Failed Family Planning
"Abstinence is Best" page link
Decades of
“family planning”
programs have left America diseased,
hurting and confused. For more than
three decades, “safe sex” ideology
has been taught in our schools to our
children with the belief that these
sex-ed courses would reduce teen
pregnancy and other related consequences
through the increased and proper use of
birth control . However, despite billion
of taxpayer dollars being poured into
“family planning” programs, the
results have been disastrous.
Teenage Sexual Promiscuity Increased
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William Bennett, U.S. Secretary of
Education in 1987 reported that since
the big push to encourage contraception
use by teenagers, teen sexual activity
and teen pregnancy had increased by
almost 400%.1 |
 |
In 1970 only
4.6% of girls ages 15
reported having had sexual intercourse.
In 1988, that figure had risen to 25.6%2
In 1992, a survey conducted by the
Atlanta-based Centers for Disease
Control show nearly 40% of high school
students have sex regularly.3 |
 |
When
participation in
federally-funded family planning clinics
decline, teen pregnancies slow down.4 |
Pregnancy and STD Infections
Increased Dramatically
 |
The number of
births to unwed mothers
hit a record high in 1990, up 75% over
the decade. |
 |
From 1970 to
1991, the federal
government had spent over $2.5 billion
on Title X, the federal family planning
program which promotes contraception
usage.5 Nonmarital teen
births rose 62% over this same time
period.6 |
 |
12 million new
cases of STDs are
reported each year7—33,000
every day. Of these, 86% occur among
persons aged 15-29 years,8
with 3 million occurring among teens9—that’s
8,219 new cases every day! |
 |
STDs are the
second most common type
of infection today. The common cold is
number one.10 |
 |
1 in 5
Americans are presently
infected with an STD.10 1 in
4 sexually active teens have been
infected. |
 |
45 million are
infected with an
incurable STD.10 |
 |
There are 20
different STDs rampant
among the young.10 |
 |
The number of
new STD cases reported
annually are alarming: |
| HIV/AIDS |
40,00011 |
| Chlamydia |
4 million11 |
| Herpes II |
200,000-500,00011 |
| Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) |
1 million11 |
| Human Papillomavirus (HPV) |
500,00011 |
 |
Gonorrhea
has increased 400%
among teenage girls since 196512
with 1.1 million new cases annually
among all ages.13 |
 |
Syphilisrate is at a 40-year
high,14 120,000 new cases
annually, rising 60% among teenager age
15-19 between 1985 and 1990.15 |
 |
Before the
introduction of the Pill
there were 2 common STDs, both curable,
now there are more than 70, many of
which are incurable. |
 |
Human
Papillomavirus (HPV) is
more contagious and is responsible for
more deaths than AIDS.16 HPV
is the cause of almost all cervical
cancer in the U.S.17 1 in 3
women are infected with HPV.18
Approximately 7,000 women in the U.S.
die every year from genital cancers
related to HPV. |
 |
Taking a look
at 1971-1978: the
amount of annual federal funding for
family planning services increased 198%.119
The number of teen attending sex
education programs quadrupled to 1.2
million. Yet: |
 |
From 1971-1979,
there was a 50%
increase in premarital sex among teen.
Out of wedlock pregnancies went up 90%
among teen girls.20 |
 |
Of the teen
girls who became pregnant
in 1976, 23.5% were using birth control
when they conceived.21 Also,
50% of the 15-19 year-olds who sought
abortions had likewise.22 |
 |
Among unmarried
teen girls between
1971 and 1979, the proportion who became
pregnant while using contraception to
avoid pregnancy rose 266%. |
Admitting Family Planning Programs
Don’t Work
 |
Planned
Parenthood’s own data shows
that education teens about sexuality and
contraception does not result in
increased contraception use.23 |
 |
Dr. Robert
Kistner, developer of the
oral contraceptive stated, “About ten
years ago I declared that the pill would
not lead to promiscuity. Well, I was
wrong.”24 |
 |
Even though we
are much more aware of
the threat of AIDS, a poll found that
only 20% of adults have altered their
sexual behavior because of fear of
getting AIDS.25 |
 |
Currently less
than half of sexually
active teen use condoms.26 |
Top of Page
To order the following brochures,
contact Friends
For Life: “Why ‘Safe Sex’
Doesn’t Work”, “Why We Oppose The
Family Planning Association of Northeast
Ohio”, “Human Papillomavirus (HPV)”

1. “Sex and the
Education of Our Children,” Address to
the National School Board of Education,
Jan 22, 1987
2. “Premarital
Sexual Experience Among Adolescent Women—U.S.,
1970-1988,” MMWR (Center for Disease
Control monthly report, Jan. 4, 1991, p.
930
3. “Most Sexually
Active Teens Don’t Use Condoms,” Atlanta
Journal and Constitution, June 5,
1992, p. A1
4. Jacqueline Kasun, The
War Against Population, Ignatius
Press, 1988, p. 144
5. Centers for Disease
Control—Atlanta Georgia, U.S. Dept. of
Health and Human Services, 1987
6. U.S. Bureau of the
Census, op cit, p. 71
7. Elise Jones, et
al., “Contraceptive Failure Rates
Based on the 1988 NSFG” Family
Planning Perspectives, vol. 24, No.
1, Jan/Feb 1992, pp. 12-15
5. U.S. Dept. of
Health and Human Services, Public Health
Service, Office of Population Affairs,
April 15, 1992
6. U.S. Bureau of the
Census, Statistical Abstract of the
United States: 1991, 111th edition,
Washington D.C., 1991, p. 67
7 . Alan Guttmacher
Institute, Sex & America’s
Teenagers, 1994, p. 39
8. “Sexual Behavior
in High School,” Life Scenes, a
publication of CA Nurses for Ethical
Standards, Feb. 1992, p. 3
9. Lloyd J. Kolbe,
Director of the Div. of Adolescent and
School Health for the Centers of Disease
Control, quoted by Charles S. Taylor,
“Survey: Most High School Students
Have Had Sex,” UPI, Jan. 3, 1992
10. “Is Sex Safe? A
Look at: Sexually Transmitted Diseases
(STDs),” brochure, Grapevine
Publications, 1992
11. “How At Risk Are
You?” brochure, Why kNOw? Abstinence
Programs, 1997
12. Kotulak, Ronald,
“Teen, Sex Can Be Unhealthy Mix,” Orlando
Sentinel, Jan. 31, 1987, p. E4
13. “How At Risk Are
You?” brochure, Why kNOw? Abstinence
Programs, 1997
14. Wensley, Germaine,
R.N., “The Silent Epidemic”
brochure, California Nurses for Ethical
Standards, 1994
15. Centers for
Disease Control 73.2638: CDC:CPS:DSTD/HIVP:
Atlanta, GA 30333, June 13, 1990
16. Centers for
Disease Control
17. Susan Okie, “Test
Helps Pinpoint Risk of Cervical Cancer,”The Washington Post, May 28, 1999
18. Medical Institute
of Sexual Health
19. “The $100
Million Misunderstanding,” Family
Planning Perspectives May/June,
1978, p. 144
20. Melvin Zelnik and
John F. Kantner, “Sexual Activity,
Contraceptive Use and Pregnancy Among
Metropolitan-Area Teenagers: 1971-1979,”Family Planning Perspectives,
12:5 Sept./Oct., 1980, p. 233, Table 2
21. Melvin Zelnik and
John F. Kantner, “Contraceptive
Patterns and Premarital Pregnancy Among
Women Ages 15-19 in 1976,” Family
Planning Perspectives, 10:3 May/June
1978, p. 140, Table 3
22. Frances Frech, “Update
on Teen Pregnancies,” Heartbeat,
3:2 Summer, 1980, p. 13
23. Marion Howard
& Judith Blaney McCabe, “Helping
Teenagers Postpone Sexual Involvement,”Family Planning Perspectives,
Jan./Feb., 1990, vol. 22, #1, p. 21
24. Family Practice
News, Dec. 15, 1977, as cited in “Birth
Control for Teenagers: Diagram for
Disaster,” James H. Ford and Michael
Schwartz, Linacre Quarterly, Feb.
1979, p. 76
25. “Poll Finds AIDS
Cause Single People to Alter Behavior,”New York Times, June 18, 1991, p.
C3
26. “Sexual Behavior
Among High School Students—United
States, 1990,” Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report, Jan. 3,
1992, vol. 40, #51 and 52, p. 886
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