We raised our daughter to enjoy sex, not get obsessed with it or become afraid of it.
Considering that you seem to view sex as something over which we have no control, I suppose I can understand how you might think this a good idea. And, in fact, why you seem to view abortion as a form of birth control. You must assume it inevitable that your daughter will get pregnant as some point, having no control over her own sexuality and no confidence that she'll avail herself of contraceptives.
My original point returns, in that those you characterize as having some sort of problem with sex perhaps simply don't view sex as impossible to control. Wouldn't this better explain the divergence between your views on sex and theirs, rather than some odd discomfort? If you thought of sex as something your daughter could control, wouldn't you teach her to do that, rather than risk pregnancy, STD's and potential emotional harm? And yet you impute some sort of skewed sexual perspective instead.
It is an interesting notion that a person’s opinion about sexual topics is condemned as “perverse.” I guess I am still surprised to hear it from folks like yourself.
I'm quite comfortable characterizing as perverse the idea that fundamentalists and evangelicals should freely and often expound on the subject of orgasms.
Then the sexual studies of Freud and Masters and Johnson’s was perverse as well. Yet that perversion put us light years ahead of who we used to be.
Why? Did they also conclude that we have no control over our own sexuality? Because I'm pretty sure they didn't.
The poor don’t develop the same skills we can. They have to worry about the cold and rain and the heat. They have to worry about feeding themselves and their famiies. Birth control is actually far down on their list.
The fact that pregnant girls tend to be religious and uneducated means that their authoritarian, obedience-based family life is not exactly nurturing for women in trouble.
Until evangelicals start educating themselves on the oppressive social forces that push young women into a corner, then abortion will continue to be a fact of American life.
Hm. Well, looking around on the internet I find that the
Guttmacher Institute says about 70% of abortions are by women who identify as religious. And guess what? About 70-75% of
people identify as religious. Religious affiliation doesn't seem to be a factor at all. I will grant you that folks below the poverty level (about 16% of the populace) have 40% of the abortions, but are you really going to argue they're completely ignorant about sex and its inherent risk of pregnancy?