Donate today and get a free, signed copy of David Sirota's New York Times bestseller The Uprising: An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall Street and Washington
ZoomZoom InZoom OutPrintDiscuss
News > April 30, 2008

Unlocking Bush’s Chastity Belt

By Steve Yoder

For all its fumbling, the Bush administration has one achievement of note: it has persuaded the American public that premarital sex is a risky behavior for teens, akin to smoking or gang activity.

Given the intensity of the administration’s abstinence-until-marriage campaign, few were surprised when in February 2007, the Journal of Youth and Adolescence, a professional research journal, published a study reporting that adolescents who had sex were 58 percent more likely than were virgins to commit a delinquent act (up to one year after sex).

But Paige Harden, a doctoral candidate in psychology at the University of Virginia, didn’t buy it. She and her colleagues narrowed the original study’s data to compare only identical twins who were raised together but started having sex at different ages. That step automatically controlled for variables such as family and school environment.

Their findings, which will appear in the same Journal of Youth and Adolescence this spring, were startling: Twins who had sex earlier than their twin siblings were less likely to become delinquent.

Harden’s wasn’t the only recent study to loosen the administration’s chastity belt. In the January American Journal of Public Health, a team from Columbia University linked delays in sexual activity until after the teen years to problems in sexual functioning later in life. The researchers noted that the finding “lends credence to research showing that abstinence-only education may actually increase health risks.”

The government’s own statistics on the trends in teen sexual health support that conclusion.

On March 11, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released figures showing that one in four young women ages 14 to 19 has a sexually transmitted disease (STD). A CDC spokesperson pronounced the situation an “epidemic.”

In December 2007, the CDC announced a 3 percent rise in the teen pregnancy rate — the first increase in 14 years. And in November, it reported data showing that adolescent rates of two of the three STDs tracked nationally — syphilis and Chlamydia — increased from 2000 to 2006 (the latest reporting year). The third STD, gonorrhea, has climbed 6 percent since 2004.

“We’ve taken a very negative approach to teen sexuality, and it’s not working,” says Martha Kempner of the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States.

A backlash against abstinence-only programs may be brewing among young people themselves. Last October, 25 young people from the Washington, D.C.-based group Spiritual Youth for Reproductive Freedom visited Capitol Hill to lobby for equal funding for comprehensive sex education.

In New York City, several eighth-grade girls started the Sex Education Advocacy Project to educate parents and leaders. In December, the girls testified before the city council to ask that sex education be made mandatory in New York middle and high schools.

And at Sex Etc. (a teen-written website and magazine published by Answer, a comprehensive sex education organization at Rutgers University), teens wrote a how-to guide for students on changing their schools’ approach to sex education.

State governments are following suit. In late February, Iowa became the 17th state to refuse federal abstinence-only money because of accompanying ideological requirements. (Grant recipients, for example, must teach that sex outside of marriage is likely to have “harmful psychological and physical effects,” a claim that is scientifically unproven.)

Says Kempner: “We really swung all the way to the right, and we’re coming back in the other direction.”

Steve Yoder is a freelance journalist based in Willow, New York.

More information about Steve Yoder
  • subscribe to print magazine

  • Reader Comments

    The Bush people got something wrong?  You have got to be kidding.  That is the thing with the conservatives, they want to have things be as they were in the good old days.  Problem is the good old days were terrible.  Blacks hung from trees, gay folk castrated, women were little more than property.  Yeah right, bring on the good old days.  When are we as a nation going to realize that education is not our enemy?  When I talk to people I am saddend by the level of ignorance that pervades in what could be the greatest nation in history.  This is just another example of ignorance in action.

    Posted by anthony.phillips29 on May 1, 2008 at 8:11 PM

    “In the January American Journal of Public Health, a team from Columbia University linked delays in sexual activity until after the teen years to problems in sexual functioning later in life.”

    No surprise to me.  I’ve met some of the adult casualties of the Teen Sex Wars—now plagued with sexual dysfunction and frustration.

    The ultimate flaw in abstinence-only programs is their basis in fear.  Instead of giving young people the facts and tools to make their own decisions, they indoctrinate them with the belief that sex brings bad things.  Then they expect those irrational fears to magically vanish once people get married.

    Unfortunately, the fears don’t go away, and they lead to even greater emotional suffering than what’s suggested by the “True Love Waits” presentations.

    But, have no fear, because all that misery has opened the door to yet another growth industry ... Christian sex therapy!

    Posted by Desmond_Ravenstone on May 1, 2008 at 8:25 PM
  • register a new account »Posting Security

    To participate in our forums, please register for a free account.
Join Here
Member Login

Forgot password?

Article Appeared in this Issue

Full contents
Past issues

Also by Steve Yoder

Donate now
and get a
free, signed copy
of David Sirota's New York Times bestseller The Uprising: An Unauthorized Tour of the Populist Revolt Scaring Wall Street and Washington

Popular Discussions