Total Votes: 14
08 May 2009
It was "a terrible, terrible idea" for Neil Cole -- founder of the Candie's Foundation, a teen pregnancy prevention group supported by the Candie's teen apparel company -- to appoint Bristol Palin as the foundation's newest teen ambassador, New York Times columnist
Gail Collins writes in an opinion piece. Palin, daughter of Alaska Gov.
Sarah Palin (R), gave birth in December 2008 after an unintended
pregnancy. Collins continues that "when it comes to combating teen
pregnancy, the Palin family has done enough damage already." There
could be no "worse message" than the one that the Palin family
delivered at the 2008 Republican convention, which was that "[i]f your
handsome but somewhat thuglike boyfriend gets you with child, he will
clean up nicely, propose marriage, and show up at an important family
event wearing a suit and holding your hand. At which point you will get
a standing ovation." Collins adds, "Now a single mom on the outs with
the father of her baby, Bristol wants a new kind of happy ending." She
writes that during an interview on Wednesday with "Good Morning America," Palin said, "I just want to go out there and promote abstinence and say this is the safest choice."
Bristol's
own "philosophy seems, at minimum, tentative," Collins writes, adding
that it's difficult to determine if "she believes that cheerleading for
abstinence should be coupled with education about birth control
methods." Meanwhile, Sarah Palin has said that "she opposes 'explicit'
sex education, which kind of sounds like ... sex education," Collins
writes. However, "while encouraging kids to wait is obviously fine, the
evidence is pretty clear that abstinence education is worse than
useless," Collins says. She notes that Texas, where nearly every school
teaches abstinence only, "is a teen pregnancy disaster zone."
During
Bristol Palin's appearance Wednesday at the Candie's Foundation's Event
To Prevent teen town hall, she "said very little except to assure her
audience that having a baby is no picnic," according to Collins. She
writes, "It's hard not to suspect that for her, being the
anti-pregnancy ambassador is just a good excuse to get out of Wasilla.
But where were her parents?" Collins adds that Sarah Palin "ought to
know by now that the only way to protect your family from becoming
tabloid fodder is to make it clear to the media that the kids are
absolutely off limits." She asks, "What does this say about Sarah
Palin's judgment?" Collins concludes that "we've sort of answered that
question before" (Collins, New York Times, 5/7).
Palin also discussed teen pregnancy in an appearance Wednesday on NBC's "Today Show" (NBC.com, 5/6).
Reprinted with kind permission from http://www.nationalpartnership.org. You can view the entire Daily Women's Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery here. The Daily Women's Health Policy Report is a free service of the National Partnership for Women & Families, published by The Advisory Board Company.
© 2009 The Advisory Board Company. All rights reserved.
Article URL: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/149312.php
Tags: teen pregnancy, palin, bristol palin, sarah palin, abstinence, prevention, sex ed, teen parents, mixed message
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"Now a single mom on the outs with the father of her baby, Bristol wants a new kind of happy ending." She writes that during an interview on Wednesday with "Good Morning America," Palin said, "I just want to go out there and promote abstinence and say this is the safest choice."
Wait, who said the last line? Sarah or Bristol? Because I DISTINCTLY remember Bristol saying not that long ago that abstinence was unrealistic and rolling her eyes at it. If suddenly she's "changed her mind", then no, I don't think she should be ANYWHERE trying to teach it to kids, when she didn't even support it herself.