that an signing memorandums. Are those different than his fake executive orders?  What about bills? And not those from Porn Stars, Playboy Bunnies and others who have sued/blackmailed/whatever him and his Consigliere has paid off.

The Right Wing Media is on Code Red right now as I recall when a youth movement brought down a President and the Press was incalcitrant in responding to digging in the dirt to ensure that all that glitters is not gold or in the case of Trump – plate.

So if these kids are hands off let’s start talking about Baron shall we?  The kid is on the spectrum it is clear to me and to many who work in education as he exhibits all said behaviors and that may also explain the sons, okay maybe just Eric.   Got nothing on the bitch daughter but her husband seems to be just like dear old dad which explains that as well.

I have said nothing positive about the kids here in Nashville but I get it as they have little opportunity to rise above their station in life and here in the land of martyrs and emotional resignation it is a challenge.    Again many of the people who live here and migrate here from podunk towns themselves so this is the big citeeee!   And those from here think it is too so its win-win for idiots.  And no I don’t think any here will walk out, protest or give a shit. These kids make self involved a pretty low bar in which to climb over.  I used to feel bad and ashamed but now I just shrug.  Wow I am becoming just like them!    This is a place where guns are part of the butter I am sure they have gun shaped butter molds.  The kids here love violence and rage. Just yesterday a 12 year old with a gun attempted to car jack a woman.  Our youth here are as batshit crazy as the Adults who fail to monitor them.

However, these kids in Parkland are very intelligent and much more extrinsically aware and articulate given the demographics of the community there were Immigrants and my favorite two kids who were very ROTC oriented and requested a military funeral for both. So no this is not some liberal bastion of Puppet masters pulling the puppet strings.

These are grieving frightened children and the anger they have is duly channelled to the appropriate source – our elected officials.    Their own Senator Marco Rubio expressed no anger, rage or even sadness, just resignation that this is the way it is and guns are a part of American life.  Then after that speech on the Senate floor promptly collected his check from the NRA.

I am not a crisis actor’: Florida teens fire back at right-wing conspiracy theorists

By Travis M. Andrews and Samantha Schmidt
The Washington Post
February 21 2018

Welcome, Parkland shooting survivors, to the ugly world of politics in 2018.

In the aftermath of last week’s school shooting in Parkland, Fla., some of the most powerful testimonies have come from the teenagers who survived the rampage. They have repeatedly detailed their harrowing experience to national news networks, many calling for stricter gun control laws while decrying President Trump for not doing enough to protect students. Others have wept with grief while telling their stories again and again.

The students have become a mobilizing force unlike any seen after previous mass shootings, planning marches and rallies in Florida and Washington — all while mourning the friends they’ve so recently lost.

They have also become a target of right-wing smears and innuendo.

Some prominent figures in the right-wing media are suggesting that the students are making it all up, or that the children are paid actors or that their talking points have been manufactured by public relations experts on the left.

An aide to a Florida legislator was even fired Tuesday after claiming two survivors who spoke to CNN were not students, but instead “actors that travel to various crisis when they happen.”

While these claims have no basis, they spread quickly in conservative circles on social media and among popular right-wing commentators.

The students proved quite capable of defending themselves Tuesday.

“I am not a crisis actor. I’m somebody that had to witness this and live through this and I continue to have to do that,” 17-year-old Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School senior David Hogg told CNN’s Anderson Cooper. “The fact that some of the students at Stoneman Douglas high school … are showing more maturity and political action than many of our elected officials is a testament to how disgusting and broken our political system is right now in America. But we’re trying to fix that.”

He was quickly backed up by fellow students. Sarah Chadwick, for example, tweeted that Hogg “can’t act to save his life,” she wrote, adding that the fact some people think he is being paid “is hilarious.”

Hogg, the high school’s student news director, has been among the most vocal students. He interviewed his classmates during the shooting, and has spoken passionately to various news outlets in the days since.

But right-wing media websites, such as Infowars, have attacked Hogg for becoming an “overnight celebrity” of the left.

Hogg has described his father as a retired FBI agent — a detail that right-wing commentators have jumped on. An Infowars story called it a “peculiar coincidence” that his father is a retired FBI agent, as “the FBI has come under fire for not preventing the Parkland massacre despite being warned about suspected killer Nikolas Cruz repeatedly beforehand.”

The president’s son Donald Trump Jr. liked two tweets disseminating conspiracy theories about Hogg. One tweet linked to a story in Gateway Pundit that accused Hogg’s father of coaching his son in peddling “anti-Trump rhetoric and anti-gun legislation,” claiming the FBI is using Hogg as its pawn.

The other tweet linked to a story in True Pundit that described Hogg as “the kid who has been running his mouth” about Trump and Republicans. “If Hogg knew the shooter would snap — as he and other students have professed — perhaps he could have told his father about it,” the story charged.

These conspiracy theories attacking the FBI parallel similar rhetoric from right-wing groups — and Trump — who have claimed the FBI is tainted with political, anti-Trump bias.

Gateway Pundit and Infowars both criticized Hogg and other students for smiling for a photograph on the set of a CBS interview, claiming that instead of grieving they are “acting and being feted like rock stars.”

Infowars’ attack was no surprise. Its founder, Alex Jones, claimed the Sandy Hook school shooting in 2012 that claimed the lives of 20 small children and six adults, was a false flag operation perpetrated by the United States government. “Sandy Hook is a synthetic completely fake with actors, in my view, manufactured,” he said on his radio show in January 2015.

Student Angelia Lazo holds up a sign on Sunday while standing near Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Some, like conservative author and filmmaker Dinesh D’Souza, mocked the Florida teenagers. “How interesting to hear students who can’t support themselves for one day giving us lectures about American social policy,” he tweeted early on Tuesday. It was liked more than 22,000 times.

A few hours later, he tweeted a video interview with 17-year-old Delaney Tarr, a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School who has emerged as one of the loudest voices calling for gun control in the wake of the shooting. In the video, she directly addressed Trump and requested greater restrictions on the purchase of semiautomatic weapons, such as mental health checks.

D’Souza said Tarr appeared “coached and also a bit deranged,” adding that Trump “should ignore these media-manufactured theatrics.”

And when the Florida House rejected a motion to consider a bill that would ban the sale of assault rifles, he tweeted, “Adults 1, kids 0.”

He followed that with a photo of students reacting to the decision. The students are stone-faced in the photograph, and one has a hand to her mouth, as if to hold in crying.

“Worst news since their parents told them to get summer jobs,” D’Souza tweeted. Hours later, he added, “Genuine grief I can empathize with. But grief organized for the cameras — politically orchestrated grief — strikes me as phony & inauthentic.”

Armond White — the National Review’s film critic drummed up a Trumpian nickname for the students: “Parkland Puppets.”

“Why their ubiquitous presence on TV news shows? Who’s their publicist?” he tweeted, along with a photograph of Hogg and 18-year-old Emma Gonzalez. “Obviously not just being picked up off the street, no 16-year-old has quick access to network news producers. Clearly, some PR exec is handling these Alt-Left kids.” (Neither student pictured is 16 years old.)

Bill O’Reilly, the former Fox News host, disgraced by a sexual abuse scandal, criticized the media for broadcasting interviews with teenagers “who are in an emotional state and facing extreme peer pressure.”

“The national press believes it is their job to destroy the Trump administration by any means necessary,” he wrote on his website. “So if the media has to use kids to do that, they’ll use kids.”

Former congressman Jack Kingston (R-Ga.) on Sunday tweeted a USA Today story about the student organizers helping lead a nationwide student walkout in protest of America’s gun laws, adding the message: “O really? ‘Students’ are planning a nationwide rally? Not left wing gun control activists using 17yr kids in the wake of a horrible tragedy?”

Kingston then appeared on CNN’s “New Day” Tuesday and doubled down on his remarks.

“Do we really think — and I say this sincerely — do we really think that 17-year-olds on their own are going to plan a nationwide rally?” Kingston asked, adding, “They probably do not have the logistical ability to plan a nationwide rally without it being hijacked by groups that already had the preexisting anti-gun agenda.”

The show’s co-host Alisyn Camerota fiercely disagreed.

“I talked to these kids before they knew the body count of how many of their friends had been killed. No one had talked to them yet,” Camerota said. “They hadn’t been indoctrinated by some left-wing group. They were motivated from what they saw and what they endured.”

Brandon Abzug, a Marjory Stoneman Douglas senior who survived the shooting, then appeared on CNN and said of the former representative’s comments, “I think it’s very despicable. … To say that just because we’re young we can’t make a difference is not right and he should apologize for that.”

Kingston began backtracking on Twitter, saying that “not only do I respect their right to protest & their resolve to look for answers, I admire it” and that’s “why it’s sad local gun control activists would hijack the tragedy to drive their own agenda.”

Time for the "Talk"

I don’t ever recall that pronouncement in my house as Sex with a capital “S” was never actually discussed but constantly in debate.  The physiological and biological components came from my Catholic School of all places in 6th Grade.  I recall the detail to this day and in fact appropriated the very thing only adding my extra special fear factor, a sort of cross between Reefer Madness, Trainspotting and Sid and Nancy style element.  I figure throw in drugs and disease when all else fails showing kids pictures of diseased lungs, dicks and vaginas will do the trick.

But what I was always honest.   I said repeatedly that unless you can name all the body parts on both sexes with the appropriate medical name, can successfully masturbate oneself to orgasm and know what that is and go to a Doctor and have that discussion about protecting oneself from unwanted pregnancy and disease then sex is not for you.  I think that frankly applies to adults as well.

Today having my coffee I read the NYT Magazine on how young people are learning about sex via porn.   Then I nearly threw it promptly up.   Just another reason why I need to get out of education.

Now in Seattle the subject was taught and opened the door for questions.  In some classes where I subbed/taught there was an open dialog but it was also then I realized that the kids were seeing porn as the questions and beliefs were almost delusional so I quit doing it.  What I also found was I noted a racial component to it as well as cultural one with few Muslim families partaking as well as Latino as they are often Catholic so there was that faith based issue that let the kids opt out.  So when you have largely poor kids who are most often the faces of color they have perspectives on sex you realize that there are many issues largely religious that here in Nashville is even more disturbing as sex education is only relegated to abstinence.  And in turn so it may explain the heavy sexualized behavior I see exhibited among that particular cohort. But this when I began to question my own attitudes towards race as it was predominately black kids who acted in this manor and yet in Seattle it was only white kids who were compelled to be verbal regarding sex.  I cannot recall any innuendo or commentary from any black kids ever in Seattle but that doesn’t mean it did not happen it is just that my recollections are on those kids who I recall and they happened to be white.   And that is when I realized that this is cultural not racial.  But it is still something I struggle with as it is something I have never witnessed ever regardless like I have here.

I have zero problem with porn if two consenting adults use it as erotica or as a way of experimenting. But that requires communication and consent.  And as I have said of late there seems to be a problem with both when it comes to sex in current day.   From watching one shower to watching one masturbate it seems that this is a plot in a bad porn film down to massages and of course stupid dialog in which to accompany it.  Some of it I believe was the situation with Aziz Ansari and even James Franco but had elevated to new heights with Charlie Rose, Matt Lauer and the rapist in chief, Harvey Weinstein.   The creepy factor was added with the faux seductions, the isolation and of course the recriminations that followed for women who refused to cooperate.  And again we have no idea how many did and now are sure that they will be exposed.  This week the suicide of Rose McGowan’s former Agent perhaps lends to that issue.

I am pretty much over fucking for sport or for pleasure.  Living in the two faced town of Nashville I neither trust nor respect anyone enough to open my door for anyone, let alone a sexual encounter. The sheer level of illiteracy here is enough to go fuck no.  You need to be able to read and in turn talk to express yourself to find common ground when it comes to sexual pleasure.  At this point I wonder if books like The Joy of Sex to The Happy Hooker have ever been viewed here as the “dirty”  paperbacks that one perused for knowledge and/or amusement.  People really are stupid here and that affair by the Mayor only proves my point.  Come on a former Ethics Officer fucks a bodyguard, who is a City Police Officer hired at your request?  Bitch please!

Btu this article is worth reading if you are a parent or not. If you are sexually active or not. If you just realize how fucked we are when it comes to the problems we face with regards to sex.   Come on.. just not on my face.

What
Teenagers Are
Learning From Online Porn


American adolescents watch much more pornography than their parents know — and it’s shaping their ideas about pleasure, power and intimacy. Can they be taught to see it more critically?

By MAGGIE JONES
THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE
FEB. 7, 2018

Drew was 8 years old when he was flipping through TV channels at home and landed on “Girls Gone Wild.” A few years later, he came across HBO’s late-night soft-core pornography. Then in ninth grade, he found online porn sites on his phone. The videos were good for getting off, he said, but also sources for ideas for future sex positions with future girlfriends. From porn, he learned that guys need to be buff and dominant in bed, doing things like flipping girls over on their stomach during sex. Girls moan a lot and are turned on by pretty much everything a confident guy does. One particular porn scene stuck with him: A woman was bored by a man who approached sex gently but became ecstatic with a far more aggressive guy.

But around 10th grade, it began bothering Drew, an honor-roll student who loves baseball and writing rap lyrics and still confides in his mom, that porn influenced how he thought about girls at school. Were their breasts, he wondered, like the ones in porn? Would girls look at him the way women do in porn when they had sex? Would they give him blow jobs and do the other stuff he saw?

Drew, who asked me to use one of his nicknames, was a junior when I first met him in late 2016, and he told me some of this one Thursday afternoon, as we sat in a small conference room with several other high school boys, eating chips and drinking soda and waiting for an after-school program to begin. Next to Drew was Q., who asked me to identify him by the first initial of his nickname. He was 15, a good student and a baseball fan, too, and pretty perplexed about how porn translated into real life. Q. hadn’t had sex — he liked older, out-of-reach girls, and the last time he had a girlfriend was in sixth grade, and they just fooled around a bit. So he wasn’t exactly in a good position to ask girls directly what they liked. But as he told me over several conversations, it wasn’t just porn but rough images on Snapchat, Facebook and other social media that confused him. Like the GIF he saw of a man pushing a woman against a wall with a girl commenting: “I want a guy like this.” And the one Drew mentioned of the “pain room” in “Fifty Shades of Grey” with a caption by a girl: “This is awesome!”

Watching porn also heightened Q.’s performance anxiety. “You are looking at an adult,” he told me. “The guys are built and dominant and have a big penis, and they last a long time.” And if you don’t do it like the guys in porn, Drew added, “you fear she’s not going to like you.”

Leaning back in his chair, Drew said some girls acted as if they wanted some thug rather than a smart, sensitive guy. But was it true desire? Was it posturing? Was it what girls thought they were supposed to want? Neither Q. nor Drew knew. A couple of seats away, a sophomore who had been quiet until then added that maybe the girls didn’t know either. “I think social media makes girls think they want something,” he said, noting he hadn’t seen porn more than a handful of times and disliked it. “But I think some of the girls are afraid.”

‘There’s nowhere else to learn about sex — and porn stars know what they are doing.’

“It gets in your head,” Q. said. “If this girl wants it, then maybe the majority of girls want it.” He’d heard about the importance of consent in sex, but it felt pretty abstract, and it didn’t seem as if it would always be realistic in the heat of the moment. Out of nowhere was he supposed to say: Can I pull your hair? Or could he try something and see how a girl responded? He knew that there were certain things — “big things, like sex toys or anal” — that he would not try without asking.

“I would just do it,” said another boy, in jeans and a sweatshirt. When I asked what he meant, he said anal sex. He assumed that girls like it, because the women in porn do.

“I would never do something that looked uncomfortable,” Drew said, jumping back into the conversation. “I might say, ‘I’ve seen this in porn — do you want to try it?’ ”

It was almost 4 p.m., and the boys started to gather their backpacks to head to a class known as Porn Literacy. The course, with the official title The Truth About Pornography: A Pornography-Literacy Curriculum for High School Students Designed to Reduce Sexual and Dating Violence, is a recent addition to Start Strong, a peer-leadership program for teenagers headquartered in Boston’s South End and funded by the city’s public-health agency. About two dozen selected high school students attend every year, most of them black or Latino, along with a few Asian students, from Boston public high schools, including the city’s competitive exam schools, and a couple of parochial schools. During most of the year, the teenagers learn about healthy relationships, dating violence and L.G.B.T. issues, often through group discussions, role-playing and other exercises.

But for around two hours each week, for five weeks, the students — sophomores, juniors and seniors — take part in Porn Literacy, which aims to make them savvier, more critical consumers of porn by examining how gender, sexuality, aggression, consent, race, queer sex, relationships and body images are portrayed (or, in the case of consent, not portrayed) in porn.

On average, boys are around 13, and girls are around 14, when they first see pornography, says Bryant Paul, an associate professor at Indiana University’s Media School and the author of studies on porn content and adolescent and adult viewing habits. In a 2008 University of New Hampshire survey, 93 percent of male college students and 62 percent of female students said they saw online porn before they were 18. Many females, in particular, weren’t seeking it out. Thirty-five percent of males said they had watched it 10 or more times during adolescence.

Porn Literacy, which began in 2016 and is the focus of a pilot study, was created in part by Emily Rothman, an associate professor at Boston University’s School of Public Health who has conducted several studies on dating violence, as well as on porn use by adolescents. She told me that the curriculum isn’t designed to scare kids into believing porn is addictive, or that it will ruin their lives and relationships and warp their libidos. Instead it is grounded in the reality that most adolescents do see porn and takes the approach that teaching them to analyze its messages is far more effective than simply wishing our children could live in a porn-free world.

Imagine that you are a 14-year-old today. A friend might show you a short porn clip on his phone during the bus ride to school or after soccer practice. A pornographic GIF appears on Snapchat. Or you mistype the word “fishing” and end up with a bunch of links to “fisting” videos. Like most 14-year-olds, you haven’t had sex, but you’re curious, so maybe you start searching and land on one of the many porn sites that work much like YouTube — XVideos.com, Xnxx.com, BongaCams.com, all of them among the 100 most-frequented websites in the world, according to Alexa Top Sites. Or you find Pornhub, the most popular of the group, with 80 million visitors a day and more traffic than Pinterest, Tumblr or PayPal. The mainstream websites aren’t verifying your age, and your phone allows you to watch porn away from the scrutinizing eyes of adults. If you still have parental-control filters, you probably have ways around them.
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Besides, there’s a decent chance your parents don’t think you are watching porn. Preliminary analysis of data from a 2016 Indiana University survey of more than 600 pairs of children and their parents reveals a parental naïveté gap: Half as many parents thought their 14- and 18-year-olds had seen porn as had in fact watched it. And depending on the sex act, parents underestimated what their kids saw by as much as 10 times.

What teenagers see on Pornhub depends partly on algorithms and the clips they’ve clicked on in the past. Along with stacks of videos on the opening page, there are several dozen categories (“teen,” “anal,” “blonde,” “girl on girl,” “ebony,” “milf”) that can take them to more than six million videos. The clips tend to be short, low on production value, free and, though Pornhub tries to prevent it, sometimes pirated from paid sites. Many of the heterosexual videos are shot from the male point of view, as if the man were holding the camera while he has sex with a woman whose main job, via oral sex, intercourse or anal sex, is to make him orgasm. Plot lines are thin to nonexistent as the camera zooms in for up-close shots of genitals and penetration that are repetitive, pounding and — though perhaps not through the eyes of a 14-year-old — banal. (There are alternative narratives in L.G.B.T. and feminist porn, and studies show that for gay and bisexual youth, porn can provide affirmation that they are not alone in their sexual desires.)

We don’t have many specifics on what kids actually view, in large part because it’s extremely difficult to get federal funding for research on children and pornography. A few years ago, frustrated by the dearth of large, recent United States studies, Rashida Jones, Jill Bauer and Ronna Gradus, creators of the 2017 Netflix documentary series “Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On,” about technology and porn, paired with several foundations and philanthropists to fund a national survey about porn viewing, sexual attitudes and behaviors. As part of the survey, led by Debby Herbenick, a professor at the Indiana University School of Public Health and director of the university’s Center for Sexual Health Promotion, along with her colleague Bryant Paul, 614 teenagers ages 14 to 18 reported what their experiences were with porn. In preliminary data analysis from the study (Herbenick is submitting an academic paper for publication this year), of the roughly 300 who did watch porn, one-quarter of the girls and 36 percent of the boys said they had seen videos of men ejaculating on women’s faces (known as “facials”), Paul says. Almost one-third of both sexes saw B.D.S.M. (bondage, domination, sadism, masochism), and 26 percent of males and 20 percent of females watched videos with double penetration, described in the study as one or more penises or objects in a woman’s anus and/or in her vagina. Also, 31 percent of boys said they had seen “gang bangs,” or group sex, and “rough oral sex” (a man aggressively thrusting his penis in and out of a mouth); less than half as many girls had.

It’s hard to know if, and how, this translates into behavior. While some studies show that a small number of teenagers who watch higher rates of porn engage in earlier sex, as well as in gender stereotyping and in sexual relationships that are less affectionate than their peers’, these findings only indicate correlations, not cause and effect. But surveys do suggest that the kinds of sex some teenagers have may be shifting. The percentage of 18-to-24-year-old women who reported trying anal sex rose to 40 percent in 2009 from 16 percent in 1992, according to the largest survey on American sexual behavior in decades, co-authored by Herbenick and published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine. In data from that same survey, 20 percent of 18-to-19 year old females had tried anal sex; about 6 percent of 14-to-17-year-old females had. And in a 2016 Swedish study of nearly 400 16-year-old girls, the percentage of girls who had tried anal sex doubled if they watched pornography. Like other studies about sex and porn, it only showed a correlation, and girls who are more sexually curious may also be drawn to porn. In addition, some girls may view anal sex as a “safer” alternative to vaginal sex, as there’s little risk of pregnancy.

The Indiana University national survey of teenagers asked about other sex behaviors as well. Though the data have not been fully analyzed, preliminary findings suggest that of the teenagers who had had sex, around one-sixth of boys said they had ejaculated on someone’s face or choked a sex partner. The survey didn’t define choking, but the high school and college-age students I spoke to referred to it as anything from placing a hand gently on a partner’s neck to squeezing it.

We don’t have longitudinal data on the frequency of ejaculating on a girl’s face or choking among American teenagers to know whether either practice is more common now. And, as David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire, told me, fewer teenagers have early sex than in the past (in a recent study, 24 percent of American ninth graders had sex; in 1995 about 37 percent had), and arrests of teenagers for sexual assault are also down. But you don’t have to believe that porn leads to sexual assault or that it’s creating a generation of brutal men to wonder how it helps shape how teenagers talk and think about sex and, by extension, their ideas about masculinity, femininity, intimacy and power.

Over the year in which I spoke to dozens of older teenagers at Start Strong and around the country, many said that both porn and mainstream media — everything from the TV show “Family Guy” (which references choking and anal sex) to Nicki Minaj’s song “Truffle Butter” (with an apparent allusion to anal sex followed by vaginal sex) to the lyrics in Rihanna’s “S&M” (“Sticks and stones may break my bones, but chains and whips excite me”) — made anal and rough sex seem almost commonplace. Drew told me he got the sense that girls wanted to be dominated not only from reading a few pages of “Fifty Shades of Grey” but also from watching the movie “Mr. & Mrs. Smith,” with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie. “She’s on the table, and she’s getting pounded by him. That’s all I’ve seen growing up.”

These images confound many teenagers about the kinds of sex they want or think they should have. In part, that’s because they aren’t always sure what is fake and what is real in porn. Though some told me that porn was fantasy or exaggerated, others said that porn wasn’t real only insofar as it wasn’t typically two lovers having sex on film. Some of those same teenagers assumed the portrayal of how sex and pleasure worked was largely accurate. That seems to be in keeping with a 2016 survey of 1,001 11-to-16-year-olds in Britain. Of the roughly half who had seen pornography, 53 percent of boys and 39 percent of girls said it was “realistic.” And in the recent Indiana University national survey, only one in six boys and one in four girls believed that women in online porn were not actually experiencing pleasure: As one suburban high school senior boy told me recently, “I’ve never seen a girl in porn who doesn’t look like she’s having a good time.”

It’s not surprising, then, that some adolescents use porn as a how-to guide. In a study that Rothman carried out in 2016 of 72 high schoolers ages 16 and 17, teenagers reported that porn was their primary source for information about sex — more than friends, siblings, schools or parents.

“There’s nowhere else to learn about sex,” the suburban boy told me. “And porn stars know what they are doing.” His words reflect a paradox about sex and pornography in this country. Even as smartphones have made it easier for teenagers to watch porn, sex education in the United States — where abstinence-based sex education remains the norm — is meager. Massachusetts is among 26 states that do not mandate sex ed. And a mere 13 require that the material be medically and scientifically accurate. After some gains by the Obama administration to promote more comprehensive sex ed, which includes pregnancy prevention, discussions of anatomy, birth control, disease prevention, abstinence and healthy relationships, the Trump administration did not include the program in its proposed 2018 budget; it also has requested increased funding for abstinence education. Easy-to-access online porn fills the vacuum, making porn the de facto sex educator for American youth.

One Thursday afternoon, about a dozen teenagers sat in a semicircle of North Face zip-ups, Jordans, combat boots, big hoop earrings and the slumped shoulders of late afternoon. It was the third week of Porn Literacy, and everyone already knew the rules: You don’t have to have watched porn to attend; no yucking someone else’s yum — no disparaging a student’s sexual tastes or sexuality. And avoid sharing personal stories about sex in class. Nicole Daley and Jess Alder, who wrote the curriculum with Emily Rothman and led most of the exercises and discussion, are in their 30s, warm and easygoing. Daley, who until last month was the director of Start Strong, played the slightly more serious favorite-aunt role, while Alder, who runs Start Strong’s classes for teenagers, was the goofier, ask-me-anything big sister. Rothman also attended most of the classes, offering information about pornography studies and explaining to them, for example, that there is no scientific evidence that porn is addictive, but that people can become compulsive about it.

In the first class, Daley led an exercise in which the group defined porn terms (B.D.S.M., kink, soft-core, hard-core), so that, as she put it, “everyone is on the same page” and “you can avoid clicking on things you don’t want to see.” The students also “values voted” — agreeing or disagreeing about whether the legal viewing age of 18 for porn is too high, if working in the porn industry is a good way to make money and if pornography should be illegal. Later, Daley held up images of a 1940s pinup girl, a Japanese geisha and Kim Kardashian, to talk about how cultural values about beauty and bodies change over time. In future classes, they would talk about types of intimacy not depicted in porn and nonsexist pickup lines. Finally, Daley would offer a lesson about sexting and sexting laws and the risks of so-called revenge porn (in which, say, a teenager circulates a naked selfie of an ex without consent). And to the teenagers’ surprise, they learned that receiving or sending consensual naked photos, even to your boyfriend or girlfriend, can be against the law if the person in the photo is a minor.

Now, in the third week of class, Daley’s goal was to undercut porn’s allure for teenagers by exposing the underbelly of the business. “When you understand it’s not just two people on the screen but an industry,” she told me, “it’s not as sexy.”

To that end, Daley started class by detailing a midlevel female performer’s salary (taken from the 2008 documentary “The Price of Pleasure”): “Blow job: $300,” Daley read from a list. “Anal: $1,000. Double penetration: $1,200. Gang bang: $1,300 for three guys. $100 for each additional guy.”

“Wow,” Drew muttered. “That makes it nasty now.”

“That’s nothing for being penetrated on camera,” another boy said.

Then, as if they had been given a green light to ask about a world that grown-ups rarely acknowledge, they began peppering Daley, Rothman and Alder with questions.

“How much do men get paid?” one girl asked. It is the one of the few professions in which men are paid less, Rothman explained, but they also typically have longer careers. How long do women stay in their jobs? On average, six to 18 months. How do guys get erections if they aren’t turned on? Often Viagra, Rothman offered, and sometimes a “fluffer,” as an offscreen human stimulator is known.

Daley then asked the teenagers to pretend they were contestants on a reality-TV show, in which they had to decide if they were willing to participate in certain challenges (your parents might be watching) and for how much money. In one scenario, she said, you would kneel on the ground while someone poured a goopy substance over your face. In another, you’d lick a spoon that had touched fecal matter. The kids debated the fecal-matter challenge — most wouldn’t to do it for less than $2 million. One wanted to know if the goop smelled. “Can we find out what it is?” asked another.

Then Daley explained that each was in fact a simulation of a porn act. The goopy substance was what’s called a “baker’s dozen,” in which 13 men ejaculate on a woman’s face, breasts and mouth.

“What?” a girl named Tiffany protested.

The second scenario — licking the spoon with fecal matter — was from a porn act known as A.T.M., in which a man puts his penis in a woman’s anus and then immediately follows by sticking it in her mouth.

“No way,” a 15-year-old boy said. “Can’t you wash in between?”

Nope, Daley said.

“We don’t question it when we see it in porn, right?” Daley went on. “There’s no judgment here, but some of you guys are squeamish about it.”

“I never knew any of this,” Drew said, sounding a bit glum.

Daley went on to detail a 2010 study that coded incidents of aggression in best-selling 2004 and 2005 porn videos. She noted that 88 percent of scenes showed verbal or physical aggression, mostly spanking, slapping and gagging. (A more recent content analysis of more than 6,000 mainstream online heterosexual porn scenes by Bryant Paul and his colleagues defined aggression specifically as any purposeful action appearing to cause physical or psychological harm to another person and found that 33 percent of scenes met that criteria. In each study, women were on the receiving end of the aggression more than 90 percent of the time.)

“Do you think,” Daley said, standing in front of the students, “watching porn leads to violence against women? There’s no right or wrong here. It’s a debate.”

Kyrah, a 10th-grade feminist with an athlete’s compact body and a tendency to speak her opinions, didn’t hesitate. “In porn they glamorize calling women a slut or a whore, and younger kids think this is how it is. Or when they have those weird porn scenes and the woman is saying, ‘Stop touching me,’ and then she ends up enjoying it!”

‘I’ve never seen a girl in porn who doesn’t look like she’s having a good time.’

Tiffany, her best friend, snapped her fingers in approval.

“Yes and no,” one guy interjected. “When a man is choking a woman in porn, people know it is not real, and they aren’t supposed to do it, because it’s violence.” He was the same teenager who told me he would just “do” anal sex without asking a girl, because the women in porn like it.

Pornography didn’t create the narrative that male pleasure should be first and foremost. But that idea is certainly reinforced by “a male-dominated porn industry shot through a male lens,” as Cindy Gallop puts it. Gallop is the creator of an online platform called MakeLoveNotPorn, where users can submit videos of their sexual encounters — which she describes as “real world,” consensual sex with “good values” — and pay to watch videos of others.

For years, Gallop has been a one-woman laboratory witnessing how easy-to-access mainstream porn influences sex. Now in her 50s, she has spent more than a decade dating 20-something men. She finds them through “cougar” dating sites — where older women connect with younger men — and her main criterion is that they are “nice.” Even so, she told me, during sex with these significantly younger nice men, she repeatedly encounters porn memes: facials, “jackhammering” intercourse, more frequent requests for anal sex and men who seem less focused on female orgasms than men were when she was younger. Gallop takes it upon herself to “re-educate,” as she half-jokingly puts it, men raised on porn. Some people, of course, do enjoy these acts. But speaking of teenagers in particular, she told me she worries that hard-core porn leads many girls to think, for example, that “all boys love coming on girls’ faces, and all girls love having their faces come on. And therefore, girls feel they must let boys come on their face and pretend to like it.”

Though none of the boys I spoke to at Start Strong told me they had ejaculated on a girl’s face, Gallop’s words reminded me of conversations I had with some older high-schoolers in various cities. One senior said that ejaculating on a woman’s face was in a majority of porn scenes he had watched, and that he had done it with a girlfriend. “I brought it up, or she would say, ‘Come on my face.’ It was an aspect I liked — and she did, too.”

Another noted that the act is “talked about a lot” among guys, but said that “a girl’s got to be down with it” before he’d ever consider doing it. “There is something that’s appealing for guys. The dominance and intimacy and that whole opportunity for eye contact. Guys are obsessed with their come displayed on a girl.”

Many girls at Start Strong were decidedly less enthusiastic. One senior told me a boyfriend asked to ejaculate on her face; she said no. And during a conversation I had with three girls, one senior wondered aloud: “What if you don’t want a facial? What are you supposed to do? Friends say a boy cleans it with a napkin. A lot of girls my age like facials.” But a few moments later, she reversed course. “I actually don’t think they like it. They do it because their partner likes it.” Next to her, a sophomore added that when older girls talk among themselves, many say it’s gross. “But they say you gotta do what you gotta do.” And if you don’t, the first girl added, “then someone else will.”

These are not new power dynamics between girls and boys. In a 2014 British study about anal sex and teenagers, girls expressed a similar lack of sexual agency and experienced physical pain. In the survey, of 130 heterosexual teenagers age 16 to 18, teenagers often said they believed porn was a motivating factor for why males wanted anal sex. And among the guys who reported trying it, many said friends encouraged them, or they felt competitive with other guys to do it. At the same time, a majority of girls who had tried anal sex said they didn’t actually want to; their partners persuaded or coerced them. Some males took a “try it and see” approach, as researchers called it, attempting to put their finger or penis in a girl’s anus and hoping she didn’t stop them. Sometimes, one teenager reported, you “just keep going till they just get fed up and let you do it anyway.” Both boys and girls blamed the girls for pain they felt during anal sex and some told researchers the girls needed to “relax” more or “get used to it.” Only one girl said she enjoyed it, and only a few boys did. Teenagers may not know that even while porn makes it seem commonplace, in the 2009 national survey of American sex habits, most men and women who tried anal sex didn’t make it a regular part of their sex lives. And in another study, by Indiana University’s Debby Herbenick and others in 2015, about 70 percent of women who had anal sex said they experienced pain.

Drew had firsthand experience with what he had seen in porn not translating into actual pleasure. The first time he had sex, he thought he was supposed to exert some physical control over his girlfriend. But the whole thing felt awkward, too rough and n
At one point during sex, Drew’s girlfriend at the time, who was a year older and more experienced, asked him to put his hand around her neck during sex. He did it, without squeezing, and though it didn’t exactly bother him, it felt uncomfortable. Drew never asked if she got the idea from porn, but it made him wonder. Had she also picked up other ways of acting? “Like, how do you really know a girl has had a good time?” he said one afternoon, musing aloud while sitting with some friends before Porn Literacy class. “My girlfriend said she had a good time,” he went on. “She was moaning. But that’s the thing: Is it fake moaning?”

Even if you know porn isn’t realistic, it still sets up expectations, one senior told me. In porn, he said, “the clothes are off, and the girl goes down on the guy, he gets hard and he starts having sex with her. It’s all very simple and well lit.” Before he had sex, porn had supplied his images of oral sex, including scenes in which a woman is on her knees as a man stands over her. At one point, he thought that’s how it might go one day when he had sex. But when he talked with his girlfriend, they realized they didn’t want to re-enact that power dynamic.

I spent a couple of hours on a Wednesday afternoon at Start Strong with a senior girl who took the first Porn Literacy class in the summer of 2016. Looking back over the last several years of middle and high school, A., who asked me to identify her by the first initial of her middle name, said she wished she had had someplace — home, school, a community sex-ed program — to learn about sex. Instead, she learned about it from porn. She saw it for the first time by accident, after a group of sixth-grade boys cajoled her to look at tube8.com, which she didn’t know was a porn site. She was fascinated. She had never seen a penis before, “not a drawing of one, nothing.” A few years later, she searched online for porn again after listening to girls in the high school locker room talk about masturbation. A.’s parents, whom she describes as conservative about sex, hadn’t talked to her about female anatomy or sex, and her school didn’t offer any sex education before ninth grade; even then, it focused mostly on the dangers — sexually transmitted infections and diseases and pregnancy.

Aside from some private schools and innovative community programs, relatively few sex-ed classes in middle and high school delve in detail into anatomy (female, especially), intimacy, healthy relationships, sexual diversity. Even more rare are discussions of female desire and pleasure. Porn taught A. the basics of masturbation. And porn served as her study guide when she was 16 and was the first among her friends to have sex. She clicked through videos to watch women giving oral sex. She focused on how they moved during sex and listened to how they moaned. She began shaving her vulva (“I’ve never seen anyone in porn have sex with hair on it”).

Porn is “not all bad,” said A., who was frank and funny, with a slew of advanced-placement classes on her transcript and a self-assured manner that impresses adults. “I got my sexual ways from porn, and I like the way I am.” But what she learned from porn had downsides too. Because she assumed women’s pleasure in porn was real, when she first had intercourse and didn’t have an orgasm, she figured that was just how it went.

For A., it wasn’t enough to know that porn was fake sex. She wanted to understand how real sex worked. Rothman and her team did consult a sex educator while they were writing the Porn Literacy curriculum but decided to include only some basic information about safe sex. It came in the form of a “Porn Jeopardy” game during one class. The teenagers, clustered in teams, chose from four categories: S.T.D./S.T.I.s, Birth Control, Teen Violence/Sexual Assault and Porn on the Brain.

“S.T.I.s/S.T.D.s for $300,” one student called out.

“Why is lubrication important for sex?” Alder asked.

“What’s lubrication?” Drew asked.

“It’s lube,” another teenager said, in an attempt to explain.

‘If you don’t do it like the guys in porn, you fear she’s not going to like you.’

“Is lubrication only the little tube-y things?” a girl with long black hair asked. “Or can it be natural?”

“I never learned this before,” Drew announced to the class after it was mentioned that lubrication decreased friction, increased pleasure and could reduce the risk of tearing and therefore of S.T.I.s and S.T.D.s. Drew’s only sliver of sex ed was in sixth grade with the school gym teacher, who sweated as he talked about sex, “and it was all about it being bad and we shouldn’t do it.”

As if to rectify that, Alder offered a quick anatomy lesson, drawing a vulva on the whiteboard and pointing out the clitoris, the vagina, the urethra. “This is called a vulva,” she said. Alder repeated the word slowly and loudly, as if instructing the students in a foreign language. It was both for humor and to normalize a word that some of them may have been hearing for the first time. “This is the clitoris,” Alder went on. “This is where women get most pleasure. Most women do not have a G spot. If you want to know how to give a woman pleasure, it’s the clitoris.”

“Let’s move on,” Rothman said quietly. Alder had just inched across a line in which anatomy rested on one side and female desire and pleasure on the other. It was a reminder that as controversial as it is to teach kids about pornography, it can be more taboo to teach them how their bodies work sexually. “The class is about critically analyzing sexually explicit media,” Rothman told me later, “not how to have sex. We want to stay in our narrow lane and not be seen as promoting anything parents are uncomfortable with.” Daley added: “I wish it were different, but we have to be aware of the limitations of where we are as a society.”

Porn education is such new territory that no one knows the best practices, what material should be included and where to teach it. (Few people are optimistic that it will be taught anytime soon in public schools.) Several years ago, L. Kris Gowen, a sexuality educator and author of the 2017 book “Sexual Decisions: The Ultimate Teen Guide,” wrote extensive guidelines for teaching teenagers to critique “sexually explicit media” (she avoided the more provocative term “porn literacy”). Even though Oregon, where Gowen lives, has one of the most comprehensive sex-ed programs in the country, Gowen said that teachers felt unequipped to talk about porn. And though the guidelines have been circulated at education conferences and made publicly available, Gowen doesn’t know of a single educator who has implemented them. In part, she says, people may be waiting for a better sense of what’s effective. But also, many schools and teachers are nervous about anything that risks them being “accused of promoting porn.”

The most recent sex-education guidelines from the World Health Organization’s European office note that educators should include discussions about the influence of pornography on sexuality starting with late elementary school and through high school. The guidelines don’t, however, provide specific ideas on how to have those conversations.

In Britain, nonprofit organizations and a teachers’ union, along with members of Parliament, have recommended that schools include discussions about the influence of porn on how children view sex and relationships. Magdalena Mattebo, a researcher at Uppsala University in Sweden who studies pornography and adolescents, would like porn literacy mandated in her country. “We are a little lost in how to handle this,” Mattebo told me.

More than 300 schools, youth and community groups and government agencies in Australia and New Zealand use components of a porn-education resource called “In the Picture” that includes statistics, studies and exercises primarily for teenagers. It was created by Maree Crabbe, an expert on sexual violence and pornography education, who lives near Melbourne, Australia. As she put it during a United States training program for educators and social workers that I attended in 2016: “We want to be positive about sex, positive about masturbation and critical of pornography.” One key component of the program is often neglected in porn literacy: providing training to help parents understand and talk about these issues.

Last year, a feminist porn producer, Erika Lust, in consultation with sex educators, created a porn-education website for parents. The Porn Conversation links to research and articles and provides practical tips for parents, including talking to kids about the ways mainstream porn doesn’t represent typical bodies or mutually satisfying sex and avoiding accusatory questions about why your kid is watching porn and who showed it to them. “We can’t just say, ‘I don’t like mainstream porn because it’s chauvinistic,’ ” says Lust, whose films feature female-centered pleasure. “We have given our children technology, so we need to teach them how to handle it.” But she takes it a step further by suggesting that parents of middle- and high-schoolers talk to their teenagers about “healthy porn,” which she says includes showing female desire and pleasure and being made under fair working conditions. I asked Lust if she would steer her daughters in that direction when they are older (they are 7 and 10). “I would recommend good sites to my daughters at age 15, when I think they are mature enough. We are so curious to find out about sex. People have doubts and insecurities about themselves sexually. ‘Is it O.K. that I like that, or this?’ I think porn can be a good thing to have as an outlet. I’m not scared by explicit sex per se. I’m afraid of the bad values.”

Tristan Taormino, another feminist porn filmmaker and author, speaks frequently on college campuses and produces explicit sex-ed videos for adults. “The party line is we don’t want teenagers watching our videos,” she says, noting they are rated XXX. “But do I wish teenagers had access to some of the elements of it?” In addition to seeing consent, she said, “they would see people talking to each other, and they’d see a lot of warm-up. We show lube, we show sex toys.”

That may be more than most parents, even of older teenagers, can bear. But even if parents decided to help their teenagers find these sites, not only is it illegal to show any kind of porn — good or bad — to anyone under 18, but, really, do teenagers want their parents to do so? And which ones would parents recommend for teenagers? “Unlike organic food, there’s no coding system for ethical or feminist porn,” Crabbe notes. “They might use condoms and dental dams and still convey the same gender and aggression dynamics.” Also, “good porn” isn’t typically free or nearly as accessible as the millions of videos streaming on mainstream sites.

Al Vernacchio, a nationally known sexuality educator who teaches progressive sex ed at a private Quaker school outside Philadelphia, believes the better solution is to make porn literacy part of the larger umbrella of comprehensive sex education. Vernacchio, who is the author of the 2014 book “For Goodness Sex: Changing the Way We Talk to Teens About Sexuality, Values, and Health,” is one of those rare teenage-sex educators who talks directly to his high school students about sexual pleasure and mutuality, along with the ingredients for healthy relationships. The problem with porn “is not just that it often shows misogynistic, unhealthy representations of relationships,” Vernacchio says. “You can’t learn relationship skills from porn, and if you are looking for pleasure and connection, porn can’t teach you how to have those.”

Crabbe notes one effective way to get young men to take fewer lessons from porn: “Tell them if you want to be a lazy, selfish lover, look at porn. If you want to be a lover where your partner says, ‘That was great,’ you won’t learn it from porn.” And parents should want their teenagers to be generous lovers, Cindy Gallop argues. “Our parents bring us up to have good manners, a work ethic. But nobody brings us up to behave well in bed.”

To prepare his students to be comfortable and respectful in sexual situations, Vernacchio shows photos, not just drawings, of genitalia to his high-schoolers. “Most people are having sex with real people, not porn stars, and real bodies are highly variable. I would much rather my students have that moment of asking questions or confusion or even laughter in my classroom rather than when they see their partner’s naked body for the first time.” He, along with Debby Herbenick, who is also the author of the 2012 book “Sex Made Easy: Your Awkward Questions Answered for Better, Smarter Amazing Sex,” advocate that adolescents should understand that most females don’t have orgasms by penetration alone, and that clitoral stimulation often requires oral sex, fingers and sex toys. As she notes: “It’s part of human life, and you teach it in smart, sensitive ways.”

As the students from the first Porn Literacy classes moved through their lives in the year after their courses ended, some things from the discussions stayed with them. In surveys from the first three sets of classes, one-third of the students still said they would agree to do things from porn if their partner asked them to. Several also wanted to try things they saw in porn. They were, after all, normal, sexually curious, experimenting teenagers. But only a tiny number of students agreed in the postclass survey that “most people like to be slapped, spanked or have their hair pulled during sex,” compared with 27 percent at the start of class. And while at the beginning, 45 percent said that porn was a good way for young people to learn about sex, now only 18 percent agreed. By the end of the class, no one said pornography was realistic; just over one-quarter had believed that at the outset. The survey didn’t reveal the catalyst for the changes. Was it the curriculum itself? Was it something about Daley and Alder’s teaching style? It’s possible the students created the changes themselves, teaching one another through their in-class debates and discussions.

A., the young woman who said she had never seen an image of a penis until she watched porn, resisted the idea that porn was uniformly bad for teenagers. “At least kids are watching porn and not going out and getting pregnant,” she said. But recently, she told me that she’d given up watching it altogether. She disliked looking at women’s expressions now, believing that they probably weren’t experiencing pleasure and might be in pain. When Drew watched porn, he found himself wondering if women were having sex against their will. As another student said with a sigh: “Nicole and Jess ruined porn for us.”

In the months after the class, A. had created a new mission for herself: She was going to always have orgasms during sex. “And I did it!” she told me. It helped that she had been in a relationship with a guy who was open and asked what she liked. But even if Porn Literacy didn’t go into as many details about sex as she would have liked, “in this indirect way, the class shows what you deserve and don’t deserve,” she said. “In porn, the guy cares only about himself. I used to think more about ‘Am I doing something right or wrong?’ ” Porn may neglect women’s orgasms, but A. wasn’t going to anymore.

Drew, who had once used porn as his main sex educator, was now thinking about sex differently. “Some things need to come to us naturally, not by watching it and seeing what turns you on,” he told me. The discussions about anatomy and fake displays of pleasure made him realize that girls didn’t always respond as they did in porn and that they didn’t all want the same things. And guys didn’t, either. Maybe that porn clip in which the nice, tender guy didn’t excite the girl was wrong. What Drew needed was a girl who was open and honest, as he was, and with whom he could start to figure out how to have good sex. It would take some time and most likely involve some fumbling. But Drew was O.K. with that. He was just starting out.

Marry Marry Quite Contrary

The other day at my local coffee shop I chatted with one of the many millennial who work there and we frequently share our perspectives and observations on the social milieu that comprise the Seattle hipster crowd.  And on this day it was the breeding patterns that I had noticed and she confirmed was clearly the new accessory du jour among the pierced tatted set.

I remarked that it was because many of those same 84 million are in a baby boom of their own choosing. Why? Because that same cohort came out of divorce and that lack of substantive family legacy, history, tradition is what the hip crowd so desperately needs, wants for a multitude of reasons.  The main one is that void, that missing link to show that out of the ashes can emerge a singular familial unit.  I also note that this does mean more than one child as you are seeing the double strollers in earnest among that same set with a plan for at least one to two more, the new mini Walton’s, Eight is Enough, the Brady Bunch and other multi sibling families popular in my generation are now divided in half.

I am not sure that we are seeing more of this here due to the tech incomes that enable the affordability of said family or that simply they are just willing to have kids fairly quickly after marriage. The home owning is a later must as of course the requisite move to the suburbs when the realization that living in city is not the ideal for a family who needs to chauffeur kids to school, to sports, to other social events that dominate the family after the baby enrolls in school. That and the reality that urban schools are largely dominated by “poors” and the cost of private school is a cost that takes away from further aspirations, as Euro Disney (what hipster would have the audacity to take a child to the one in Anaheim only the French will do!) or attain other markings of the aspirant class, such as a Nanny or Cleaner.  Yes this group will create an app for that if they have not already.  They want the same things the upper class has while doing so wearing Converse and sporting purple hair, that is their version of alternative independence.

So while the meme class is moving into downtown chic gentrifying hoods, slurping craft beers and eating artisan breads the same way their grandparents downed the champagne of beers and Wonder Bread, the end result is the same – conventionality.  So they will move to the suburbs rebuild the decaying malls and in turn become the families that they lost, never had or will duplicate only now with a 3D printer vs a Xerox machine.  Ah modern times!

But for those who are single, who do divorce the scarlet letter “F” will be yours. Bill Maher the other week  on his show was discussing the way “singles” are perceived as with a type of suspicion.  Yes we are the same generation that gave you Bridget Jones “singleton,” Sex and the City, Sex and the Single Girl, and That Girl, are now those old creepy people who we either fear or pity.  Even Playboy has stopped with nudes and the mansion is for sale. Ah the end of an era.

I suspect we look upon singles of a certain age with fear I suspect more with regards to men and pity when it comes to women.  The need to pair off skipped many of us and we are the largest cohort of unmarried and living alone than any other age and as they say “we have been there done that read the book and seen the movie;” around 29% of us when surveyed in 2012 have any desire to do so again.

The good ole days of the Elizabeth Taylor concept of multiple spouses some of whom you remarry seems to have gone to the grave with her.  As I watched the documentary about Gloria Vanderbilt and her son Anderson Cooper she is truly of another generation of women whom marriage was not optional nor negotiated it was expected and repeated as necessary until one got it right.   And it appears that this is true for the remaining 70%.  Ahh the good old days are the new days!  People in America are afraid to be alone or at least unable to be alone for long.

 So when I read the article below I laughed and thought once again not surprising and utterly wrong. This generation of supposed free independent thinkers are anything but, they are quite provincial and yes conventional.  I know few frankly if any who are alone and not living with a “partner” “significant other.”  I know few who do anything alone and feel uncomfortable doing so.  If not attached at the hip to another they are attached at the wrist with another.

Right now many Millennial are called Hipsters as we who rebelled were the Hippies, then we were the Prepsters who became the Yuppies, so I am not sure what they will call themselves when they enter that phase,  they will have to figure it out by simply cutting and pasting. As everything old is new again they just rebrand it.

Americans are becoming more socially liberal — except when it comes to divorce

 By Catherine Rampell Opinion writer
The Washington Post April 1 2016

Contrary to popular belief, marriage isn’t dead. It’s not even dying. The institution is probably more respected and admired than ever before — just not in a way that encourages millennials to partake in it.

 You can see this in national survey data, recently released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about Americans’ views of various family arrangements. At first glance the report suggests that Americans may indeed be less devoted to the sacrosanctity of marriage — or at least that we’ve become more tolerant of once-stigmatized non-marital sexual behaviors .

In 2002, for example, slightly more than 6 in 10 Americans said they thought it was okay for a young couple to live together without being married. By 2011-2013, the period of the most recent survey, the share had jumped to more than 7 in 10. Similarly, the report finds that Americans have gotten more accepting of women who bear and raise children out of wedlock, of unmarried 18-year-old couples who decide to have sex and of same-sex couples who adopt children.

On these and other familial and procreative arrangements, Americans have become measurably more liberal. But on one crucial measure, they have become much more conservative. Respondents were asked whether they agreed or disagreed with the statement that “Divorce is usually the best solution when a couple can’t seem to work out their marriage problems.” In 2002, about half of Americans disagreed.

Within a decade, the share had risen to more than 60 percent. In the most recent data, younger Americans — a cohort with the lowest marriage rates on record, mind you — were especially likely to perceive divorce as an unacceptable response to marital strain.

How is it possible that Americans are simultaneously getting more traditional about marital commitment and less traditional about non-marital relations? How did we become more judgmental of divorce and less judgmental of people who “live in sin” or have children out of wedlock? The answer lies in our evolving views of marriage itself. Earlier generations saw marriage as a sort of foundational milestone, laid relatively early in life, that would help couples go on to achieve familial and financial stability.

Today, it is seen more as a crowning achievement, appropriate and available only after lots of other boxes are ticked off first. And this brass ring ought to be indestructible by the time it graces your left hand. Marriage has, in other words, gone from being a cornerstone achievement to a capstone one.

Marriage rates may have plummeted in recent decades, but the vast majority of never-married millennials still say they aspire to get hitched someday. They just want to get their ducks in a row first — and my, are those ducks multiplying. A survey from last fall found that young Americans believe they should wait to marry until they have a stable job, have reduced their debt levels or accumulated savings, have a college degree, have successfully cohabitated with their future spouse, have had previous serious relationships and even own their home.

We millennials still want our happily-ever-afters, but with an emphasis on the after. Meanwhile, many of those intermediate milestones we now see as connubial preconditions have moved further out of reach. Mounting student loan debt, falling youth homeownership rates and stagnant or declining job opportunities are disqualifying many young Americans from this apparently elite institution, or at least turning them into less eligible bachelors and bachelorettes.

 Wedlock is a luxury good that young Americans want, but view themselves — and just as important, their potential spouses — as too poor or otherwise unprepared to buy.

 It is the layering of these two concurrent forces — the idealization of marriage, plus the declining marriageability (real or perceived) of so many of its would-be participants — that has ground down marriage rates, especially for lower-skilled Americans. And so young people put off marriage, though not necessarily the other milestones that used to almost exclusively follow marriage (such as childbearing). It’s unclear why marriage has been elevated to such a high pedestal.

 Perhaps it’s the traumatic legacy of earlier decades of high divorce rates, which make today’s young people fear creating their own broken homes. Or perhaps it’s the increasing association of marriage with wealthier, better-educated people. Elites have also adopted the capstone view of marriage and actually found it useful for forming more stable, successful, enduring unions.

So keep this in mind if you ever feel the temptation to urge some broke young couple to hurry up and get hitched already: Chances are they’re dragging their feet not because they don’t take marriage seriously but because they do

Boys to Men

Kids lie. And adults either chose to of course believe them when it suits them and then when it doesn’t it is ignored or sometimes they are prosecuted/

This week brought several cases to the top of the news.  Two boys north of the area were arrested for making threats that were felonious in addition to being screaming racist ones. And the excuse “we were just joking” okay then.   Then we had another boy, only this one in College, for a similar thing.  White males, younger than the current norm of millennial who seem unable to assuage their rage are demonstrating that we are miles away from a color blind society.   Justice Scalia is the top end of that bookend the boys at Edmonds Woodway the bottom.

Then we have this case below.  I have talked about the school last week when I found out who the boys were that shared pornography with the entire student body and the aftermath that resulted in a bizarre utterly unproductive “be kind” campaign.  The boys still at the school and clearly I question from their behavior on that day if they have received any mental health counseling or appropriate supervision. 

A year ago when I was placed with a Student Teacher whose mentor Teacher went on medical leave suddenly prior to the school year starting, I entered two weeks into the year. Another sub had been there earlier, a Special Ed Teacher was in/out of the classes all day and yet I knew by day three there was one student who was mentally ill.  Now while all the other professionals in the room failed to note this I am unclear.  The student teacher claimed to have extensive child experience in another field prior to entering education, the SPED teacher was a veteran so how they failed to realize this I have never understood. I shared my concerns, there was a respective trip to the counselors office where no records were available as he was a transfer student. Calls home went unanswered as were emails. So we moved his seat to a table with two highly achieving students who documented the insane ramblings and bizarre remarks throughout the block period of two hours, there was no shortage of time and ability to watch his behavior and hear his remarks to realize this child had a serious mental health disorder.

I was counseled by the Principal that my attitude was a reflection of my white privilege and inability to connect to those of color, she advised me to take a class on deflection class management course and then thought I was related to someone in Federal Way as we shared a last name which she had never heard of.  Yes two consonants and a vowel and the name of the Wall Street activities on a daily basis was something she was unfamiliar.  Okay then.  Then the file arrived. This boy was removed immediately as he had a serious mental health problem. By then we had all been at risk and the chaos that he brought to the classroom placed the lessons and curriculum behind as well. 

The reality is that Teachers are rarely told about students who have had a violent behavioral problem(s) or been subject to legal matters due to the confidential laws that protect students. Yet ironically Special Ed kids we receive a raft of information some of it absurdly not useful or appropriate, and the same with health problems of which few are trained to intervene or assist if said problem occurs at school property.  Additionally, there are few Nurses available to help should they be  needed.  The reality is that both staff and students are undeserved when it comes to both mental and physical health problems in a classroom.

And as I read about the boys verdict yesterday I simply felt sick.  This boy was 14 at the time of the crime, and if he was that severely ill as his Lawyer concludes then he made it through the system for close to 10 years before anyone knew and it took an act of extreme violence before anyone apparently did.

For what is worthy of noting the halls at the school had cameras that recorded the movements of the perpetrator and the victim. But where are the adults after school? Were there other Teachers in the building? If they felt compelled to have cameras where or who was monitoring them?  The other student clearly was there in the class and yet what happened there? Did he leave before seeing the boy and his odd behavior, getting a box cutter out of where or from where? The looking out the door and then what?

The last two years here have found two similar cases where the boys assaulted or molested girls and they both had a history that was documented with regards to similar behavior, none requiring intervention by law; however, the boys at the Middle School last week did have Police visit the school yet it is clear that they were never charged with any crime or how would they be there?

As a woman and a teacher I have every right to no what students have a history of behavioral issues and those who have had a legal problem that at one point may have led to incarceration or monitoring.  My first year of teaching I knew of one girl who set fire to her boyfriends home and she was on the monitoring program and had a probation officer, we now have the ALE (alternative schools for these type of situations but even in those where there his a higher probability if not likelihood that many of the students have had some legal issues, although I suspect largely drug or truancy related.  Regardless, I should have complete knowledge upon accepting an assignment that I may be in a class with a student-at-risk.

I am more than accommodating with kids and their problems.  There is a documentary called Paper Tigers out about youth and trauma. I took the quiz and scored 6 out of 8, so yes I get trauma and when a white Principal scolds me on not understanding I should offer her a  cliff notes version of my history as the SFTU moment.

But this boy is dangerous and was long before he set foot in that classroom. That boy grows up and becomes Dylan Root, Adam Lanza, James Holmes and on and on,  and they were boys too – Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris – just on the cusp of being men.  There were clear patterns, history of problems and yet no one cared or felt compelled to do anything to prevent this from happening.

Are the Teacher’s unions at fault here too?
 


Massachusetts teen found guilty of murdering math teacher

By Dominique Debucquoy-Dodley, CNN

Updated 2:09 PM ET, Wed December 16, 2015
Teen found guilty of first-degree murder of math teacher

Teen found guilty of first-degree murder of math teacher 00:50

“There can never be true justice for the crime committed,” says victim’s father
A jury finds Philip Chism guilty of first-degree murder in the 2013 killing of Colleen Ritzer
He is also found guilty of armed robbery and aggravated rape

(CNN)A jury in Massachusetts has found Philip Chism guilty of first-degree murder in the 2013 killing of his high school math teacher, Colleen Ritzer.

The jurors in Essex Superior Court on Tuesday also found Chism guilty of aggravated rape and armed robbery. He was found not guilty on a second count of aggravated rape.

Chism was charged as an adult and faces life in prison with the possibility of parole between 15 and 25 years, according to Carrie Kimball Monahan from the Essex District Attorney’s Press Office.

He showed no obvious emotion as the verdict was being read. A status date in the case is set for December 22.

Chism, now 16, was charged with killing Ritzer, 24, with a box cutter in a bathroom at Danvers High School on October 22, 2013.

Ritzer’s body was found a day later in woods near the school.

“This guilty verdict, while the beginning of justice for Colleen, is certainly no cause for celebration as there can never be true justice for the crime committed. There remains a tremendous and painful absence in our lives — one that, sadly, can never be replaced,” said Ritzer’s father, Tom.

“Colleen never gave up and neither will we. We will not allow Colleen’s death to define how she’s remembered,” he told reporters.

During closing arguments Monday, defense attorney Denise Regan recounted the testimony of psychiatrists, arguing that Chism has suffered from a psychotic disorder since a young age and that he responded to voices and hallucinations at the time of Ritzer’s killing.

“When Philip Chism followed Ms. Ritzer into that bathroom, he was not himself,” Regan said before the jury.

“He didn’t choose to do this.”

The defense conceded that Chism killed Ritzer but presented an insanity defense last week. The court had earlier found Chism competent to stand trial.

Prosecutor Kate MacDougall argued that Chism did not suffer from mental illness and that surveillance video from inside the school showed Ritzer’s killing was planned.

“The only still image that matters in this case is the image of Colleen Ritzer in the woods,” MacDougall said.

“There is not one single person in this courtroom who wants to believe that a 14-year-old-boy could have done this and not be crazy. But doing something so awful does not make you crazy.”

Talk About Sex Baby

I grew up with foreign born parents. We had largely foreign born or very avant garde people in our home. I cannot remember when I understood what trans/gender or being gay was it was just part of the family and I thought little of it.  It certainly makes one different among one’s peers and probably why I had few.

But I have been lamenting about the state of sex education among our children and that is what is contributing to the sexual assaults, misbehavior when it comes to sexting and of course utter confusion about sexual roles, identity and all that in between.

  I know adults who seem confused about it and when I tell people I am now pursuing celibacy, I might as well announce I am becoming Bruce Jenner.  The sheer pressure and constant need to be sexual in this country astonishes me.  Yet we are actually taking another matter of contraception to the Supreme Court as the ACA allows that element to be covered while no one group is debating/challenging that erection pills are also covered under the ACA.  Can you have one without the other?

And then I read the article below today and thought at any minute law enforcement will be busting his door down for some type of violation of the law regarding minors and safety.

Yes America is a country run  by men whose idea of sex is that it is on demand, without protection and women are ultimately responsible for what that entails. Disease, child birth, rape or whatever, we caused it, we need to live with it.  And people wonder why I am done with it all? When will they be issuing our burquas?

This Dad’s Honest Sex Advice to His Teenage Kids Deserves a Standing Ovation

For most people, the first time they have sex is awkward, clumsy, incredibly not-pleasurable and, in the event that the deflowering takes place outside, potentially results in a nasty case of poison ivy. 

But just because most first-time sex stories are pretty uncomfortable and terrible doesn’t mean they have to be, especially if you have the proper guidance and sex ed beforehand. Case in point: this awesome dad, who recently posted on Reddit about his surprisingly refreshing (not to mention progressive) sex advice for his 13-year-old son and 15-year-old daughter.

In a post on /r/sex, the dad (known only as t-away-man) said he gave his kids four pieces of advice for knowing whether they were “ready.”

You’re ready for sex, he wrote, if and only if you are:

1) mature enough to be open about it.. no sneaking around … if they’re not mature enough to talk to me or their Mom about it, they’re not ready.

2) mature enough to wait until they develop full trust in their partners… start slow and work your way from holding hands and talking to kissing, touching etc. That gives you time to really know your partner, develop trust and a measure of real affection not just infatuation and lust (don’t get me wrong.. I’m not putting down lust… it’s just not the best emotion for life decisions).

3) mature enough to understand the need for and to use condoms.

The fourth and perhaps most practical piece of advice? He told his kids “not to have sex in creepy places like school stairwells or behind the gym. They have perfectly good bedrooms with doors that lock and their friends will be welcome to stay for breakfast.”

Arrest this man for burglary, because he has officially stolen our hearts.
 
There’s something seriously wrong with American sex ed: In an email to Mic, t-away-man (who wished to remain anonymous) said that he was inspired to write the post after talking to his son about his school sex ed program. Until recently, he said, he and his wife had believed that their kids’ “fairly progressive” school system was teaching comprehensive sex ed. But that turned out not to be the case.
“We found out from my son that their idea of sex ed was: 1) A man’s penis goes into a woman’s vagina to make a baby, 2) It is very dangerous and if you do it too much or too soon you will die and 3) Don’t do it,” he told Mic.

The dad said that he had raised his kids under the Dutch sex ed model, which teaches youth not only the importance of safe sex, but also how sex and relationships can play a crucial (not to mention pleasurable) role in one’s development.

“Most of what I am espousing in my post is straight from the Dutch approach — open discussion, no shame,” he told Mic.

“I wish my parents were like this.” 

Indeed, there is ample statistical evidence that the approach to sex ed in the Netherlands is factually superior to that of the United States. 
According to a 2006 study AlterNet reported, while Dutch teenagers and American teenagers become sexually active around the same age, American teen girls are twice as likely to have an abortion and eight times more likely to give birth than their Dutch counterparts.
 (In fact, the American teen pregnancy rate is one of the highest in the world, with 600,000 teens becoming pregnant every year.) 
Moreover, the STI rate among American young adults is “considerably higher” than that of their peers in the Netherlands, according to a 2011 Adolescent Sexual Health report.
With these stats in mind, it makes perfect sense for parents like this sex-positive redditor to talk to kids about sex. In fact, there’s positive evidence that teens benefit from it, no matter how initially uncomfortable it might be. 

According to a November 2015 survey of past sex ed research, teenagers who talk to their parents about sex are less likely to become pregnant and contract STIs. “Results of this study confirm that parent-adolescent sexual communication is a protective factor for youth,” the authors wrote.

Clearly, this anonymous redditor is onto something here — and others agree, judging by the effusive response from others who received subpar sexual health education.

“As a daughter who has had a parent say this to me, you did good,” one redditor wrote. Another added, “I’m 15, I wish my parents were like this. It avoids a lot of sneaking around and fear of being caught doing something that is OK to do.”