Students in Class learning
Dame Jenni Murray a BBC presenter has shocked the public after she said, school kids should be allowed to watch pornography instead of just teaching them, that it will further educate them well in order for sex not to harm them.
Dame Jenni Murray
While addressing audience in Cheltenham Literature Festival Jenni 66-year-old said, it was what was needed to fight the "porn culture" which is informing children's opinions of sexuality and gender roles."Why not show them pornography and teach them how to analyse it?" she asked.
"So then at least those girls know and all those boys know that normal women do not shave, normal women do not make all that bloody noise those women make, they are making all that noise because they need a soundtrack on the film.
"Then, we are actually getting them to think their way through what they are watching," reports the Telegraph.
Jenni has been working with BBC Radio 4 as a presenter of 'Woman's Hour since 1987, again suggested moving current 'sex and relationship education', in which child over the age of 11 is required currently to have reproduction, sexuality and sexual health lessons, under the 'biology' banner.
"No parent is going to say ‘oh I don’t want my child getting involved in biology or science’, while an awful lot of parents might say, ‘I don’t want my child to have sex education".
Also Jenni said girls are "engaging in oral and anal sex because they want to please the boys".
A report last month by the Women and Equalities Committee said that pornography and its links to sexual violence are still not being addressed in sex education.
Research also found that sexual harassment in education is part of "everyday life", with the committee also warning that some pupils, including those in primary school, were being exposed to hardcore pornography and the images they saw were twisting their views on sex and relationships.
"No parent is going to say ‘oh I don’t want my child getting involved in biology or science’, while an awful lot of parents might say, ‘I don’t want my child to have sex education".
Also Jenni said girls are "engaging in oral and anal sex because they want to please the boys".
A report last month by the Women and Equalities Committee said that pornography and its links to sexual violence are still not being addressed in sex education.
Research also found that sexual harassment in education is part of "everyday life", with the committee also warning that some pupils, including those in primary school, were being exposed to hardcore pornography and the images they saw were twisting their views on sex and relationships.
No comments:
Post a Comment