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NORTHERN EXPOSURE
'How-to-be promiscuous' plan considered by schools
'Black Book' also promotes 'gay' agenda, abortion and calls God 'fat black dyke'

Posted: September 19, 2006
1:00 am Eastern

© 2009 WorldNetDaily.com



A sexually-explicit guide written in a way that condemns traditional North American values and promotes homosexuality and abortion to young girls learning about sex is being considered for use in public schools, and leaders at a family-values think tank are horrified.

"We have to find a way to stop this from happening," Joseph Ben-Ami, the executive director of the Institute for Canadian Values, told WND. "People don't know this is happening."


The project is called, "The Little Black Book – A Book on Healthy Sexuality Written by Grrrls (sic) for Grrrls" and was assembled by a group including the St. Stephen's House community service organization.

The Toronto project, now online after earlier published versions, is, according to Ben-Ami, "a thinly veiled propaganda piece that undermines healthy parent-child relationships, substitutes voodoo myths for actual science, and provides advice that, if followed, will certainly result in real and serious harm to those who follow it."

For example, the guide states that "only 10% of the population is heterosexual – the rest being 'mixed' or bi-sexual," but mentions no evidence. It also promotes homosexuality and labels parents "homophobes."

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"So are children until they get minds of other own," it said.

"One section devoted to lesbian sex is entitled, 'My First Time F***ing a Girl!" This in a book intended for young girls, Ben-Ami noted.

Neither an e-mail nor a telephone call to St. Stephen's was returned. St. Stephen's reports it was started by the Anglican Diocese in 1962, and "was" a Christian-based settlement house providing community services. It became "independent" in 1974.

"The guide promotes the use of devices to reduce the risk of contracting disease and infection through sexual activity, referring to this as safe-sex. No meaningful attempt is made to warn the reader of the failure rate of these devices," Ben-Ami said.

And in a swipe at anyone with a religious background or beliefs, the book includes the comment that, if "you need someone to represent God The Holiness, then for me, it's a fat black dyke."

"What this statement has to do with healthy emotional and sexual development is beyond us," Ben-Ami said.

He said his concern is that government authorities now are reviewing the guide for its possible uses. In Canada, which legalized same-sex marriage about a year ago, school curricula that refers to a man-and-woman as a couple has to be dropped.

Schools and teachers, he said, therefore are looking for new materials reflecting the change in the law, and he fears this will be chosen.

"Our understanding is that the Manitoba Ministry of Education is currently assessing whether the book is appropriate," he said.

St. Stephen's, the originator of the concept, is being funded this year by three levels of government, city, provincial and federal, with allocations totaling almost $8 million, he said.

The Institute for Canadian Values is a public policy think tank that is faith-based, but does not focus on a single belief system.

"The reason we're able to work with so many faith groups is because we don't have a particular religious agenda," Ben-Ami said. "We're just saying the traditional moral views in a lot of these areas are consistent with good social policy, good social science."

He said, for example, although he is not Catholic he recognizes the inherent benefits to society from the Catholic church's teachings on sexual abstinence. If that were translated to public policy with regards to the crisis of sexually transmitted diseases in Africa, he said, those diseases could be virtually eliminated in a generation.

"We ought not to be in a wholesale abandonment mode of traditional ways of doing things," he said, "simply because they happen to be identified as closely associated with religious groups."

Modern society, he said, appears to be implementing "bad social policy" almost in principle as a badge of not being religious.

"'The Little Black Book' is one of the most obscene and irresponsible 'educational' books we have come across," said the institute. "Canadians from all walks of life need to take action now to ensure that children are not exposed to its harmful influence."

Reminding readers that it's intended for fairly young girls, it honors the 40th anniversary of the Barbie doll with a list of recommendations for the occasion.

Those include "Shave her head and give her a nose ring," "Have Barbie marry another Barbie," "Have her take part in an orgy," and "Give her leather bondage gear, a whip and chains."

It also lists "Fun alternatives to intercourse: Petting, Cyber sex, phone sex, kissing, making out, blowjob" and others.

It also offers tips about having sex that "help you make the jump and land with a smile."


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Previous stories:

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Trial over pro-'gay' book set to begin

No notice to parents in 'diversity' classes

Dad on trial over homosexual book

Father faces trial over school's 'pro-gay' book








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