Charlie Sheen is a microcosm of America

By Tom Quiner

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America’s STD epidemic continues.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new data, and it’s bad:

√ Reported cases of gonorrhea are up for 2014, up 4% from the previous year.

√ Same for syphilis, which rose 15%.

√ Same for chlamydia with 1.4 reported million cases.

Most infections occur in teens and young adults in the 15 to 24 year old age range. Chlamydia and gonorrhea can cause infertility in women.

Charlie Sheen

Charlie Sheen

These damning numbers come on the heals of news that famed television actor, Charlie Sheen, has been diagnosed as HIV positive, which can be fatal without treatment.

Promiscuity can not only make you sick, it can even kill.

In light of this sobering news, the case for chastity is more compelling than other.

And yet a 19 year college freshman suggests it is bad in her letter to advice columnist, Carolyn Hax:

“I have decided to lose my virginity soon, obviously in a safe way while using protection. Is it okay to not tell the guy I’m a virgin? I sort of want to get this over with in a sort of one-night-stand kind of way.”

Sounds like someone anticipating a colonoscopy.

None of the participants in the online discussion encouraged chastity. Ms. Hax, to her credit, indicated that sex and intimacy are indeed big deals.   No one uttered that dreaded ‘C’ word.

And yet we pay a huge cost when chastity is discarded as a societal virtue. Dr. Meg Meeker, a pediatrician, wrote a book titled, “Your kids at risk.” She said the incidence of sexually-transmitted disease (STDs) has increased 500% in recent years amongst our young.

Despite the widespread availability of condoms and contraception, despite the proliferation of discussion about “safe sex,” Dr. Meeker says that one out of four sexually-active teens has contracted a STD.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention states that some 110 million Americans have contracted a STD, about a third of the nation.

The societal cost of unbridled sex goes beyond the high risk of infectious disease. It also leads to human abortion. The vast majority (85%) of human abortions occur in unmarried women.

A million human abortions take place in this country every year. Since Roe v Wade, some 56 million Americans had their lives ended in the womb, more than all American deaths in all wars combined. To compound this tragedy, women who choose human abortion are susceptible to long term health risks.

A meta-analysis, published in Britain’s Royal College of Psychiatrists, of 22 studies from six countries involving 877,181 women revealed women who choose abortion are more likely to experience a variety of subsequent mental health issues, including 155 percent higher rate of suicidal behavior. Even more, these women were 55 percent more likely to experience mental health problems than women with unplanned pregnancies who rejected the abortion option.

Credible research reveals that post-abortive women also face long term physical health risks, including higher incidence of breast and cervical cancers.

In light of all of this, it seems that the biggest public health concern facing the American culture is not climate change, Ebola, or police brutality, but rather the consequence of promiscuity, especially among the young.

Here’s where politics enters in. Two philosophies clash in the public square on what to do about the fallout of the sexual revolution. One camp proposes risk-reduction. They believe kids are going to have sex no matter what anyone says, so adults should teach them to do it safely.

This camp’s philosophy has gained dominance in our communities over the past generation as sex education is increasingly offered to younger students with an emphasis on “safer sex” practices. The idea is to arm kids with info on the risks of sexual activity, give them easy access to condoms and other forms of birth control, and expect them to behave like adults in bed. Kind of like Charlie Sheen, I guess.

Only adults aren’t behaving responsibly in the sexual arena either (see above).

A family doctor in New York, Ann Nolte, says the sex-related health risks plaguing her teen patients has nothing to do with lack of knowledge on sexual matters or lack of access to contraception:

“Most teenagers that I’ve cared for know about sex, condoms and birth control — and have ample access to it. They know where to get it, when to use it and what can happen if they don’t. Yet teen pregnancy rates remain unacceptably high; sexually transmitted diseases in some major cities are epidemic.”

Another doctor, Dr. Miriam Grossman, author of “Unprotected” and “You’re Teaching my Child What?”, worked with students in their late teens and twenties as a member of UCLA’s Student Counseling Services. She observed that “risky sexual encounters … happen even when adolescents know and understand the dangers involved. It’s not lack of information; it’s lack of judgment.”

We tried the approach advocated by the risk-avoidance camp. By any metric, it has failed. No matter how many condoms we throw at the problem, we are awash in a cycle of disease and death that makes Ebola look like a bruised knee.

Perhaps it’s time to listen to the second the camp. They believe in adopting the same ideal promoted in other public-health interventions, such as no-smoking campaigns. These campaigns don’t encourage kids to ‘smoke safely,’ they call on them to stop smoking entirely.

Let us do the same in the area of teen sexuality.