Planned Parenthood (PP) is suing the
federal government for cutting short funding to a sex education program that allegedly
tries to reduce teen pregnancy.
The Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program
(TPPP) began under President Obama. It’s
an “evidence based program that funds diverse organizations working to prevent
teen pregnancy across the United States.”
But the Trump Administration’s
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is ending TPPP 2-years early. PP – America’s largest abortion vendor – and
several other TPPP grant recipients are suing over losing grant money.
One of the programs funded by TPPP
include sex education classes taught through PP and an app that teaches
15-year-olds about condoms (“Put One On”).
A Colorado organization that received
$749,900 in annual funding from the TPPP advocates for “youth” having access to
“safe, legal, and confidential reproductive and sexual health services ...
including abortion.” This organization (Colorado
Youth Matter) supports “LGBT inclusive sex ed” instructing children about homosexuality
and transgenderism starting in kindergarten.
Another grantee, the Baltimore-based
Healthy Teen Network, received an annual $723,000. It supports “the full range of contraceptive
options” for teenagers, affirming “LGBTQ+” lifestyles for youth, and the
integration of sex education into “all educational levels and programs and
across the academic curriculum.”
Lawyers from PP, Democracy Forward,
Public Citizen, and Arnold & Porter are representing the liberal sex education
promoters in federal courts in Washington state, Maryland, and the District of
Columbia.
Contrary to popular myths,
contraception use does not reduce abortion numbers. Social scientist Dr. Michael New has written about
this extensively. Mary Anne Mosack, the
Executive Director of the advocacy group Ascend, told LifeSiteNews it isn’t enough to teach kids about contraception and
consent to try to reduce risks. “It’s
important that we eliminate risk rather than simply reduce it,” she said. “I commend HHS for actually ending programs
that don’t work and re-assessing so that we can get this right ... the bottom
line has to be the health of the youth.”
“Three of the [TPPP] programs actually
had negative effects” and increased sexual initiation, pregnancy, or oral sex,
Mosack explained. They were “not
effective” yet “we spent almost a billion dollars on those programs during the
Obama Administration.”
An undercover investigation by Live
Action revealed PP employees giving teens sex advice about whipping,
asphyxiation, and “pooping” on partners.
Leslie Kantor, PP’s Vice President of Education, said the Trump Administration
is trying “to impose its beliefs on everyone” by axing TPPP funding. TPPP “has helped millions of young people
stay safe and healthy,” she claimed.
“It’s really not in the best interest
of youth to continue these particular programs that are not effective,” Mosack
told LifeSiteNews. “It is not enough to simply reduce risk. We are going for the elimination of risk for
all students. We believe that every
student really needs to have the opportunity to achieve optimal health.”
Rev.
Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain
(Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel
It time we started asking our congressman for the Article, Section, Clause of the Constitution that gives the authority to spend tax money such programs. For that matter, where do we find the Article, Section, Clause for HHS?
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