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Oprah and GMA ‘Bristle’ at Bristol’s Pledge of Abstinence
Media mogul and network agree that swearing off sex isn't 'realistic.’
By Carolyn Plocher
Culture & Media Institute
January 25, 2010
Every week Oprah
Winfrey encourages over 44
million Americans to “Live
Your Best Life” – the mantra of her billion-dollar brand.
“The key to realizing a dream,”
Oprah said in the Sept. 2002
issue of her O magazine, “is to focus not on success but
significance - and then even the small steps and little victories along your
path will take on greater meaning.”
Maybe Oprah should revisit that
statement and add, “Unless we’re talking about sexual abstinence. In that case,
just throw in the towel.”
In a Jan. 22 interview, Oprah
criticized Bristol Palin, the teen daughter of former Alaska governor Sarah
Palin, for recently telling In
Touch Weekly that she was pledging abstinence until marriage.
“I kinda of bristled,” Oprah began,
“when I saw this – where you said, ‘I’m not going to have sex until I’m married.
I can guarantee it’ … I’m just wondering if that is a realistic goal. I think
teaching responsibility, teaching, ya know, a sense of judgment about it, but is
that a realistic position?”
Strange that Oprah decided to be
“realistic” about saving sex for marriage. Forget about that “focus on not
success but significance” hogwash. Forget empowerment and realizing your dream.
You’re a slave to your hormones, and stating your intention of abstaining from
sex is simply “setting yourself up [for failure].”
“I just think it’s a goal to have,”
she replied. “And I think that other young women should have that
goal.”
That would have been the time for
Oprah to graciously relent and applaud this young teen girl for at least setting
an example, but simply couldn’t find anything praiseworthy about it.
“I was going to give you a chance to
retract,” Oprah concluded, “… but if you want to hold to that, may the powers be
with you.”
And Oprah isn’t alone. On Jan. 25,
ABC’s “Good Morning America” reported on Bristol ’s interview and defended Oprah’s
stance. GMA’s Andrea Canning referred to a 2004
Columbia University study as proof that abstinence isn’t “realistic.”
The study, she said, followed 12,000
teens and found that “88 percent of those who made the pledge had sex before
marriage, had similar rates of STDs to those who didn’t, and were actually much
less likely to use contraception.”
Canning didn’t mention, however,
that 99 percent of those who didn’t take the pledge had sex. That’s a difference
of more than 1,300 teens. And not only did they have sex, but they had it sooner
and had more sexual partners. But instead of pointing this out, Canning included
a clip from the Sexuality
Information and Education Council of the United States, a non-profit
organization that “affirms that sexuality is a fundamental part of being human.”
“Abstinence works when it’s used
consistently and correctly,” SIECUS’ Monica Rodriguez told Canning. “The problem
is that abstinence isn’t always used consistently and correctly. And when it
fails, it has a really high failure rate.”
Yes, but any contraception that
isn’t used “consistently and correctly” won’t protect against pregnancy. And
unlike contraception, abstinence “used consistently and correctly” has a 100
percent success rate.
Of course using abstinence as a form
of birth control actually requires self-control and that’s apparently asking far
too much from today’s teens. According to GMA’s parenting contributor Ann
Pleshette Murphy, parents must emphasize protection over abstinence.
“You can say,” Murphy continued, “I
want you to wait until – and you fill in the blank – but I know a lot of your
friends don’t, and if you’re not going to wait, then you must use protection and
it must be consensual. These are the messages that parents have to keep
communicating.”
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