Thursday, June 01, 2006

News Noted

An English study wants to find out how men are affected by cervical cancer.

Many colleges don't have written policies regarding female college athletes who get pregnant.

Ireland's Supreme Court struck down the country's statutory rape law. Nice.

The Reich's incestuous version of prom, where fancy creepy dress-up rituals entail:
"The Father Daughter Purity Ball is a memorable ceremony for daughters to pledge commitments to purity and their fathers to pledge commitments to protect their girls. Because we cherish our daughters as regal princesses—for 1 Peter 3:4 says they are “precious in the sight of God”—we want to treat them as royalty.

SD Healthy Families site

Focus South Dakota

King George is preparing a new push for an anti-gay amendment that would ban same-sex marriage, reportedly at a June 5th press conference. Here we go again.

Amsterdam Pedophiles to launch political party to push for a cut in the legal age for sexual relations to 12 from 16 and the legalization of child pornography and sex with animals, sparking widespread outrage. Um...?

General George Casey orders 'core values' training for US troops in Iraq to begin immediately, after troops shot and killed a pregnant woman who was racing to the hospital to deliver her baby and, oh yea...the whole Haditha massacre.

Anti-choice extremists recently picketed a Woodbury MN clinic that DOES NOT perform abortions. It offers STD testing and contraception. Oh, the horror.

A study by the National Center on Health Statistics-- Fertility, Contraception, and Fatherhood: Data on Men and Women from the National Survey of Family Growth--says that men with higher education levels are more likely to eat with, play, and bathe their kids.

A St. Thomas graduate preaches about the ills of contraception at this graduation speech.

Check out: the First Carnival Against Sexual Violence.

A father raped his daughter repeatedly from 2-4 years old, taped it and then produced child pornography with the tapes. Sentenced to 15 years, but The Quebec Court of Appeal voted 2-1 to reduce his sentence to nine years. "There was no violence, such as gagging, threatening or hitting the child," one of the justices wrote in his decision.

It’s about time for male contraception!

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