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Pork for prudes: how conservatives score, while teaching kids not to.


ON HIS FIRST PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN stop in South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures


Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15.
, in June 1999, George W. Bush paid a visit to an abstinence-until-marriage workshop run by Heritage Community Services, a Charleston-based nonprofit that sponsors classroom presentations in over 40 local schools to teach teenagers that "waiting on sex until marriage is the expected standard in our culture" A longtime advocate for such programs, Bush told the crowd, "The contraceptive message sends a contradictory message. It tends to undermine the message of abstinence" If elected, he vowed to support the efforts of groups like Heritage with a boost in federal funding.

After the workshop, Bush met with Heritage president Anne Badgley, who began teaching abstinence after a decade running a pro-life counseling and adoption referral center. A politically connected GOP activist, Badgley organized a meeting for Bush with local conservative leaders and put her Roladex at his disposal. "I could see he was very sincere, and I worked hard to get him elected," she recalls.

And with good reason: Delivering spectacularly on his campaign pledge, the president's 2003 budget calls for hiking federal funding for abstinence education by a third, to $135 million. Bush wants to expand the same federal abstinence programs that have awarded more than $8 million to Badgley's organization since 1997.

Heritage is just one of hundreds of abstinence-until-marriage programs now funded by the federal government, courtesy of a little-noticed provision of the 1996 welfare reform law that allocated $250 million over five years for states to promote abstinence education. Written largely by the Heritage Foundation's Robert Rector Robert Rector is a Senior Research Fellow on Welfare and Family Issues at Heritage Foundation[1], a conservative think-tank based in Washington D.C., where he has studied welfare, poverty, marriage, and family issues for the last 18 years. Mr.  and championed by former Sen. Lauch Faircloth Duncan McLauchlin "Lauch" Faircloth (born 14 January 1928), served one term as a Republican U.S. Senator from North Carolina.

Before his Senate service, Faircloth was a prominent and wealthy hog farmer.
 (R-N R-N Raion (Russian, district; used in postal addresses) .C.), the statutes bar grant recipients from discussing contraceptions except to note condom failure rates, and require them to teach that "sexual activity outside of the context of marriage is likely to have harmful psychological and physical effects Physical effects is the term given to a sub-category of special effects in which mechanical or physical effects are recorded. Physical effects are usually planned in preproduction and created in production. "

Bush's support for abstinence-until-marriage has outraged liberals, who question whether such programs can actually reduce teen sex--and who, consequently, boycott the grants. But the effectiveness debate has largely obscured one underlying reason for the Bush administration's support: politics. Funding abstinence-until-marriage programs allows the White House to reward conservative groups by putting them on the federal gravy train gravy train
n. Slang
An occupation or other source of income that requires little effort while yielding considerable profit.


gravy train
Noun

Slang
.

For 30 years, sex education has been at the center of the culture wars, with liberals struggling to safeguard services that teach teens about contraception against conservatives' efforts to eliminate federal support for them. But since 1996, conservatives have adopted a new strategy: Instead of simply attacking initiatives they oppose (which, incidentally, are often administered by liberals), they have begun winning federal funding for their own alternative programs. With the administration's blessing, conservatives are breeding a new kind of federal pork geared entirely to their kindred spirits Kindred Spirits may refer to:
  • A painting by Asher Durand, 1849, see Kindred Spirits (painting)
  • A fantasy novel set in the Dragonlance universe, by Mark Anthony and Ellen Porathnovel, see Kindred Spirits (novel)
Kindred Spirit (singular) may refer to:
    . Though it flies in the face of small-government ideology, nourishing the nascent abstinence movement with federal funds Federal Funds

    Funds deposited to regional Federal Reserve Banks by commercial banks, including funds in excess of reserve requirements.

    Notes:
    These non-interest bearing deposits are lent out at the Fed funds rate to other banks unable to meet overnight reserve
     marks an important shift in GOP strategy to court its restless social-conservative base.

    Defying Condom Sense

    Washington first entered the national debate over sex education in the 1960s. Wilbur Cohen cohen
     or kohen

    (Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male.
    , Lyndon Johnson's undersecretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, raised the issue in a 1965 report, "Family Planning family planning

    Use of measures designed to regulate the number and spacing of children within a family, largely to curb population growth and ensure each family’s access to limited resources.
    : A Freedom to Choose," and the following year awarded a grant to a private, left-leaning organization called the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States SIECUS, the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States is a United States organization dedicated to sexuality education, sexual health, and sexual rights.  (SIECUS SIECUS Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States ) to design the first teacher-training manual for sexuality education. Aside from developing curricula, however, Washington did not mandate or directly fund sex education in schools. It did, however, under Johnson begin to pour federal dollars into local health clinics that provided contraceptive services and counseling to adults--and later to teens referred to the clinics by school nurses.

    In 1970, with the support of the Nixon administration, which believed informed access to contraception would limit global population growth (one of Nixon's pet concerns), Congress passed Title X of the Public Health Services health services Managed care The benefits covered under a health contract  Act, the primary federal program for the provision of family planning services. Title X funded the expansion of a national network of public and private clinics, which provided information and contraception on a sliding scale slid·ing scale
    n.
    A scale in which indicated prices, taxes, or wages vary in accordance with another factor, as wages with the cost-of-living index or medical charges with a patient's income.
     based on income. Todays state and local health departments run about 60 percent of these clinics, while the Planned Parenthood Planned Parenthood

    A service mark used for an organization that provides family planning services.
     Federation of America, the largest private provider of family planning services, administers another 14 percent.

    These federally supported family planning clinics became deeply controversial after 1976, when the Republican National Committee, in the wake of Roe v. Wade Roe v. Wade, case decided in 1973 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Along with Doe v. Bolton, this decision legalized abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy. , adopted its first pro-life platform. Though Title X money never directly funded abortions, pro-life groups complained that, by supporting family planning clinics, it effectively liberalized public attitudes toward sex and abortion. Conservatives also suspected that family planning organizations were the force behind immoral sex education in the schools. Groups like the National Right to Life Committee The National Right to Life Committee (NRLC) is a nonprofit organization that seeks to end legalized Abortion in the United States. Founded in 1973, following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 93 S. Ct. 705, 35 L. Ed.  and their allies in Congress began a yearly campaign to slash federal funding. Under Ronald Reagan, the first president with a political commitment to the pro-life movement, Title X was cut by nearly a quarter during his first year in office--though congressional Democrats later restored some of the money.

    During the 1980s and 1990s, attacks on Title X and legalized abortion riled rile  
    tr.v. riled, ril·ing, riles
    1. To stir to anger. See Synonyms at annoy.

    2. To stir up (liquid); roil.



    [Variant of roil.]

    Adj. 1.
     pro-choice liberals and family planning organizations supported in part by decreasing federal funds. Over the years, these groups have become a considerable political force. Planned Parenthood, which has clinics in almost every large metropolitan area, leverages its size and strength to distribute voter guides and organize get-out-the-vote drives on behalf of pro-choice candidates nationwide. While it occasionally endorses liberal Republicans in local elections, at the national level, Planned Parenthood nearly always supports Democrats. In 2000, for instance, the Planned Parenthood Action Fund, the group's lobbying arm, campaigned ardently for Al Gore Noun 1. Al Gore - Vice President of the United States under Bill Clinton (born in 1948)
    Albert Gore Jr., Gore
    , spending millions on television ads in a handful of swing states like Florida and Michigan to remind voters that George W. Bush cut family planning in Texas and pledged to "do everything in my power to restrict abortions" While Planned Parenthood doesn't lobby with federal funds--the vast majority of its budget comes from private donations--conservatives cry foul that any federal dollars support an organization with a history of stumping for Democrats.

    Until recently, conservatives have had limited success in securing federal support for their own programs. In 1982, two Republican senators, Jeremiah Denton and Orrin Hatch Orrin Grant Hatch (born March 22, 1934) is a Republican United States Senator from Utah, serving since 1977.

    Hatch is a member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, where he serves on the subcommittees on Energy, Natural Resources, and Infrastructure and Taxation and IRS
    , pushed through the Adolescent Family Life Act (AFLA AFLA Armed Forces Legal Assistance
    AFLA Adolescent Family Life Act
    AFLA Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association
    AFLA Africa Legal Aid
    AFLA Association Française de Linguistique Appliquée (France)
    AFLA Amateur Fencers League of America
    ). This measure provided the seed money to research "chastity" curriculum in schools--the precursor to many of today's abstinence programs, including the popular "Sex Respect" curriculum, developed by the evangelical group Concerned Women for American in the 1980s. However, AFLA's funding for pilot programs remained low (never exceeding $10 million), and its credibility was damaged by a 1983 lawsuit, brought by the American Civil Liberties Union American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), nonpartisan organization devoted to the preservation and extension of the basic rights set forth in the U.S. Constitution.  (ACLU ACLU: see American Civil Liberties Union. ), which alleged that some of its programs violated the constitutional separation of church and state
    See also: .
    Separation of church and state is a political and legal doctrine which states that government and religious institutions are to be kept separate and independent of one another.
    .

    With limited backing and few federal dollars, the abstinence crusade remained quite small, overshadowed by the primary anti-abortion passions of conservative groups in the 1980s and early 1990s. But support for the movement swelled with the wave of GOP successes in the 1994 congressional elections. Newly empowered in Congress, ideological Republicans saw that support for the pro-life movement was collapsing in the wake of clinic bombings by extremists, and they turned their attention to bolstering funding for abstinence education instead. If they couldn't keep Planned Parenthood from getting federal funds, at least they should get some of their own.

    Virgin Territory

    In 1996, the welfare reform act opened up the funding floodgates. Through a provision championed by then-Sen. Lauch Faircloth (R.-N.C.) during an eleventh-hour markup session with no public debate, the new law provided conservatives with federal funding in the form of grants to the state health departments to create abstinence education programs. Robert Rector, a policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative Washington think tank, helped write the law's controversial provision for abstinence education. Unlike Title X, which mainly funds family planning clinics, the new provision put the federal government in the position of directly funding sex education in both public and private schools. Until then, sex education had been funded and directed at the state or local level (the exception being recent HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome  prevention workshops offered by educators or public officials trained by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  (CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

    CDC - Control Data Corporation
    )). Because the provision's language makes lessons about contraception taboo--beyond noting condom failure rates--it all but guarantees that liberal groups won't apply for the grants.

    The new money was routed through state health departments, which reacted quizzically quiz·zi·cal  
    adj.
    1. Suggesting puzzlement; questioning.

    2. Teasing; mocking: "His face wore a somewhat quizzical almost impertinent air" Lawrence Durrell.
    . "I don't think states were ready for it or knew quite how to deal with it," says Montana's abstinence coordinator, Jon Berg. Many state health officials, dubious of abstinence education, instead used the money to fund everything but abstinence instruction. Hawaii funded after-school tutoring and extracurriculars; Massachusetts spent most of its money on a media campaign; and California simply refused the federal grant.

    This approach quickly drew tire from conservatives, who responded by creating the National Council on Abstinence Education (NCAE NCAE National Coalition for Aviation Education
    NCAE North Carolina Association of Educators, Inc.
    ) to capitalize on Cap´i`tal`ize on`   

    v. t. 1. To turn (an opportunity) to one's advantage; to take advantage of (a situation); to profit from; as, to capitalize on an opponent's mistakes s>.
     the new funding stream and pressure states to fund classroom abstinence instruction, rather than extracurricular activities. The group elected Peter Brandt, a conservative strategist and director of issue response for Focus on the Family, as its leader and spokesman. In several conservative states, the NCAE's lobbying efforts succeeded. Governors transferred control of the abstinence programs from state health departments to handpicked conservative commissions.

    In Louisiana, Republican Gov. Mike Foster, who annually proclaims Valentine's Day Valentine's Day: see Saint Valentine's Day.
    Valentine's Day

    Lovers' holiday celebrated on February 14, the feast day of St. Valentine, one of two 3rd-century Roman martyrs of the same name. St.
     as "Marriage Day," shut down the health department's plans to fund after-school tutoring and installed as director of his newly created Governor's Program on Abstinence Dan Richey Daniel Wesley "Dan" Richey (born October 31, 1948) is a Baton Rouge-based political consultant for pro-family candidates and organizations, including Louisiana Family Forum. From 1997-2004, Richey served under appointment of Republican Governor Murphy J. "Mike" Foster, Jr. , a former state senator Noun 1. state senator - a member of a state senate
    senator - a member of a senate
     and Christian activist. "I want to be involved," Foster told the Baton Rouge Baton Rouge (băt`ən rzh) [Fr.,=red stick], city (1990 pop. 219,531), state capital and seat of East Baton Rouge parish, SE La.  Advocate. "I want to make sure that the people [responsible for program implementation] are at least somewhat faith-based--people who have a real interest in abstinence, not technocrats." Richey withdrew preliminary contracts with nonpartisan groups like the YMCA YMCA
     in full Young Men's Christian Association

    Nonsectarian, nonpolitical Christian lay movement that aims to develop high standards of Christian character among its members.
     and awarded grants to conservative groups, including the state affiliate of Focus on the Family.

    In South Carolina, former Gov. David Beasley David Muldrow Beasley (born February 26 1957) is a United States politician. He was the Governor of South Carolina from 1995 until 1999.

    David Beasley began his political career as a member of the U.S. Democratic Party, but switched to the U.S.
    , a Republican who once tried to ban the state health department from distributing condoms to teens in public clinics, bypassed the competitive bidding Competitive bidding

    A securities offering process in which securities firms submit competing bids to the issuer for the securities the issuer wishes to sell.


    competitive bidding

    1.
     process most states employ to award grants, and handed its entire $1.3 million annual allotment to Badgley's Heritage Community Services. (Despite its state funding, Heritage programs have not always been welcome. In Badgley's home turf of Charleston County, the school board blocked Heritage programs from public schools in 1998 in order to continue teaching about contraception.)

    And in Arkansas, Republican Gov. Mike Huckabee, formerly the president of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention, also appointed an abstinence commission. Whereas only a decade ago, state officials were urging school-based health clinics to distribute contraception, today Arkansas is pushing a $1.4 million-a-year abstinence program run by conservatives.

    Not surprisingly, state abstinence programs have attracted passionate criticism from liberals, and some programs have faced charges of fraud and mismanagement mis·man·age  
    tr.v. mis·man·aged, mis·man·ag·ing, mis·man·ag·es
    To manage badly or carelessly.



    mis·manage·ment n.
    . The first round of contracts awarded by Arkansas' abstinence program was delayed by the state legislature, which suspected bias in the grant review process toward groups aligned with national conservative organizations; the legislators subsequently learned that the governor's abstinence committee had kept no meeting minutes bylaws The rules and regulations enacted by an association or a corporation to provide a framework for its operation and management.

    Bylaws may specify the qualifications, rights, and liabilities of membership, and the powers, duties, and grounds for the dissolution of an
    . In Louisiana, the ACLU in federal court against the that some abstinence grant recipients money for proselytizing, including lessons on the Virgin Mary as an exemplar of abstinence, and for prayer vigils outside abortion clinics.

    Well-Endowed

    To circumvent skeptical state health departments, conservative lawmakers are maneuvering more federal money directly into the hands of abstinence enthusiasts. In 2000, Rep. Ernest Istook (R-Okla.) secured an amendment to the annual Labor-HHS-Education appropriations bill to fund a new $20-million abstinence program. (In order to secure its passage, Istook struck a bargain with House Democrats to drop a Republican-backed provision limiting teens' access to Title X-funded clinics.) The follow states where abstinence education is unpopular--to apply directly to the federal government for funding.

    Nationally, conservative activists organize grant-writing workshops to help local abstinence groups capitalize on federal funding. When HHS HHS Department of Health and Human Services.  announced Istook's new grant program, its office was flooded with nearly 400 applications. "If it hadn't been for us, no one would have known about this program," says Leslee Unruh, founder and president of the National Abstinence Clearinghouse in Sioux Falls, S.D. Unruh used her database of addresses and emails, garnered from a decade on the abstinence speaker circuit, to get out the word and train grassroots activists how to approach the federal government for money.

    In her efforts to tutor abstinence educators about grant proposals, Unruh has gotten "nothing but support from the Bush administration," as she told The Washington Post. Michelle Lawler, the HHS program manager overseeing abstinence funding, has given tips on writing grant applications at the National Abstinence Clearinghouse's annual conferences for the past two years. When the inaugural grants for Istook's program were announced last June, the organizational impact of conservatives was evident. Nearly every group that received funding had ties to either the National Abstinence Clearinghouse, a conservative lawmaker, or to a faith-based group.

    This relationship is, of course, reciprocal. Not only does the Bush administration help prepare conservatives to write winning grant applications, but movement leaders continually remind abstinence educators that growing federal funding for their programs is possible because of the administrations support. At this year's National Abstinence Clearinghouse, held in July in Washington, D.C., a framed photograph of Bush smiling with Unruh and her husband was displayed at the conference registration table, and a giant banner to the left of the speaker's podium proclaimed, "President Bush, thank you for supporting Abstinence-Until-Marriage" The Heritage Foundation's Rector told the crowd, "If it was not for the steadfast support of President Bush today, the survival of [abstinence-until-marriage funding under welfare] would be very much in peril" HHS administrator Wade Horn received a standing ovation after a speech reaffirming the Bush administration's commitment to increasing financial support for abstinence programs.

    Market Penetration

    Over the past five years, federal grants have spurred the growth, not just of abstinence curricula in many public schools, but also of an entire secondary industry in brochures, media campaigns, speakers, and novelty items to facilitate the new state programs. "All of a sudden, abstinence is a business," says Unruh, who estimates that more than 900 new organizations have cropped up in the last decade. The vast majority of companies developing and marketing abstinence material are, not surprisingly, politically conservative.

    Today, for instance, educators nationwide go to longtime Bush adviser Dr. Joe McIlhaney, president of the Austin-based Medical Institute for Sexual Health, for graphic slides depicting late-stage STDs as a deterrent to sexual activity. Conservative think tanks like the Family Research Institute churn out statistics on condom failure rates for abstinence activists to share with schools and youth centers. The National Abstinence Clearinghouse sells books by Focus on the Family founder James Dobson, videos by the Family Research Council, even stickers and keychains emblazoned with slogans such as "I'm Worth Waiting For" and "Pet Your Dog, Not Your Date" The movement has also given rise to "abstinence speakers"--a hot new subgroup of motivational speakers. For $1,500 a day, a classroom planner can book Frank Shelton, a graduate of the Billy Graham School of Evangelism, to preach the good word about abstinence using parables and celebrity impersonations.

    These abstinence-product companies eagerly flaunt flaunt  
    v. flaunt·ed, flaunt·ing, flaunts

    v.tr.
    1. To exhibit ostentatiously or shamelessly: flaunts his knowledge. See Synonyms at show.

    2.
     the stamp of official approval that comes with government sanction. Brochures for the abstinence PEERS Project, for example, advertise being "funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Noun 1. Department of Health and Human Services - the United States federal department that administers all federal programs dealing with health and welfare; created in 1979
    Health and Human Services, HHS
    " The Responsible Social Values Program (RSVP (ReSerVation Protocol) A communications protocol that signals a router to reserve bandwidth for real time transmission. RSVP is designed to clear a path for audio and video traffic, eliminating annoying skips and hesitations. ), a training seminar for abstinence educators, includes a starred bullet point on its registration form to suggest that school districts or state health departments spend their allotment of federal abstinence funds on the RSVP program. And a Heartbeats International brochure selling abstinence videos for classroom use outlines its compatibility with any federally runded program.

    Some of these organizations would not exist were it not for federal funding. The McLennan County (Texas) Collaborative Abstinence Project, which bills itself as "the Wal-Mart of abstinence products," kicked off with a $747,000 grant and an inception banquet that boasted as its keynote speaker no lesser a luminary than then-Gov. George W. Bush. Its funding from private contributions, however, in 2000 was only $100, according to federal tax filings.

    The pro-life movement has also tapped into federal abstinence funding by reincarnating many of its "crisis pregnancy centers" (CPCs) as providers of abstinence education. CPCs are counseling centers which advise women to pursue adoption rather than terminate their pregnancies; they are often listed alongside family planning clinics in phone books to lure in women who may be considering abortions. A 1991 congressional inquiry found some CPCs had shown graphic abortion videos to women awaiting pregnancy test pregnancy test Any test used to detect or confirm pregnancy; in early pregnancy, all PTs measure hCG, the developing placenta's principal hormone, which is detectable as early as 6 days after fertilization; in clinical laboratories, serum levels of hCG are  results in order to dissuade them from having abortions. Though many centers do provide prenatal care prenatal care,
    n the health care provided the mother and fetus before childbirth.
     to young mothers, the federal government has largely kept pro-life organizations at arras Arras (äräs`), city (1990 pop. 42,715), capital of Pas-de-Calais dept., and historic capital of Artois, N France, on the canalized Scarpe River.  length since the abortion clinic bombings and doctor murders of the 1990s.

    However, CPCs that have transformed themselves into abstinence-educators have recently received federal grants. Several affiliates of Heartbeat International, a network of "life-affirming pregnancy resource centers" won grants under Istook's program. Heartbeat's president, Dr. Peggy Hartshorn harts·horn  
    n.
    1. The antler of a hart, formerly used as a source of ammonia and in smelling salts.

    2. Ammonium carbonate.
    , spoke at the National Abstinence Conference on "Why Abstinence and CPCs go together" In South Carolina, Heritage Community Services was founded as an adjunct to Badgley's Lowcountry Crisis Pregnancy Center; though incorporated as separate nonprofits, Heritage and Lowcountry share some staff, including their president.

    As a political instrument, the appeal of stoking the abstinence movement lies not just in its ability to finance conservatives' programs, but also to deny money to traditional, secular family planning organizations. Ohio recently declined nearly $1 million from the CDC for HIV/AIDS prevention programs, which SIECUS trains educators to teach, because conservative legislators decided that the curriculum conflicted with the state's exclusionary emphasis on abstinence. Similarly, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has proposed diverting $1 million from family planning clinics to abstinence education programs. Of course, supporters like Peter Brandt of the National Council on Abstinence Education argue that funding conservative groups at the expense of liberal ones isn't dirty politics, but merely an attempt to ensure equality. "These [abstinence] programs in effect took money away from a monopoly," he says.

    Trojan Horse

    With Bush's blessing, conservatives are pressing for more federal dollars. Rep. Istook, for one, has proposed increasing funding for his program to $73 million--a proposal, which, among other things, would divert $17 million away from the CDC and its HIV/AIDS prevention programs. Although the House voted down the measure, President Bush has since identified it as one of his budget priorities for 2003. The administration's goal is to bring the total funding for abstinence programs to $135 million and put it on par with what the White House cites as the federal funding level for "programs that teach about contraception use." That figure, however, accounts for everything from counseling teens in public clinics to HIV/AIDS hotlines; little of that money gets spent directly on classroom instruction. In contrast, conservatives want virtually all of the federal abstinence money to fund school programs.

    Another critical difference is that federal abstinence programs mandate what the curricula must teach (only abstinence instruction), whereas federal programs that teach about contraception are not required to do so by legislative intent. State and local health officials could conceivably spend Title X money on teaching abstinence-until-marriage if they choose. (Some states have, in fact, funded abstinence counseling with federal family planning funds.) Few do, however, because the prevailing mainstream scientific opinion holds that instruction about contraception is more effective in preventing disease and unwanted pregnancy unwanted pregnancy Obstetrics A pregnancy that is not desired by one or both biologic parents. See Teen pregnancy.  than a pure abstinence message. The American Medical Associations American Medical Association (AMA), professional physicians' organization (founded 1847). Its goals are to protect the interests of American physicians, advance public health, and support the growth of medical science.  the CDC, and the American Academy of Pediatrics The American Academy of Pediatrics ("AAP") is an organization of pediatricians, physicians trained to deal with the medical care of infants, children, and adolescents. Its motto is: "Dedicated to the Health of All Children.  all favor traditional sex education. Even Surgeon General The U.S. Surgeon General is charged with the protection and advancement of health in the United States. Since the 1960s the surgeon general has become a highly visible federal public health official, speaking out against known health risks such as tobacco use, and promoting disease  David Satcher, a Clinton holdover hold·o·ver  
    n.
    One that is held over from an earlier time: a political advisor who was a holdover from the Reagan era; a family tradition that is a holdover from my grandparents' childhood.

    Noun 1.
    , last year released an extensive report on human sexuality that questioned the value of abstinence-until-marriage education. (The Bush administration responded by cutting Satcher's staff, effectively silencing him for the remainder of his term.)

    Though evidence that abstinence programs work is extremely thin, even by conservatives' own admission, advocates portray that weakness as a further reason for increasing program funding. "Unless we put money there to find out whether it works," says HHS Deputy Secretary Claude Allen, "we will never know" Yet research to distinguish potentially promising programs from the duds is hampered by ambiguities in the welfare reform law itself. Despite being explicit in the particulars of its purpose ("a mutually faithful monogamous relationship in the context of marriage is the expected standard of human sexual activity"), the legislation avoids actually defining sexual activity (does oral sex count as sex?), which has led researchers to quibble QUIBBLE. A slight difficulty raised without necessity or propriety; a cavil.
         2. No justly eminent member of the bar will resort to a quibble in his argument.
     over what it means to measure changes in rates of teen sex. Of course, many grassroots educators are deeply reluctant to gather any data about their students' sex lives, arguing that even posing questions for the sake of research could undermine their mission to exclusively promote abstinence.

    When President Bush unveiled his 2003 budget in February, he argued that federal funding should be linked to measured results of government programs. Under Bush's accountability plan, the Office of Management and Budget The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), formerly the Bureau of the Budget, is an agency of the federal government that evaluates, formulates, and coordinates management procedures and program objectives within and among departments and agencies of the Executive Branch.  will grade each program, and those deemed ineffective or inefficient will be axed or trimmed. Bush's budget director Mitch Daniels pledged, "There are plenty of places to reduce spending when you separate the effective programs from the ineffective programs. This budget will take a long step toward governing with accountability."

    But those same rules don't seem to apply when it comes to abstinence programs--a sure sign that such programs are more about politics than public health in the administration's eyes. Abstinence-until-marriage funding is part of a broader administration strategy of using federal largesse lar·gess also lar·gesse  
    n.
    1.
    a. Liberality in bestowing gifts, especially in a lofty or condescending manner.

    b. Money or gifts bestowed.

    2. Generosity of spirit or attitude.
     to feed and broaden its electoral base that includes imposing steel tariffs to win union votes, boosting crop subsidies to woo farmers, and buying back oil leases in Florida to help Gov. Jeb Bush win reelection re·e·lect also re-e·lect  
    tr.v. re·e·lect·ed, re·e·lect·ing, re·e·lects
    To elect again.



    re
    . Despite its professed fealty fealty: see feudalism.  to the GOP's historic small-government conservatism, White House support for abstinence programs is yet another sign that the Bush administration has decided that if you can't beat `em, join `em.

    RELATED ARTICLE: As seen on TV.

    BESIDES TRAINING ENTHUSIastic young abstinence adductors, Heritage Community Services is now working on what president and founder Anne Badgley calls "a phenomenally exciting project ... an infomercial? The idea for the 30-minute presentation extolling the physical and psychological benefits of abstinence came from similar paid product placements Badgley has seen on television. "It's like when you're selling exercise equipment," she explains. "You want to make people think, `Wow, that sounds cool!'"

    Several state abstinence programs have hired major advertising firms to design 30-second television and radio spots like Texas's catchy "Zip-It' campaign, which features original hip-hop music, a close-up shot of a DJ scratching an LP, and the phrase "You Don't Have To Prove Your Love" flashing across the screen. "The point was to make this something that's really hip and cool for the kids," says Sherry Matthews, president of Sherry Matthews Advertising Agency in Texas, which produced the ad for around $395,000.

    Idaho's state campaign tried using reverse psychology to show teens what was potentially uncool about having sex. Their television spots, produced by es/drake ad agency in Boise, Idaho, were spoofs of ads for popular dolls. "Action Teen Father," for example, resembles a Ken doll with a mullet mullet: see silversides.
    mullet

    Any of fewer than 100 species (family Mugilidae) of abundant, commercially valuable schooling fishes found in brackish or fresh waters throughout tropical and temperate regions.
     haircut and faded jeans, and comes complete with a crib, diaper bag, "Action Baby Buggy," and food stamps. (His girlfriend, "Teen Mommy Darcie," is sold separately.) Although the message--"Teen parenting isn't fun"--flashes in the final frame, some younger viewers apparently didn't get the point. According to Shelly Rambo Robertson of the Idaho Department of Health, a few parents complained that their children thought the toys were genuine and wanted to buy "Teen Mommy Darcie."

    Whether such ads can influence behavior is a hotly contested question, with criticism coming from both liberals, who find the abstinence message unrealistic, and conservatives, who think television isn't the way to sell it. Unfortunately, most evaluations of media campaigns reveal little about their impact on teen pregnancy and STD (Subscriber Trunk Dialing) Long distance dialing outside of the U.S. that does not require operator intervention. STD prefix codes are required and billing is based on call units, which are a fixed amount of money in the currency of that country. ) rates. A 1999 study by the Maternal Child and Health Bureau, which administers the federal abstinence grants, discovered that more states measured success by tracking additional media coverage than by tracking changes in teen sexual activity.

    --Christina Larson

    CHRISTINA LARSON is the associate publisher of The Washington Monthly.
    COPYRIGHT 2002 Washington Monthly Company
    No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
    Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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    Author:Larson, Christina
    Publication:Washington Monthly
    Date:Sep 1, 2002
    Words:4068
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