!®r Opimon s The Battalion Page 11 • Thursday, March 11,2004 Abstinence-only education is the key to ensure teens make the right decision ime to ?.0m is that r es ir 5 thing, lost nation. e lead- 'uncil “lost 'g snot ore nore i budg- ither 1 eader- or lop- in T 'es in me ipmeni possi- )US. irk ehall resik ex sells. It always has, and it always will. Everything on TV tells ,ociety that sex is the right lecision. According to the ’arents Television Council, ouths watch more than 25 lonrsaweek of television irogramming, and 66 percent if children between the ages if 10 and 16 claim their leers are influenced by television. Simply put, in a society drenched in sexual- y-laced images and so influenced by televi- , a sizeable opposition is necessary to :ounterthe message that is leaving this genera- hopeless, uninformed and in need of truth, fliis comes through nothing simpler then an ibstinence education program supported by ’resident George W. Bush. This administration appropriated $55 million nproject grants to “public and private entities or the development and implementation of ibstinence-only education programs for adoles- :ents, ages 12 through 18, in communities icrossthe country,” according to the White louse Web site. Moreover, Bush requested $73 nillion for 2004. While some consider this an outrageous munt of money for a social program of this uture, others are more genuinely outraged at a lore alarming statistic. According to The Morning News, 2.739 teenage girls ecome pregnant every day in the United States, md8,219 youths contract an STD on a daily is. Some of these teens have neglected to lis ente the wisdom of those who care, but many rfthem are simply uninformed of the perils of ch a lifestyle because everything about socie- screams that it’s OK. Beyond the risk of pregnancy, STDs and abortion, another risk looms — the adverse emotional effects. Some teens do get lucky. Tkyare sexually active to a highly dangerous involved. Passing out condoms to 14-year-olds is like giving a 7-year-old a match. “We don’t care what you do with it, we just want you to know it’s there,” educators say. On the contrary, abstinence groups tell developing minds that condoms aren’t the solution; they’re simply a way to possibly avoid some of the problem. Abstinence groups are not anti-condom; they are pro-education. Programs that provide no alternative leave children unprepared) ignorant F or years, conservatives have been lauding absti nence-only education programs as a way to lower teens’ sexual activity, lower the abortion rate, lower the number of cases of STDs and raise the moral standard of the nation’s teens. They say that abstinence is the only way to improve teens’ abstinence-only most effective way (ip, yet they do not ever contract an STD or eachild in the making. All seems dandy Mil they realize the gravity of their sexual jperience in tenns of its emotional conse- pience. Sex is, without question, the most pas- ionate and profound display of affection letween two individuals. It often creates an dentity of security and comfort and implies that relationship is at a very serious level, tfteen-year-olds who should be worrying about arsnow have to deal with complex emotional itoations that they are not ready to deal with. Ibstinence-only education programs will teach n the risks that many of them don’t even now they’re taking. Abstinence-based education is more than just moral argument. Its roots are grounded in omething stronger — logic and reason. Ibstaining from sex is not just morally right; 's smart. Teens do not need another moment of omebody going to their schools and explaining etas if they don’t understand it. Sex is the sta- isquofor adolescents. Instead of simply stat- igthe obvious, programs need to present a lavidto the Goliath that stands today. Many teenagers who have sex don’t know bout the emotional, psychological and health tors involved. Abstinence education groups lach that a condom is not a surefire way to pro- itand that other more serious issues are These programs give students the respect that other educational programming doesn’t. They view the teen as impressionable rather than hopeless. These programs offer a permanent solution to counter the half-truth that sex before mar riage is okay, and give the students a little more credit before throwing contraception in their fades and writing them off as another societal problem. Children need to be taught there is a reward for waiting until marriage to have sex. One reward obviously comes in the form of never having to worry about an STD, abortion or pregnancy. But another reward and a more pro found one comes in the form of honor. There is something overwhelmingly admirable about men and women who save themselves for mar riage. And nobody can refute this. All across the country, every day, husbands look into their wives’ eyes and say, “This is the most meaning ful relationship I will ever be in, and for our protection and our honor, I am presenting myself to you as a virgin.” Children must be taught that people such as this do exist. Matt Younger is a junior political science major. Graphic by Tony Piedra. The Netherlands has the lowest abortion rate in the world with between five and seven women out of 1,000 having abortions each year. It also boasts one of the lowest teen pregnancy rates in the world: Less than 1 percent of 15- to 17-year-old females gets pregnant every year, according to the National Center for Policy Analysis and the National Library of Medicine. In the United States, 34 percent of women become pregnant before the age of 20, and eight in 10 of these pregnancies are unintended, according to teenpregnancy.org. The Dutch government achieves this unparal leled success through open communication with teens about sex and a program that educates, rather than threatens. Teens are going to find a way to have sex if they want to. In some cases, explicitly telling teens to abstain from sex may make them want to rebel. Although President George W. Bush and his political cronies claim that his absti nence-only education program is responsible for a decrease in the teen birth ratCj this number has been declining since 1991 — 10 years before Bush took office. This type of education program threatens teens with stories of pregnancy and STDs, scar ing them into thinking that abstinence is the only way to avoid these problems. Obviously, abstinence is the best way to avoid pregnancy and STDs, but teens must be taught the alterna tives. Not every American shares the same moral and religious beliefs as the president. European programs, especially in The Netherlands, stress the importance of making the right personal decisions, not the importance of abiding by others’ decisions. Dutch sexual education programs establish an open line of communication. Almost all Dutch secondary schools and about 50 percent of primary schools address sexuality and contraception, rather than abstinence only, according to the National Library of Medicine. Dutch children are exposed to sexuality without the taboo that the United States places on it, making them easier pupils to teach. This open-communication poli cy encourages parents to talk with their teenage children about sex, an important facet of the European-style sexual education programs. According to teenpregnan- cy.org, 70 percent of teens said they were willing to listen to things their parents thought they were not ready to hear, and more than 70 per- cent of teens said that a lack of communication between a girl and her parents was a reason she may become pregnant. As a result of the greater communi cation between parents and teens, ^ European teenagers begin hav- ing sex at around 17 years old, two years after the average American teen starts. This is an important sta tistic, because children who have sex at a younger age are more BBBI likely to be victims of rape: 40 percent of girls who had sex at age 13 or 14 said it was involuntary, according to teenpregnancy.org. And logic dic tates that the sooner a person starts having sex, the more likely they are to become pregnant or contract an STD. The Dutch and European sexual education programs also stress the importance of contra ceptive use. These programs discuss the use of, the pros and cons and the risks involved with each type of contraception. They also give stu dents access to contraceptives, making a respon sible decision more likely. Conservatives are pulling the wool over their own eyes, thinking they will be able to stop teens from having sex. No one can stop teens from having sex, so why take away their access to affordable or free contraception? If sexual education programs teach absti nence as the only way to prevent pregnancy and STDs, teens who choose to have sex will be ignorant of the risk they are taking. These teens will also be ill-equipped to practice safe sex when they choose to do so. Conservative efforts to push abstinence edu cation are misinformed. If government officials would look at the results that other countries are getting out of a total sexual education package and encourage American schools to adopt such programs, teenage sexuality problems would severely decline. Matt Rigney is a junior journalism major. Vietnam veteran should not be memorialized opening the door to those who committed suicide would be an unmanageable task CHRIS LIVELY Constructed in 1982, the L/Vietnam War [emorial stands as resonant dedica- on honoring the ourage, sacrifice nd devotion to duty nd country charac- rized by the nearly 1 million mericans who participated in the rim struggle. The wall contains Highly 58,000 names of those con- idered casualties of war. Already a agic and staggering number, that umber could grow by the thousands one family’s request is granted. Almost four months after returning battle, prisoner of war and U.S. ir Force Capt. Edward Brundo took own life due to the psychological evastation symptomatic of many ietnam soldiers both during and after tewar. Now, his family has request- d that his name be added to the wall nthe grounds that Brundo’s trauma ’as a war-inflicted casualty, accord- ig to a news report from World Net laily. The Brundo family makes a sensible and honorable request, and it is one that deserves the utmost com passion and attention. Granting approval of such a request, however, would set a precedent that would be almost impossible to keep. Although the memorial is a dedica tion to all who served in combat, cur rent U.S. Department of Defense poli cy states that the names inscribed on the wall be of those who were killed or declared missing in the combat zone designated by President Johnson’s executive order. Names of those who died after the war directly from wounds received in the combat zone also meet the criteria. As a result of the Brundo family’s request, a psy chiatric consultant to the surgeon gen eral conducted research and reported that Brundo’s record indicated that he sustained “severe psychological and physical wounds” in Vietnam, which resulted in his death by suicide, according to The Washington Post. Maj. John Thomas, chief of public affairs for Air Force personnel, advo cates granting the Brundo family’s request. He mentions that the criteria for name addition refers to wounds received, but do not differentiate between physical and psychological wounds. The wall currently contains names of suicide victims, but are of those who died in and during combat. All things being equal, post-traumatic stress disorder and other psychologi cal abnormalities inflicted by a war of such devastation and chaos could be serious enough to drive many to sui cide. Although this is arguable, granti ng approval for the Brundo family would result in the a case-by-case record review of any veteran’s family wishing to do the same. While Brundo’s case may justify an inscrip tion under these grounds, inventing a process with today’s available tech nology to distinguish between war- induced suicides and those that stem from other reasons would be a logisti cal nightmare. . Also excluded from the list of names are victims who have died of cancer as a result of exposure to Agent Orange. Here too, qualifying Agent Orange-induced cancer would become a tedious, impractical task. Jan C. Scruggs, president of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, opposes the inscription of Brundo’s name. “If the Department of Defense decides to go down this route,” Scruggs argues, “I guarantee you and the Department of Defense that 20,000 families of service members who committed suicide will demand, and will now have legal standing, to place those names on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial,” according to The Post. Scruggs makes a reason able point as he also claims that there is simply not enough room on the wall to include all of those names, not to mention other post-conflict death victims such as those from Agent Orange. Estimates of post-conflict suicides of Vietnam veterans reach staggering numbers, and some say would need possibly two more entire walls to accommodate them. Since the fighting ended in Vietnam, various names have been added to the wall, as was expected by the VVFM. However, these names are of those who died in training missions in the combat zones or of directly related and distinguishable war injuries not characteristic of all sui cide victims. Perhaps the memorial should have been built with the anticipation of adding thousands of more names, but that is another issue in itself. Nevertheless, Captain Brundo and all post-war suicide victims deserve to be remembered and revered for their dedi cation and services at least in the hearts and minds of those who cared about them despite the fact that inscribing their names in the wall would have cer tain unfeasible implications. A spokesman for the WMF said a decision would be made regarding the Brundo family’s request in the next few weeks. In the meantime, the VVFM will appropriately dedicate a plaque honoring the victims of post conflict suicides and cancer next month, an appropriate way to honor people who lost their lives because of Vietnam, despite the fact that it is not feasible for the wall to be amended. Chris Lively is a senior sociology major.