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To: Sully- who wrote (61893)8/10/2007 1:39:48 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 90947
 
Sex-ed course proposed in D.C.

By Gary Emerling
The Washington Times
August 9, 2007

Proposed guidelines for a sex-education curriculum to be used in D.C. Public Schools recommend that middle-school students learn to define sexual orientation and be taught about homosexuality.

The guidelines — contained in a 43-page draft document titled "Health Learning Standards" — say eighth-grade students should be taught the definition of sexual orientation "using correct terminology" and learn that some people "may begin to feel romantically and/or sexually attracted to people of a different gender and/or to people of the same gender."

The guidelines also say that sixth-grade students should be taught that "people, regardless of biological sex, gender, ability, sexual orientation, gender identity and culture, have sexual feelings and the need for love, affection and physical intimacy."

Ninth-graders should be taught to "analyze trends in ... contraceptive practices and the availability of abortion," the document states.

The District's draft document includes standards for students in pre-kindergarten through the 10th grade and also contains guidelines for teaching nutrition, emotional health and drug awareness, among other health-related topics.

It recommends abstinence as "the most effective way to prevent disease or pregnancy," and also call for teachers to "discuss strategies to remain abstinent and resist pressures to become sexually active."

The standards, dated July 2, were printed with the name of the new schools chancellor, Michelle A. Rhee, on the title page. Asked about the proposed standards, Mrs. Rhee said they fall under the purview of the Office of the State Superintendent of Education, Deborah Gist.

John Stokes, a spokesman for Miss Gist, said the standards were developed by the staff of former schools Superintendent Clifford B. Janey.

The standards, which are posted online at www.k12.dc.us/offices/oas/curriculumandinstruction/draftstandards.htm, must be approved by the school board. The school board will address the standards sometime in the fall, Mr. Stokes said.

A public comment period ended last Thursday, but Mr. Stokes said Miss Gist "is still willing to take a look at comments should any more come in."

Moira Gaul, director of women's and reproductive health for the District-based Family Research Council, said she has concerns over the "age-appropriateness" of the standards when discussing topics such as abortion.

She also said the guidelines may not contain enough information about the consequences of certain activities.

"Homosexuality is a high-risk behavior, and certainly adolescent sexual activity in general is a high-risk behavior," she said.

Curriculum tenets that address homosexuality and contraception have drawn fire elsewhere in the region.

Parents groups in Montgomery County filed suit two years ago over that school system's proposed sex-ed curriculum, which opponents said promoted homosexuality and discriminated against those with religious beliefs against the practice.

A federal judge agreed that the course was one-sided and issued a restraining order, and school officials later scrapped the entire course. But the county school board this year approved a revised curriculum that teaches about homosexuality and condom use, and the Maryland State Board of Education denied requests to stop the lessons.

The curriculum is slated to be taught in all county middle and high schools this fall, although opponents last month filed an administrative appeal seeking to reverse the state board's decision.

washingtontimes.com



To: Sully- who wrote (61893)8/10/2007 4:06:49 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
    These Marines are among those whom Mad Jack Murtha 
pronounced guilty on, he implied, inside information.
Murtha, one of the most disgraceful of all Congressional
Democrats, claimed that our Marines, including Lance Cpl.
Sharratt, "executed civilians in cold blood." Murtha was
wrong. Surely an apology to Lance Cpl. Sharratt and Capt.
Stone will be forthcoming?

"Our Way Is Right, But It Is Difficult"

Power Line

We noted here that the prosecution of some, at least, of the Marines accused of committing murder at Haditha appeared to be crumbling. Sure enough: today, Lt. Gen. Jim Mattis, head of Marine Corps Forces-Central Command, dismissed all charges against two of the Marines, Lance Cpl. Justin Sharratt and Capt. Randy Stone, a lawyer who was the infantry battalion's staff judge advocate.

As to these individuals, at least, the dismissal can be taken as proof that they were innocent. Lt. Gen. Mattis wrote eloquently about the conditions under which Marines in Iraq are required to make split-second decisions. I haven't seen the complete text of his decision, but these quotes are from the Navy Times account:

<<< Sharratt, he wrote, "has served as a Marine infantryman in Iraq where our nation is fighting a shadowy enemy who hides among the innocent people, does not comply with any aspect of the law of war, and routinely targets and intentionally draws fire toward civilians.

"The challenges of this combat environment put extreme pressures on our Marines," Mattis wrote. "Notwithstanding, operational, moral and legal imperatives demand that we Marines stay true to our own standards and maintain compliance with the law of war in this morally bruising environment.

"With the dismissal of these charges, LCpl Sharratt may fairly conclude that he did his best to live up to the standards, followed by U.S. fighting men throughout our many wars, in the face of life or death decisions made in a matter of seconds in combat," Mattis added. "And as he has always remained cloaked in the presumption of innocence, with this dismissal of charges, he remains in the eyes of the law - and in my eyes - innocent."

Mattis, in issuing his decisions, acknowledged the difficulties that infantrymen face in a combat zone, particularly in a counterinsurgency environment. "The experience of combat is difficult to understand intellectually and very difficult to appreciate emotionally," he wrote, citing the writings of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., an infantryman during the Civil War, who described war as an "incommunicable experience."

Holmes, Mattis wrote, "has also noted elsewhere that `detached reflection cannot be demanded in the face of an uplifted knife.' Marines have a well earned reputation for remaining cool in the face of enemies brandishing much more than knives. The brutal reality that Justice Holmes described is experienced each day in Iraq, where Marines willingly put themselves at great risk to protect innocent civilians.

"Where the enemy disregards any attempt to comply with ethical norms of warfare, we exercise discipline and restraint to protect the innocent caught on the battlefield," he added. "Our way is right, but it is also difficult." >>>

These Marines are among those whom Mad Jack Murtha pronounced guilty on, he implied, inside information. Murtha, one of the most disgraceful of all Congressional Democrats, claimed that our Marines, including Lance Cpl. Sharratt, "executed civilians in cold blood." Murtha was wrong. Surely an apology to Lance Cpl. Sharratt and Capt. Stone will be forthcoming? Mad Jack's phone number is (202) 225-2065. It will take only a minute to ask his staff about the status of his apology to the now-cleared Marines.

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navytimes.com

powerlineblog.com