Teen Sex Ed? Planned Parenthood Employee Suggests Pretending to be Babies
Planned Parenthood might champion the destruction of babies in the womb, but the sometimes the abortion giant finds babies a real turn-on.
In a push to defund Planned Parenthood, pro-life group Live Action released a third video on July 23 showing a Planned Parenthood “counselor” telling a Live Action investigator (posing as a 15-year-old) that “it’s common to experiment with different things.” In the name of “sex-ed,” the Oregon staffer highlighted tactics including whipping, tree-tying and baby role-playing – going so far as to suggest “breastfeeding” and “put[ing] on diapers.”
“Kink has a wide range,” the employee explained in the undercover video. “Some people like to play the baby thing, where they will put on diapers and be the baby” and “pretend they’re breastfeeding.” Besides reading “Kama Sutra” and “The Joy of Sex,” she recommended watching “educational pornos” and “woman-oriented porn.” Continues after video.
As the third installment of the Live Action series “SexEd: Planned Parenthood’s Dangerous Sex Advice for Kids,” the video followed in the footsteps of the first and second. Live Action’s latest campaign asks Americans to sign a petition against the $500 million per year in taxpayer money that funds Planned Parenthood.
This particular Oregon clinic, Live Action noted, received additional taxpayer funding for teen sex education through Obamacare. The clinic has been awarded grants by PREP (the Personal Responsibility Education Program), a $75-million sex education taxpayer funded program initiated by the Department of Health and Human Services.
In reaction to the Oregon clinic’s behavior, Live Action President Lila Rose stressed “This is not sex education, but rather a disturbing and dangerous ideology consciously being pushed on our nation’s youth.”
“Political ideology,” Rose challenged, “shouldn’t affect parents’ desire to protect their children. Whether you’re liberal or conservative, or even pro-life or pro-abortion, tax-funded ‘counseling’ sessions directing kids to porn sites and sex shops, and teaching them how to beat and choke each other, are completely unacceptable.”
And, despite previous censorship, this should be prime media fodder.
— Katie Yoder is Staff Writer, Joe and Betty Anderlik Fellow in Culture and Media at the Media Research Center. Follow Katie Yoder on Twitter.