Posted on 08/11/2008 4:42:16 PM PDT by wagglebee
August 11, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - In a culture where cold, hard science is king, one doctor is questioning whether the theory of "safe sex" can measure up.
In her pamphlet "Sense and Sexuality: The College Girl's Guide to Real Protection in a Hooked-up World," to be released later this month, Miriam Grossman, M.D., uses her medical training and 10 years' experience as a staff psychiatrist at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) to expose the physical and mental dangers of the uninhibited sexual climate that dominates the modern college campus.
In the introduction, Grossman describes the tragic and recurring scene in her campus office: a young woman, broken and in crisis, describes the mistakes that have poisoned her dreams. Dr. Grossman laments: "The worst part? Many times the crisis was 100 percent preventable. If only I'd known... she says, if only someone had told me."
These are the words, says Dr. Grossman, that young women should never have to say. Hers is not a pamphlet for "safer sex," but for giving girls the information they need: the "critical health information" that few others will tell them about.
One of the most striking features of this pamphlet is how Dr. Grossman draws her arguments from her authoritative medical perspective. Well-documented studies and statistics stand behind her objections to common misconceptions. As one example, Grossman argues that anal intercourse does not, as is sometimes erroneously believed, protect from STDs: rather, it increases the risk of HIV to 20 times that of vaginal intercourse. She also quotes a study that claims 91% of girls on one campus have feelings of regret after a hook-up - a fact she simply lets stand on its own.
In this pamphlet there are no arguments from moral standards; in fact, there is little argumenation at all, only a wealth of scientific fact that inevitably calls into question the safety of the "hook-up culture" at college campuses.
The pamphlet, stylishly tinted pink and red, appeals directly to college-age women in personal, but hard-line terms. It discusses in familiar words the effects of oxytocin, a hormone released by intimate behavior, on one's ability to make clear choices and on the long term consequences of the choices one makes: "Because of it [oxytocin], you could develop feelings for a guy whose last intention is to bond with you. You might think of him all day, but he can't remember your name."
Ultimately, Dr. Grossman's theme is crystal clear: be informed. If you do not take the time to ask right questions, you will be vulnerable to the wrong answers. As she writes in her conclusion: "Learn about the distinct sensitivities of being female - go beyond the brief information provided here - and use that knowledge to inform your decisions."
Dr. Miriam Grossman is a board-certified psychiatrist and the once-anonymous author of Unprotected: A Campus Psychiatrist Reveals How Political Correctness Endangers Every Student. She is a Senior Fellow at the Clare Boothe Luce Policy Institute, a non-profit organization that promotes conservative women in leadership roles.
For a preview of Dr. Grossman's pamphlet:
http://www.cblpi.org/senseandsexuality/index.cfm
Dr. Grossman's website:
http://www.miriamgrossmanmd.com
Clare Boothe Luce Policy Institute's website:
http://www.cblpi.org
For information on Dr. Grossman's book Unprotected, see the LifeSiteNews.com article:
College Women at Risk for Psychiatric Illness at Politically Correct Campuses
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2006/dec/06121409.html
Very well said.
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Too often, the issues of sex and sexuality are discussed in only the physical terms. Too often, there is talk about physical goals or pleasure, but no focus on the emotional aspect of sex intimacy.
And even in this anything goes world of ours, some things haven’t changed in the past 50 years. And that is, for girls who are too active in this area, they will still be called certain insulting names. ]
Birth control pills and condoms may help protect against certain consequences of sex behavior, but there’s no “safe sex” when it comes to the emotional piece of it.
When our sons and daughters go to college they are going to have sex. It is better for them to do so with a little knowledge than without.
Yes, that's what the article is addressing. Many of them would wait and save themselves a lot of pain by doing so, if they weren't subjected to a barrage of propaganda and peer pressure, for the purposes of breaking down their resistance.
It is better for them to do so with a little knowledge than without.
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing...
Cheers!
You assume correctly. It was like a hetero San Fran. They had a big temple there full of pagan temple prostitutes. To Aphrodite, the ‘goddess of love’. Lust more like it.
I always appreciated the statement “Flee..”, not just avoid but emphatically, flee, take action, nothing passive. And he didn’t just assume that everyone is going to fornicate so better tell them to be careful when they did.
I wonder if this is true for guys too, though. I considered that in college, reminding myself of the Biblical quote a few posts down...
Gee ain’t that the truth. Emotions are a bi-ach. Even when there is love it seems like the hurt ain’t far behind. parsy, who is lost in love and hurting.
Every one of them? All the time? Throughout time and space it has always been true that young men and women in college have sex?
There's no way to change this? it's not affected by thinking about morals? It's a readily ascertainable and unalterable law of human behavior?
Have I made my point?
Okay, the vast majority of people have sex before marriage.
Q:You know what we call people who use condoms? A: Parents.
I don't know the source of this humerous anecdote, but it's often true. If condoms cannot stop pregnancy (because they're ill-fitted or break), then their effectiveness at stopping STD's must also be called into question. And the HIV/AIDs virus identified as the guilty culprit, is 1/10th the size of the finest, though ultimately porous, breaks in the condom wall.
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