Lesbian sex story
Wednesday, June 30th, 2010Day girl -
Carnal In making a match, must men really try harder?
In an article titled, "Why Women Aren't Funny" in this month's Vanity Fair, Christopher Hitchens writes, "The chief task in life that a man has to perform is that of impressing the opposite sex. . . . Women have no corresponding need to appeal to men in this way. They already appeal to men. . . ."
Source: www.philly.com
Why Don't More Public Schools Teach Sex Education?: A Constitutional Explanation and Critique
This article questions why so many public schools do not teach any form of sex education. The answer proposed in this article is that the U.S. Constitution is a part of the problem. This claim is based on the following two premises: (1) the U.S. Constitution almost certainly does not require public schools to teach sex education; and (2) the U.S. Constitution arguably requires public schools that teach sex education to exempt those students whose religious beliefs are substantially burdened by sex education.To illustrate how these two premises might weigh in a school district's decision not to teach sex education, this article analyzes a hypothetical question of how a school district should respond to threatened constitutional litigation over sex education. After Part I poses the hypothetical, Part II analyzes the problem and concludes with the two premises upon which my thesis is based. Based on Part II's analysis, Part III offers the following solution: not to teach sex education. After noting that this is not a solution to the problems resulting from uninformed or misinformed teen sex, Part III then departs from the article's descriptive format and briefly explores, as a normative matter, whether we should break the constitutional constraints that lead schools not to teach sex education. The article concludes with consideration of how the preceding discussion contributes to our understanding of the Constitution and those charged with interpreting it.
Source: works.bepress.com