- Aug 20, 2000
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I'm not a fan of Meghan McCain, but I applaud her for bringing up a delicate topic that really needs to be raised if the Republican Party is going to mount a recovery in many of the urbanized regions of America.
I like her primary but somewhat understated message in this opinion piece: Educate, give your opinion, but at the end of the day after you've supplied your children with as much information as you can give them, respect that the choices they make are theirs. Both the political left and right sorely need to follow that advice.
The GOP Doesn't Understand Sex
I like her primary but somewhat understated message in this opinion piece: Educate, give your opinion, but at the end of the day after you've supplied your children with as much information as you can give them, respect that the choices they make are theirs. Both the political left and right sorely need to follow that advice.
The GOP Doesn't Understand Sex
Let me get something straight: Bristol Palin, as an 18-year-old adult, is free to make her own choices and decide how she wants her life to unfold. But for whatever reasons, the American public and media remain overly engrossed in our politicians? sex lives and, as in this case, those of their families.
There?s an especially unhealthy attitude among conservatives. Daughters of Republican politicians aren?t expected to have sex, let alone enjoy it?as if there were some strange chastity belt automatically attached to us female offspring. God forbid anyone talk realistically about life experiences and natural, sexual instincts. Nope, the answer is always abstinence.
This is something I know about firsthand. During my father?s 2000 presidential campaign, a reporter asked how he would feel if I became pregnant and wanted an abortion. He answered that it would be my choice, sending shockwaves throughout the party (because for the GOP there is only one answer, and obviously Senator McCain?s daughter shouldn?t be engaging in sex ever).
Here was a father, delicately navigating a question about his teenage daughter and being true to the kind of father he had always been, and the Republican Party was outraged. It didn?t matter that my parents raised me to know that, regardless of the mistakes I might make, they would allow me the dignity and courage to make my own choices.
That?s the kind of trust my parents have always placed in their children?yet the GOP still needed to get involved and have a say in what I did with my body.
Here?s what I?ve never understood about the party: its resistance to discussing better access to birth control. As a Republican, I am pro-life. But using birth control and having an abortion are not the same at all. Actually, the best way to prevent abortions is to educate people about birth control and make it widely and easily accessible.
True, abstinence is the only way to fully prevent pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases. Still, the problem with abstinence-only education is that it does not make teenagers and young adults more knowledgeable about all the issues they face if or when they have sex?physically and emotionally.
The key, honestly, is communication between parents and children. At the end of the day, the worst thing parents can do is raise children who are not prepared for the situations they may encounter, especially when they?re not planned. (For anyone who remembers their teen years, you know what I mean.) Unfortunately, Republicans typically don?t like to discuss or deal with things they think are wrong or immoral. And that?s a huge mistake.
If we can?t discuss birth control in addition to abstinence, and in a nonjudgmental way, kids will continue to make bad choices for lack of having access to informed, safe options. Not everyone shares the same beliefs, and more importantly, people don?t always react the same way to their circumstances. Which is why it is so important to encourage honest, open communication about the realities of sex within the party at large, and more specifically, between parents and their children.