The Denver Post’s Anna Staver reports on the next steps for House Bill 19-1032, the somewhat-unexpectedly controversial bill clarifying regulations on sex education in public schools, which remains an optional curriculum, to ensure what’s taught is accurate and (oh wait here’s the controversy) unbiased:
A 10-hour House committee hearing on the bill stretched late into the night and included hours of heated, sometimes graphic allegations that the language of the legislation promoted abortion, banned religious viewpoints and allowed for the teaching of sexual positions to children as young as 9 years old.
After passing the Democrat-controlled House on a series of party-line votes, the bill faces its next test this week in the Senate, where Democrats hold a narrower majority.
Its first Senate hearing is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Thursday in the Health and Human Services Committee.
We suggest taking a moment to thoroughly digest Staver’s detailed explanation of what House Bill 19-1032 does and does not do, because as our readers know the gap between fiction and reality on this particular piece of legislation is extremely wide. The legislation does not direct teachers to “explain sexual positions to children,” does not take away parental rights to opt kids out of sex ed, and does not ban the teaching of religious doctrine on sexuality–only that they don’t endorse a religious position.
At this point, however, the benign facts of the bill have been completely buried in an avalanche of misinformation–which prompted the spectacle of last month’s hearing in the House in which all present received an unsolicited education in the mechanical fine points of anal fisting (sadly, that is no joke). Tomorrow’s hearing is expected to be every bit as luridly descriptive, being far more entertaining to the crowd of tittering opponents than any factual discussion.
What we’ll learn by the end, when legislation that was not intended to be a radical change to existing policy at all is in the books, is that there are a lot of Coloradans out there who didn’t get very good sex ed in school themselves. We can only hope their kids are educated better.
In hope of achieving that, we can pass this bill.
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In Nicolas Cage voice:
"You have Tab A over here… and put it in Slot B over there… and that's how you make a baby! A, B, C, D, E, F,G! Release the baby!"
When will crazy R lady talk about fellatio? And, cunnilingus?
Or water sports … especially if they involve Russian prostitutes. Hypothetically speaking, of course.
Are you offering her pointers on either or both?
If her logic were consistent, she'd be all about teaching at least the 16+ students about these practices – after all, neither results in pregnancy, hence no possibility of abortion.
But no, their
innocenceignorance must be preserved at all costs. And the costs are high. I know juniors in high school who don't know how the various forms of contraception work.This is a great guide on what age-appropriate sexual education should look like.