Saturday, March 22, 2014
Thursday, March 20, 2014
Seaside 2013: Teens teach porn class to adults at Oregon Adolescent Sexuality Conference. by Jim Sedlak STOPP
Planned Parenthood is a permanent member of the Seaside Adolescent Sexuality Conference.
Jim Sedlak is the founder of STOPP, stop Planned Parenthood. And is an expert on this subject.
When I walked into this year’s Oregon Adolescent Sexuality Conference
in Seaside, Oregon, one of the first things I encountered was a table
manned by three young teen boys. On the table was a collage that
included many depictions of totally bare female genitalia—obviously
pornographic and, one would think, illegal.
The collage included a drawing of a woman circa 1950 declaring, in the most base terms, what a woman’s private parts should smell like. It also included a drawing of a pigtailed little girl riding on a tricycle with the word “Vagina!” written above her, and another drawing of a young female child standing by a rose, with the word “Vagina” written below her on a chalkboard.
“Everyone can come inside” are the words visible along the outer edge of the piece, which appeared to be a decoupaged plate.
The boys smiled nervously as hordes of teens, who had arrived for what some described as a field trip, passed the display table. Planned Parenthood was on the steering committee of this conference.
The booth belonged to Youth for Education and Prevention of Sexual Assault (YEPSA), a supposedly teen-led initiative from Eugene, Oregon. At a booth whose stated mission was the prevention of sexual assault, I could only wonder why the teen boys would be manning a table containing graphic pictures of female genitalia, suggesting that “everyone can come inside” a pigtailed little girl on a tricycle.
With that question in mind, I checked on the Internet and found that the group puts on performances, the first of which was The Vagina Monologues. The students stated they just finished a run of a play that they wrote about the life struggles of a transgendered woman. They have a transgender education panel coming up, and they do art shows around teen sexuality and gender.
Day two of the conference found me very reluctantly attending a workshop led by YEPSA entitled “You Say Porn, I Say Porn!”
The program description did not even begin to touch the stark reality of the session. “To porn or not to porn, that is the question. YEPSA will be leading the masses through the very exciting world of pornography.” The session was held in a large room, filled with teens and adults. It started with a soft porn video commercial.
About 10 teen facilitators lined up across the front of the room and introduced themselves. They gave their names and the pronoun they prefer (“I prefer ‘she,’” “I don’t have a preference but I identify as male,” etc.). This was in keeping with a theory emphasized over and over at the conference—that gender is fluid and is determined only by the person in question and how that person feels at that particular time about his or her gender. In others words, biology has nothing to do with gender.
That was evidenced by a teen boy who attended lunch the first day dressed as a woman, complete with wig, pearls and dress. He soon put aside the outfit, and was once again looking like a teen boy the next time I saw him. Another young man was decorated with glitter on his face and a lilting voice, both of which he shed later in the day.
It was pointed out at the beginning of the conference that there were unisex bathrooms available for those who preferred to use them. There were separate male and female bathrooms available as well.
Getting back to the session, the facilitators asked everyone in the room to work on a group definition of porn. Since they said it wouldn’t be possible to come up with a real definition that everyone agreed on, we just needed to make it “pornish.”
Some of the pornish ideas were: Main purpose is to stimulate arousal. You learn different ways to have sex from porn. It has commercial purposes. It is an exaggerated depiction of fantasy. It is a beautiful thing. It objectifies people. It is whatever promotes a sexual response. It tries to get people thinking about sex.
Next, the room was divided into nine groups. The youth facilitators went from group to group, individually or occasionally in pairs, talking about different aspects of porn to the mixed groups of teens and adults.
One of the young teen female facilitators was very scantily dressed, with her entire midriff showing and wearing a very tight miniskirt. She literally bounced rather than walked. The young teens would come into these groups of mixed adults and teens and ask questions like: “How is porn different from real sex?” “How might watching porn from a young age affect you?”
A major discussion about how tragic it is that porn stars refuse to use condoms ensued in our group, with much wondering about why this is so. An adult male, who seemed to have way too much knowledge on all things pornographic, said it is because of lack of stimulation.
Most of the facilitators were teen girls. Much of the response to these young girls’ queries and the discourse about sex and pornography came from two older men in our group.
When one particularly thin girl finished questioning our group and left, I heard one of the men say to the other, “That was sexy. What do you do?” To which the man who knows too much about porn replied: “I work with teens.”
He had been discussing with the teens a social media outlet where one can post photos for just a few seconds, or as long as wanted, and then the pictures disappear, he said.
One teen facilitator asked whether it was okay for girls to send nude pictures to their boyfriends, and the adults generally agreed it was fine as long it was a boyfriend, but not to strangers. One woman finally pointed out that those pictures can go anywhere once they are sent and don’t disappear when the relationship dissolves.
The session was a dirty old man’s delight. These teen facilitators were probably high school age, some very young high school, with some appearing to be possibly middle school. Several of them were awkward and visibly uncomfortable with their role in this debacle, while others seemed far too seasoned and comfortable with the situation.
This is just a sampling of the plan that Planned Parenthood has for our teens. Check out our website at www.stopp.org, where I will be writing for several weeks on the unbelievably inappropriate materials and scenarios that were presented at this conference.
Oregon Education Department “sexuality education expert” Brad Victor prides himself on the fact that Oregon has the “most progressive sex education laws in the nation,” and brags about how he easily slid Oregon’s explicit Administrative Rule under the radar as a consent item at the state board level. The plan is that other states will follow suit. Many are already deeply embroiled in Planned Parenthood’s sex education. Those who are not embroiled are targeted.
But as we pointed out in our last edition of The Wednesday STOPP Report, Brad Victor also demonstrated that if parents will speak out at every level, sex education can be easily derailed in a school district—even one where the programs are already firmly in place. The sooner parents start their challenges, however, the better.
Jim Sedlak’s book Parent Power!! is available free of charge on our website. It is a brilliant instructional tool that lays out the plan that parents can follow to get Planned Parenthood out of local schools. It is a plan that has been proven to work time and time again when parents follow it. Read Jim’s book today and take action!
The collage included a drawing of a woman circa 1950 declaring, in the most base terms, what a woman’s private parts should smell like. It also included a drawing of a pigtailed little girl riding on a tricycle with the word “Vagina!” written above her, and another drawing of a young female child standing by a rose, with the word “Vagina” written below her on a chalkboard.
“Everyone can come inside” are the words visible along the outer edge of the piece, which appeared to be a decoupaged plate.
The boys smiled nervously as hordes of teens, who had arrived for what some described as a field trip, passed the display table. Planned Parenthood was on the steering committee of this conference.
The booth belonged to Youth for Education and Prevention of Sexual Assault (YEPSA), a supposedly teen-led initiative from Eugene, Oregon. At a booth whose stated mission was the prevention of sexual assault, I could only wonder why the teen boys would be manning a table containing graphic pictures of female genitalia, suggesting that “everyone can come inside” a pigtailed little girl on a tricycle.
With that question in mind, I checked on the Internet and found that the group puts on performances, the first of which was The Vagina Monologues. The students stated they just finished a run of a play that they wrote about the life struggles of a transgendered woman. They have a transgender education panel coming up, and they do art shows around teen sexuality and gender.
Day two of the conference found me very reluctantly attending a workshop led by YEPSA entitled “You Say Porn, I Say Porn!”
The program description did not even begin to touch the stark reality of the session. “To porn or not to porn, that is the question. YEPSA will be leading the masses through the very exciting world of pornography.” The session was held in a large room, filled with teens and adults. It started with a soft porn video commercial.
About 10 teen facilitators lined up across the front of the room and introduced themselves. They gave their names and the pronoun they prefer (“I prefer ‘she,’” “I don’t have a preference but I identify as male,” etc.). This was in keeping with a theory emphasized over and over at the conference—that gender is fluid and is determined only by the person in question and how that person feels at that particular time about his or her gender. In others words, biology has nothing to do with gender.
That was evidenced by a teen boy who attended lunch the first day dressed as a woman, complete with wig, pearls and dress. He soon put aside the outfit, and was once again looking like a teen boy the next time I saw him. Another young man was decorated with glitter on his face and a lilting voice, both of which he shed later in the day.
It was pointed out at the beginning of the conference that there were unisex bathrooms available for those who preferred to use them. There were separate male and female bathrooms available as well.
Getting back to the session, the facilitators asked everyone in the room to work on a group definition of porn. Since they said it wouldn’t be possible to come up with a real definition that everyone agreed on, we just needed to make it “pornish.”
Some of the pornish ideas were: Main purpose is to stimulate arousal. You learn different ways to have sex from porn. It has commercial purposes. It is an exaggerated depiction of fantasy. It is a beautiful thing. It objectifies people. It is whatever promotes a sexual response. It tries to get people thinking about sex.
Next, the room was divided into nine groups. The youth facilitators went from group to group, individually or occasionally in pairs, talking about different aspects of porn to the mixed groups of teens and adults.
One of the young teen female facilitators was very scantily dressed, with her entire midriff showing and wearing a very tight miniskirt. She literally bounced rather than walked. The young teens would come into these groups of mixed adults and teens and ask questions like: “How is porn different from real sex?” “How might watching porn from a young age affect you?”
A major discussion about how tragic it is that porn stars refuse to use condoms ensued in our group, with much wondering about why this is so. An adult male, who seemed to have way too much knowledge on all things pornographic, said it is because of lack of stimulation.
Most of the facilitators were teen girls. Much of the response to these young girls’ queries and the discourse about sex and pornography came from two older men in our group.
When one particularly thin girl finished questioning our group and left, I heard one of the men say to the other, “That was sexy. What do you do?” To which the man who knows too much about porn replied: “I work with teens.”
He had been discussing with the teens a social media outlet where one can post photos for just a few seconds, or as long as wanted, and then the pictures disappear, he said.
One teen facilitator asked whether it was okay for girls to send nude pictures to their boyfriends, and the adults generally agreed it was fine as long it was a boyfriend, but not to strangers. One woman finally pointed out that those pictures can go anywhere once they are sent and don’t disappear when the relationship dissolves.
The session was a dirty old man’s delight. These teen facilitators were probably high school age, some very young high school, with some appearing to be possibly middle school. Several of them were awkward and visibly uncomfortable with their role in this debacle, while others seemed far too seasoned and comfortable with the situation.
This is just a sampling of the plan that Planned Parenthood has for our teens. Check out our website at www.stopp.org, where I will be writing for several weeks on the unbelievably inappropriate materials and scenarios that were presented at this conference.
Oregon Education Department “sexuality education expert” Brad Victor prides himself on the fact that Oregon has the “most progressive sex education laws in the nation,” and brags about how he easily slid Oregon’s explicit Administrative Rule under the radar as a consent item at the state board level. The plan is that other states will follow suit. Many are already deeply embroiled in Planned Parenthood’s sex education. Those who are not embroiled are targeted.
But as we pointed out in our last edition of The Wednesday STOPP Report, Brad Victor also demonstrated that if parents will speak out at every level, sex education can be easily derailed in a school district—even one where the programs are already firmly in place. The sooner parents start their challenges, however, the better.
Jim Sedlak’s book Parent Power!! is available free of charge on our website. It is a brilliant instructional tool that lays out the plan that parents can follow to get Planned Parenthood out of local schools. It is a plan that has been proven to work time and time again when parents follow it. Read Jim’s book today and take action!
"Wink Wink: have fun, do good." Church Message at Seaside Adolescent Conference?
Although the Adolescent Sexuality Conference hasn't happened yet, it's April 6th and 7th, Amy Johnson's past article shows how her mind works. In "Wink Wink: have fun, do good." she feels that the game "Wink, Wink" is appropriate. Here's the picture in her article.
The problem for us as Catholics is that the things shown in this picture are not option for our children, or us. Although most Catholics use birth control, the Church teaches that there is more freedom in Natural Family Planning but abstinence for the un-married.
She wants to circumvent many church teachings with her workshop. And the State of Oregon is helping her. She can be reached at info@diligentjoy.com
E3 – Embracing Sexuality Education in Church: Alternative to Just Say No
Amy Johnson, MSW
Using a model of holistic sexuality, the presenter will explore ways to include scripture in sexuality education in a way that promotes comprehensive education and inclusivity of all people. This workshop will be useful for youth and adults who find themselves feeling like sexual identity and sexuality education are difficult to reconcile with religion, and in particular with Christianity. Come explore ways to use spirituality and religion as healthy building blocks in sexuality education for youth.
Intended Audience: Youth & Adults
Main Focus: Spirituality & Sexuality
Level of Information: Introductory
Presentation Techniques: Interactive
Click on for the Full List of Workshops
There is no information on this woman's background or religious belief, if any. The people running this conference are not parents and not balanced in their view of sexuality. Active homosexuality behavior and total sexual license is their message. Plus this conference is for "adolescents up to age 24". What is that all about?
If the the State of Oregon let Amy speak on Church issues and sex, why not let a priest or minister give their church's view and have real education or is this all contraception driven and no other views are welcome? Wink, wink.
http://oregon-asc.org/steering-committee/
Cascade AIDS Project pparisot@cascadeaids.org
208 SW 5th Ave #800, Portland, OR 97204
or
Father Peter J. Smith, Bishop-Elect
2838 E Burnside St, Portland, OR 97214
From USCCB website.
Matthew 18:6-7
Temptations to Sin.
6d “Whoever causes one of these little ones* who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone hung around his neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.
7* Woe to the world because of things that cause sin! Such things must come, but woe to the one through whom they come!
The problem for us as Catholics is that the things shown in this picture are not option for our children, or us. Although most Catholics use birth control, the Church teaches that there is more freedom in Natural Family Planning but abstinence for the un-married.
She wants to circumvent many church teachings with her workshop. And the State of Oregon is helping her. She can be reached at info@diligentjoy.com
E3 – Embracing Sexuality Education in Church: Alternative to Just Say No
Amy Johnson, MSW
Using a model of holistic sexuality, the presenter will explore ways to include scripture in sexuality education in a way that promotes comprehensive education and inclusivity of all people. This workshop will be useful for youth and adults who find themselves feeling like sexual identity and sexuality education are difficult to reconcile with religion, and in particular with Christianity. Come explore ways to use spirituality and religion as healthy building blocks in sexuality education for youth.
Intended Audience: Youth & Adults
Main Focus: Spirituality & Sexuality
Level of Information: Introductory
Presentation Techniques: Interactive
Click on for the Full List of Workshops
There is no information on this woman's background or religious belief, if any. The people running this conference are not parents and not balanced in their view of sexuality. Active homosexuality behavior and total sexual license is their message. Plus this conference is for "adolescents up to age 24". What is that all about?
If the the State of Oregon let Amy speak on Church issues and sex, why not let a priest or minister give their church's view and have real education or is this all contraception driven and no other views are welcome? Wink, wink.
http://oregon-asc.org/steering-committee/
Cascade AIDS Project pparisot@cascadeaids.org
208 SW 5th Ave #800, Portland, OR 97204
or
Father Peter J. Smith, Bishop-Elect
2838 E Burnside St, Portland, OR 97214
From USCCB website.
Matthew 18:6-7
Temptations to Sin.
6d “Whoever causes one of these little ones* who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a great millstone hung around his neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.
7* Woe to the world because of things that cause sin! Such things must come, but woe to the one through whom they come!
Monday, March 17, 2014
Alert! "War Room" to Stop Us From Paying for Abortions. No EMO's Here.
This is from Jeff Jierson the head of the effort to Stop Taxpayer Funded Abortions. Here is a opportunity for Lenten gift to Our Lord as His Children are wanted to be removed from existence by abortion. We have little traction because there needs to be a champion for the unborn in the Office of "Life", Justice and Peace.
Ask Matt Cato, Archdiocesan Office of Life, Justice and Peace to get an Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon Church to host an effort against this evil. I don't think he'd hurt his reputation with them to even broach the request.
From Jeff:
This Saturday, March 22, we're holding a strategic planning “war room” at Salem First Baptist Church in downtown Salem.
Ask Matt Cato, Archdiocesan Office of Life, Justice and Peace to get an Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon Church to host an effort against this evil. I don't think he'd hurt his reputation with them to even broach the request.
From Jeff:
This Saturday, March 22, we're holding a strategic planning “war room” at Salem First Baptist Church in downtown Salem.
We need your input to craft an effective plan of action as we sprint towards our Mother’s Day signature gathering deadline. This will be a critical meeting for anyone who wants to see an end to taxpayer-funded abortion in Oregon this November.
There's no cost to attend, and lunch will be provided. Can you join us?
Just 55 days remain to gather 150,000 signatures needed to qualify for
the November ballot, and it’s exciting to see momentum really starting
to pick up.
If you need petition sheets, click here. To make a donation, click here.
Serving together with you,
Jeff Jimerson
Co-Chief Petitioner to Stop Taxpayer Funding for Abortion
Oregon 2014 Petition Committee / Oregon 2014 PAC
www.Oregon2014.org
Co-Chief Petitioner to Stop Taxpayer Funding for Abortion
Oregon 2014 Petition Committee / Oregon 2014 PAC
www.Oregon2014.org
Join the conversation on Facebook
Order petition sheets for your family, club, or church
Make a donation to stop taxpayer funding for abortion
New Auxiliary Bishop Named to Archdiocese of Portland...He will wear many hats.
March 4, 2014 11:46 a.m.
| Portland Sergio Cisneros / OPB
An Auxiliary Bishop assists the Archbishop in confirmations and other tasks.
Bishop-elect Smith says he was not expecting the appointment.
“I love being out here in the Northwest and serving the presbyterate. This is where the door opened for me to serve and it’s just an honor and a surprising one to get into this position.”
Bishop-elect Smith is serving as Vicar General and Moderator of Curia for the Archdiocese. He will continue those positions after he is ordained bishop.
The new Auxiliary Bishop was born in South Africa. His ordination is tentatively set for April.
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