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1.
The sex pendulum swings again
Contents: Victorians
were more restrained Swing
against Victorian values Another
sexual revolution follows war Sex
today A cry for change
Back to basics? Parents
are worried about sex America
embarrassed by condom culture Erotic
condoms - but adults still hate them Condom
sex flops at the school gate Parents
against Thought Police History
speaks for itself Parents
confront "Thought Police" Sex
"experts" wiped out as "irrelevant"
Politicians follow the crowd
American "say-no"
campaigns grow Some
parents object to encouraging abstinence.... Many
pupils now say "True love waits" THE
TRUTH ABOUT SEX Many
sex polls are useless Kinsey
sampling was poor Much
less sex than men pretend Three
quarters of new students in UK are virgins
HOME
INTRO
CHAPTER
2 CHAPTER
3 CHAPTER
4 CHAPTER
5 CHAPTER
6 CHAPTER
7 CHAPTER
8 ACTION
References
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Dr Patrick Dixon
is author of "The Rising
Price of Love" published by Hodder 1995, director of Global
Change Ltd - see Web TV site
on global trends. These pages contain the FULL TEXT of
the book.
Before we can make sense of the rapid reversals taking
place in sexual relationships today, we need to look back on the
last three hundred years and the three swings of the pendulum from
relaxation to restraint and then to relaxation - but now swinging
back again.
Then we can look at what is happening right now and
make some careful predictions about the future. One thing is certain.
There will be no re-run of the Victorian age. While the pendulum
is swinging back towards a new moralism, in a new century and a
new millennium it will be expressed in a unique way. But we can
learn from the past?.
In the eighteenth century provocative displays were
tolerated. Sex was on the agenda. marriage in church was common
but not universal. Births outside marriage were growing. That is
why Lord Hardwicke introduced a marriage Act in 1753 to regularise
"common law" marriages, with proper records to sort out
problems with inheritance.
Then came a growing unease about the growing costs
of sexual freedom as the effects of a massive spiritual awakening
took a grip on the nation, starting with Wesley in the mid eighteenth
century, crusading on throughout the nineteenth. Great reformers
like William Wilberforce abolishing slavery or Lord Shaftesbury
abolishing child labour were just part of a massive movement championing
change. This affected sexual culture too.
As thousands in every town and city found faith a
new moral code swept the country. People did not necessarily keep
to it, hence the unpleasant taste of hypocrisy, bigotry and double
standards that we still detect today.
Victorians
were more restrained (back
to Index)
But something did change profoundly. A new emphasis
on sexual purity, restraint, virginity and personal duty had an
effect which lasted several generations. The same may be about to
happen again.
At its extreme a hundred years ago it produced such
strict modesty that watching someone swimming was sometimes seen
as a perverted act. A society woman had to cover most of her body
before slipping into the sea from the front of a bathing machine,
a hut on huge wheels pushed into the water.
However Victorians had sex lives too. We have a warped
view of them not backed by reality. Michael Mason says in "The
Making of Victorian Sexuality" that widespread sexual repression
in the Victorian era is a myth, with between a third and a half
of women pregnant at marriage , middle class couples kissing and
cuddling in public and "unbridled sexual intercourse"
in working-class dance halls.
Another study of a Dorset village found eight out
of ten births were illegitimate between 1870 and 1890. There is
no evidence that this was typical of the whole country but does
suggest our view of all Victorians as morally strict is incorrect.
Mason claims the Victorians were fully aware of female
sexuality. Dr William Acton's famous quote that most women are "not
troubled by sexual feeling of any kind" was written to help
young men afraid of impotence. Victorian doctors knew about female
orgasm as seen in their writings and teaching.
The extremes of prudery may be a myth, but times were
certainly very different then compared to today. Divorce only became
legal after the 1857 Matrimonial Causes Act and by 1914 there were
still only 856 divorces a year. Eighty years later in 1994 the figure
was 158,700.
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Swing
against Victorian values
(back to Index)
Just as the Victorians reacted against the previous
century's sexual abandon, with a radical sex revolution of their
own, almost as soon as the century ended, another reaction and revolution
followed, which has continued to swing more or less without interruption
towards sexual abandon, until today.
The First World War from 1914-18 helped drive a new
sexual culture into the heart of the nation at a time of revolution
in Europe. Radical new ideas emerged in the 1920s about relationships,
women in the workplace, votes for women, burning bras, new clothes
styles, short hair, short skirt, skimpy necklines. The divorce rate
shot up as soldiers returned from the war and stabilised at twice
the previous level.
In the early 1940s sexual relations were still relatively
"prim and proper", despite increasing numbers of war babies.
It was "extraordinarily difficult to lose one's virginity".
Keith Waterhouse says "girls went in terror of becoming pregnant
- as did boys of impregnating them". Condoms were available
but not usually carried on a date. "Convention very strongly
laid down that respectable girls didn't do it until they were married,
or at least properly engaged... and the government had mounted a
fearsome campaign against VD that made today's onslaught against
AIDS look like a warning against tooth decay."
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Another
sexual revolution follows war
(back to Index)
After the end of the Second World War a floodgate
of sexual liberationism was seen in many countries. A recent comprehensive
sex survey shows behaviour in Britain began to change dramatically
in the mid 1950s, not as is often thought following the advent of
the pill which happened a decade later. The pill may have had an
accelerating effect.
In 1967 Masters and Johnson influenced a generation
with "The Sexual Response" , describing what happens to
men and women during sex. More recently they said of the 1960s and
1970s:
"There was a rush to make sex recreational, to
make it fun and games, and ignoring the things that make sexual
responses occur, things that deepen a relationship, that give it
colour and endurance."
In 1969 the Divorce Reform Act was passed and by 1981
one in nine marriages lasted less than six years, compared to one
in eighty in 1951.
The 1970s and 1980s were two decades increasingly
obsessed with new sexual freedom. It could be said of the early
1990s that never has there been a time when so many have been so
publicly preoccupied for so long about their next orgasm, or someone
else's.
Try the television: love scenes, chat shows, comedy
acts, documentaries, song lyrics, pop videos, and of course the
all-pervading adverts....
The New York Times said recently:
"Virtually
every magazine on the newsstand, every book in the drugstore, half
the stories in the tabloid press, vast quantities of television
entertainment and movies galore depict sexual philandering as a
common and casual pastime. The result can only be that any monogamous
folks wandering this cultural Sodom and Gomorrah feel positively
freakish. Yet let some high-profile politician be caught at the
deed, or even be accused of it, and public shock suggests that adultery
is the most unheard of thing America has ever heard of".
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Sex
today (back
to Index)
One reason for this inconsistency is that the pendulum
of private behaviour has not swung quite as far as the media image.
People may be having lots of sexual relationships, but usually only
one at a time, and far fewer than you may think. This sex revolution
has changed us less than some suggest - just as well for the changes
that HAVE happened have been enough to wreck a generation.
So much for the last two hundred years, and the revolution
in sexual relationships over the last forty years, but what is happening
today? Despite the popular image of free love and the desire for
a better sex life, forty years after the so-called sex revolution
began, most people still want to be faithful. The American National
AIDS Behaviour Survey of 11,000 people in 1993 shows that 90% of
heterosexuals are monogamous - only 10% have two or more partners
in a year.
Half of all British women say a married person having
sex with someone else is ALWAYS wrong - it was six out of ten in
1983. For men the 1993 figure is four out of ten. Then we need to
add a larger number who say it is usually wrong to have an affair
when married. Most people are more restrained today than perhaps
we thought.
What revolution are we talking about anyway? White
heterosexual western values? Gay values? Ethnic minority values?
Values in developing countries which make up most of the world?
National surveys tend to collapse distinct groups together into
an average. Smaller sex surveys in multi-culture nations like Britain
also ignore huge differences between ethnic groups. For example
Asian communities have always had a strong ethical code for sex,
quite traditional. Afro-caribbean communities are often more tolerant
of single parenting.
Countries like India or China have their own sexual
history, but something else is happening now in white-dominated
heterosexual western culture.
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A cry
for change (back
to Index)
In the mid 1990's there are many signs of change.
As history shows us, sexual fashions are part of social change as
a whole, interwoven in a dense fabric of cultural influence.
A growing unease about who we are and what we have
become is beginning to spill over to new thoughts about sex. In
Britain and America heart cries have been expressed after a series
of atrocities.
One such shocking event in the UK was the abduction
and murder of three year old James Bulger in 1993 by two young boys,
who led him crying and bleeding through the streets before killing
him. They knocked him unconcious with heavy stones and laid him
in the path of an oncoming train. Wht did they do it? Why did no
adult do anything to stop them? Something was wrong with our society
that could allow such things to happen.
Can we really go on like this? What kind of world
are we creating? We are realising that we cannot go on in the same
pleasure dominated direction.
My pleasure may be your nightmare. My right to do
what I like may be your loss of freedom or life. My search for love
with your partner may wreck your chances of love.
This rejection of the "pleasure principle"
is changing how we want to bring up children, altering our relationships,
lifestyles - and challenging life after sex.
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Back
to basics? (back
to Index)
A new age is now dawning, with a new code for living
as radical as anything that has changed us before. In Britain the
conservative "Back to Basics" slogan soared into orbit,
an event historians would be writing about for a hundred years:
a symbol of post-Thatcherism identity crisis and malaise; a post-imperialist,
post-unionist, post-individualist, depressed Britain on the eve
of a new era, a new revolution in the making.
Many like Lord Rees-Mogg in "The Great Reckoning",
have tried to predict global trends for the next century. Sexual
change is coming soon.
An indication of new thinking is the way sex education
is changing in schools as a result of parent pressure. Parents of
teenagers today are a group aged between 35 and 55. Many are reaching
the top echelons of influence and power. So what is their opinion
about sex?
If we believe those who say the sexual revolution
is alive and well, fully on course to go into orbit into the next
century, jettisoning prehistoric debris such as the family unit,
heterosexual marriage , long term ties and the chain of reproductive
processes, we may be in for a big shock.
If we are on course for more of the same, then we
would expect these parents to be driving that philosophy forward
in the classroom. They were born between 1940 to 1955, teenagers
during 1955-75 when dramatic changes in sexual expectations took
place. They have first hand experience of the sex revolution. Their
reactions today are vitally significant. Forward for more? Wind
the clock back? Something new?
It has been said by some of those who lived as young
adults in the 1960's era that there was generally more talk than
sex - we have yet to experience even a fraction of the original
1960's dream of free love, community living, group parenting or
trial marriages.
Dr Masters said looking back in 1994 at the age of
78:
"Sometimes it feels as though nothing has changed.
In spite of all the incredible availability of sex-related material
I feel we're back where we started".
However we all agree we had a taster. So what is the
verdict? What do these parents say now? What do these aging social
engineers want for their own children ?
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Parents
are worried about sex (back
to Index)
These parents are worried, they say we have gone too
far already and are deeply conservative when it comes to their own
families. As part of my AIDS work I have gone into schools, met
pupils, talked to teachers, spoken to governors, met hundreds of
parents.
My experience and that of others I know suggests there
is now a clear consensus among parents: many are anxious that their
own children will follow the lifestyle dreams, aspirations and behaviour
they had at the same age. They are worried about copycat behaviour
and have a recurring nightmare that their own teenage daughters
or sons might go further than they did.
These parents are clock-watchers, many wishing they
could reverse some time, restoring expectations of long term faithfulness,
commitment and waiting as long as you can for the right person to
come along. Part of that concern is AIDS.
Since the British AIDS campaigns started in 1987 there
has been a big debate about message. What is the most effective
way to prevent AIDS? People laughed at pictures of icebergs. However
the laughter turned to anger in schools as the message changed to
a high profile, safer-sex condom campaign.
The message was generally felt right for an adult
national campaign - but for pre-pubertal twelve year old girls?
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America
embarrassed by condom culture
(back to Index)
In America such a condom campaign was far more sensitive
- even for adults, and there has been an even stronger reaction
in schools. The government only dared launch a national adult campaign
promoting condom use in 1994, thirteen years after the first AIDS
cases, when over 600,000 were already HIV infected.
However within a week one advert was withdrawn, with
questions over the rest. The campaign was a series of television
and radio advertisements aimed at eighteen to twenty five year olds.
The banned advert was for alternative rock radio stations, and seemed
to show Anthony Kiedis, lead singer of Red Hot Chili Peppers taking
his clothes off and putting on a condom.
All four major television networks agreed to take
the other adverts but were nervous, restricting them to late night
slots only. The press gave huge coverage to the views of conservative
Congressmen, and to Evangelical and Catholic church officials who
said the campaign would backfire by promoting sex.
The point I am making is that older adults both sides
of the Atlantic are much more cautious and conservative about sex
than you might think. The pendulum never swung as far in the first
place as the media hype has suggested. As it begins a swing back,
it does so from a place already more restrained than some would
like. How far will it take us?
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Erotic
condoms - but adults still hate them
(back to Index)
In Britain a public health condom message was more
acceptable - but "experts" said this was not enough. Surveys
showed many people hated condoms: they were difficult to put on,
slippery, unreliable, leaked, burst, split, fell off, interrupted
lovemaking, smelt horrible, producing one implied lack of trust
or worries about the past - and when it was all over they were mucky
to dispose of. Hardly an erotic turn-on for a night of passion.
So the experts had an idea: sell erotica as part of
the "condom experience". Show erotic images at the same
time as condoms and everyone will be halfway to orgasm at the very
thought of queuing to buy them.
The experts forgot one important thing.
Erotica might possibly sell condoms to adults - but
it would never do in the classroom because the teenagers of the
sex revolution have grown up, now have teenage children of their
own and are wanting to change future sexual history. They are hoping
they can alter the way their children will live, away from their
own example when they were young and away from condomania.
These parents are hanging onto the pendulum with all
the weight they can muster, hoping to drag it back down to a middle
position - but once it has gathered momentum, history shows it tends
to keep going over to the other extreme.
In many countries parents have an important role in
shaping what children are taught about sex in school. In Britain
this was formalised by Parliament in the 1980s.
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Condom
sex flops at the school gate
(back to Index)
Rights tend to get exercised. Materials costing millions
from the Health Education Authority were blocked at the school gate
because parents and governors were sick of experts trying to give
their children a one-dimensional message to use condoms, without
any references to relationships, commitment and family. They were
fed up of the Thought Police.
Many parents were also very concerned about crude,
explicit or "lewd" lessons on sex by adults "who
should know better". Hence a national outcry in March 1994
after Leeds pupils of ten and eleven had "Mars Bar parties"
explained to them in response to a question, (using chocolate bars
during oral sex). There were also protests over role play involving
"mummy", "daddy" and "mummy's lover".
The lesson was by a nurse visiting from the Health Authority.
One mother said: "When I heard about the lesson
on affairs I was very upset, but my child was almost too embarrassed
to talk to me about the lesson involving Mars bars."
If this revolution was still very much alive, with
support of those who grew up in it, would she not welcome a relaxed
and uninhibited approach, giving children an education free from
sexual repression, fears and guilt, teaching teenagers to have wonderful,
creative orgasms?
The mother disagreed: "We are not prudes. My
son knows how babies are made, but he does not need to know about
perverted sex." Her views were echoed at the time by a great
many others.
Two days later, the head teacher of another school
apologised after ten and eleven year olds came home from school
using graphic terms for sexual intercourse and other acts, following
a sex education class taken by an outsider.
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Parents
against Thought Police
(back to Index)
Here is yet another sign that change is coming. Recently
I helped conduct a national survey of some of the estimated 60%
of British schools that requested a radically different booklet
which I originally wrote myself with help from others. This was
part of my work in helping develop an independent national AIDS
prevention programme for schools.
Who decided what was taught about sex or AIDS, where,
how? Teachers were given several boxes to tick: education authority,
headteacher, head of year, governors, parents, others.
Out of around 250 schools who replied almost all ticked
more than one - but none ticked the education authority. The thought
police had lost and parents had won.
The booklet drew on experience of a team of educators
visiting schools from the AIDS organisation I started in 1988. They
had already seen several thousand pupils face to face. Opinions
were gathered from pupils, teachers, governors and parents.
The approach taken was one insisted on by almost all
adults concerned. Pupils might have liked explicit erotica - we
would never have been allowed that option so did not ask. Adults
agreed they wanted clear facts, attractive presentation, lifestyle
options including a positive view of postponing sexual activity,
long term monogamy, choices, self respect, being able to resist
peer pressure.
Who got it right? The official, expert-backed condom
approach or one more restrained, mentioning celibacy and monogamy
as possibilities to consider?
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History
speaks for itself
(back to Index)
History speaks for itself. An initial hundred thousand
colour booklets were launched in the House of Lords in December
1991. Greeted with derision and contempt by some "experts"
the booklets became a runaway success with overwhelming demand from
teachers. The entire print run disappeared in weeks. A further quarter
of a million were hastily reprinted and lasted a year.
Something was happening.
Take up was rapid across government schools, special
schools, privately funded schools - mainly for fourteen to sixteen
year olds. Over 10,000 teacher packs and 3,500 demonstration videos
went out. Almost overnight it became the most widely used literature
resource on sex and AIDS in British schools.
The survey showed almost every school found the booklets
useful and wanted more. Many using them originally just for a class
of thirty now wanted copies for a whole year. Some ordering previously
for a year group now wanted enough for the entire school.
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Parents
confront "Thought Police"
(back to Index)
The demand was massive and rapidly growing. Teachers
talked to teachers, governors to governors and parents to parents.
While some Education Authorities placed bulk orders, one individual
in one authority decided the materials were so awful that it wrote
to every school and other Education Authorities warning them about
the "moralistic" content. Schools continued to order in
ever increasing numbers - since when were they going to let Thought
Police tell them what to do?
A new booklet was produced in December 1993. Nicer
illustrations, larger format, updated expanded text, new cartoons
with scenarios showing peer pressure and how to resist it - and
the same options of abstention and monogamy listed among others.
A quarter of a million were printed to last a year
but went in sixteen weeks. There are only around 600,000 pupils
in each school year.
The booklets were also used in prisons, hospitals,
clinics, colleges, youth clubs and churches. Some were requested
by other nations: Canada, Australia, America, New Zealand, South
Africa and many others, translated into Romanian and Czech. Perhaps
culture was changing elsewhere too. The vast majority went to British
pupils and eight out of ten allowed to keep copies took them home.
And still the demand grew.
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Sex
"experts" wiped out as "irrelevant"
(back to Index)
Face to face educators had also taken classes attended
by over 150,000 pupils. Seven out of ten schools polled said they
wanted a personal visit from the same organisation, same message.
So what happened?
The world has begun to move on and has left these
sex education "experts" behind. Stuck in a mid 1970's
psychological rut of promoting the old sex revolution to teenagers,
the so-called experts have been wiped out as an irrelevance.
Consumerism is having its day, and consumers who themselves
were products of the sexual revolution are now voting overwhelmingly
for something new: not for prudery, repression or double standards,
but for sexually fulfilled, long term, happy relationships full
of pleasure but free from disease and the fear of AIDS. The last
thing they want is some trendy youth worker teaching girls how to
have orgasm and boys how to roll condoms on bananas.
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Politicians
follow the crowd
(back to Index)
The British government has begun to follow the crowd,
with stronger statements about the need for a clear moral framework
in sex education - arguing that it had always been a part of policy.
Headlines depicted the Education Secretary in a "moral crusade"
while the Health Minister stepped in to ban a "Smutty"
health guide. It was written in 1994 by Nick Fisher, "agony
uncle" of "Just Seventeen", funded by the Health
Education Authority to be sold in book shops. All 15,000 copies
were pulped, but another publisher soon snapped it up.
Was this to be the end of the Health Education Authority's
out of date sex education role, after bitter rows and a ban on further
sex education materials pending a review?
The government was plunged into further controversy
four weeks later when a junior health minister said condoms could
be given to twelve year old girls if it was the only way to protect
them from pregnancy, an option many parents found disturbing, especially
if contraceptives were being handed out to their daughters without
their consent.
Labour opposition speeches also began to change, with
Tony Blair and others returning to an emphasis on family.
Parents are not asking for a "moral crusade",
just for balanced common sense, effective sex education in the context
of relationships and commitment and for protection from government
funded "thought police" who seem to think only they know
best.
Then came a new video resource for schools called
"Make Love Last" produced by Care Trust with a more up-beat
message about "waiting for sex" than anything seen before.
Launched on 14th February 1994, around 1,500 schools ordered copies
in the first four months "to show teenagers that saying no
to premature sex is a positive and rewarding choice".
So are we moving from a political to a moral agenda?
Possibly so, but perhaps sex behaviour is neither
political nor moral at root, but relational: an act of desire between
two people. Therefore the changing pattern of relationships is the
one thing most likely to have the greatest effect on the revolution
to come.
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American
"say-no" campaigns grow
(back to Index)
Major changes in sexual culture are also taking place
in America, indeed the swing back of the pendulum began there. While
sexual culture has generally been more relaxed, America has always
seemed shockingly traditional to those in Europe when it comes to
sex education.
But now there are new parent protest movements which
are sweeping across the States with even stronger "Say NO"
campaigns which would be rejected outright in Britain as ultra-moralistic,
although the Care video is breaking new ground. These new American
groups have created sharp controversy in an increasingly polarised
society.
In February 1994 there was a big reaction in southern
California to a new Christian sex education programme trumpeting
abstinence.
The "Sex Respect" campaign visited Acacia
Middle school near San Diego. Twelve and thirteen year old pupils
were given T-shirts with printed slogans such as "Stop at the
Lips", and badges saying "I'm Worth Waiting For".
They were reported as chanting "Be Confident,
Be a Virgin", or "Do the Right Thing, Wait for a Ring",
or "Don't be a Louse, Wait for a Spouse."
Driven by the same kind of parent pressure as has
been seen in Britain (though with a far more explicit moral message),
the programme has grown fast, with 1,600 schools taking it up together
with schools in twenty four other nations.
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Some
parents object to encouraging abstinence....
(back to Index)
When fashions change, some people always need time
to catch up. In Acacia one parent withdrew her child from the school
in protest at the new culture promoting abstinence and is planning
to take court action if Sex Respect is not dropped from the syllabus.
However, the programme is based on more than fashion.
It does seem to be effective. In 1991, researchers at the Psychology
Department of Brigham University in Utah looked at three different
sex education programmes encouraging abstinence in seven, eight,
nine and tenth grade students across three school districts.
The Sex Respect programme produced the highest scores
for reported attitude changes - although converting that into proof
of behaviour change is more difficult.
Parents in the States are particularly worried for
several reasons: firstly they have a far higher teenage pregnancy
rate than Britain, and Britain has one of the highest in Europe.
While parents argue this is a reason not to encourage yet more teenagers
to have sex, many sex education "experts" see these high
pregnancy rates as the strongest argument in their favour for explicit
sex education promoting condoms.
I remember leading a local youth group in Washington
DC in the mid 1970s. Sexual activity between thirteen to sixteen
year olds seemed around ten years ahead of what was happening in
the UK, confirmed by later surveys. So perhaps it is not surprising
that the US has felt the costs earlier and begun to react sooner.
They have also been hit far harder by AIDS than any other developed
country. America is seeing more people die of AIDS every year than
died in the entire ten year Vietnam War.
They are building a post-AIDS world when some countries
are still pretending AIDS does not exist.
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Many
pupils now say "True love waits"
(back to Index)
On 29th July 1993 up to half a million signed cards
pledging abstinence and monogamy were placed in the ground on Capital
Hill by the True Love Waits campaign. Each signed card said: "Believing
that "true love waits", I make a commitment to God, myself,
my family and those I date, my future mate, and my future children
to be sexually pure until the day I enter a covenant marriage relationship".
Marie Claire magazine describes "a new sexual
revolution sweeping America.... the biggest shift of social behaviour
since the free-love movement of the 1960s." The campaign was
started in 1992 by Southern Baptist minister Richard Ross, who has
become an instant TV chat show personality. The movement has been
powered by the explosive spread of enthusiastic faith in young people.
Those sniffing the pungent aroma of a new moralism
may point to alarming or encouraging signs, depending on their vote.
There is certainly a new hunger for something to fill what is widely
felt to be a moral vacuum - even if people cannot agree on what
it should be.
The same vacuum is felt in Britain too, hence the
launch of 10,000 "You, Me, Us!" by Citizenship Foundation
and the Home Office in Britain in 1994 to try to help young children
tell the difference between right and wrong, and a consensus among
all the major political parties that young people need to be taught
social values for the health of our nation.
So then, we have seen that big culture changes are
already beginning with more to come, powered by anxious parents
and in America by increasingly influential Christian groups.
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THE
TRUTH ABOUT SEX
(back to Index)
I want to return for a moment to sexual behaviour
today because there is a lot of confusion and it is affecting how
we feel about the future. There is a lot less sex going on than
you may have thought. Surveys on sex can be seen almost every week
in some magazine or another. After years of raunchy headlines, convincing
us the whole world is "doing it" the truth is beginning
to dawn. The pollsters have sold us a con.
Popular polls over the phone or up the street are
no way to find out about sex. British confidence in opinion polls
sank in the wake of an unexpected conservative victory at the 1992
general election. If polls on politics are problematic, then polls
on sex are simply perilous.
Many of them are flawed before they start, because
they just sample their own readers. How selective can you get? In
contrast the surveys used as research evidence in this book are
ones properly designed with representative samples of sufficient
size.
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Many
sex polls are useless
(back to Index)
The exact wording of a question can also influence
the answer: for example masturbation is a guilt-inducing issue for
many. So let's phrase the question: "when did you last masturbate?"
rather than "have you ever masturbated?" The two questions
get very different responses.
How was the survey conducted? Intimate face to face
sex interviews of men by women may get different answers than if
the interviewers are men - or the other way round. Likewise age,
ethnic origin, perceived differences in background between interviewer
and interviewee, or other factors can affect results.
Perhaps these are some of the reasons why the most
comprehensive sex survey ever conducted in Britain of 19,000 people,
published in 1994, drew so many different conclusions to the famous
surveys published by Kinsey in America in 1948 and 1953.
We have been told over and over again that Kinsey
found at least one in ten of all males were homosexually active.
However the UK national survey found only 1.7% of men reported a
male sexual relationship in the last five years, ranging from 5%
in London to only 1% for the rest of the country.
The result was dismissed by some, but painstaking
care was taken in the survey methods and similar studies published
almost simultaneously in France, Canada, Norway, Denmark and America
found almost exactly the same results - between 1% and 4%.
The American survey was of 3,321 men between twenty
and thirty nine, carried out by the Batelle Human Affairs Research
Centres
in Seattle, Washington. The aim was to see how many
were at risk of HIV. Only 1% of men reported sex only with men over
the last ten years. Another recent study in 1994 by the University
of Chicago gave slightly higher figures.
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Kinsey
sampling was poor
(back to Index)
The 10% figure from Kinsey in 1948 has had the status
of Absolute Truth. However even when you add figures from the new
studies of men who have had sex with both men and with women over
the previous decade, the figure still only adds up to 2.3%.
Kinsey's sample was flawed since one in four were
former or present prisoners, a high proportion of whom were sex
offenders, and he recruited many others from his lectures.
To be fair to Kinsey, his claims were often distorted.
For example he only claimed 10% of men from sixteen to fifty five
were more or less exclusively homosexual in activity for up to three
years.
Some gay rights groups feel that in a hostile climate
and with insensitive questions the recent surveys are also likely
to be misleading. When it comes to finding out about sex, people
may not want to tell us and even if they agree to be interviewed
they may not give the truth.
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Much
less sex than men pretend
(back to Index)
What about heterosexual relationships? Is that picture
of what people get up to today flawed as well? Almost all sex surveys
find men report lots more partners than women. So who are all the
women? The women deny it's them! Researchers say the difference
is explained by male bravado and female bashfulness.
One thing is clear from the biggest and most reliable
surveys: there is a lot less going on than you might think. Yet
prophecies can be self fulfilling. An example of this is in schools.
Mega-sex myths from previous surveys have put huge
pressure on people to follow a crowd today that doesn't exist. For
example, survey after survey has been quoted suggesting that half
of all British teenagers are sexually active by their sixteenth
birthday. Tens of thousands of self-respecting seventeen year olds
have felt that in order to be normal they probably need to join
in and "do it" as well. A self-fulfilling false prophecy?
These amateurish or wrongly reported sex surveys have
also affected debate about how explicit sex education should be
and when it should start. If a quarter are sexually active at fourteen,
then perhaps explicit sex education is needed at eleven?
Many of these unscientific sex polls have been wrong.
The much larger British National Survey of Sexual
Attitudes and Lifestyles, carried out during 1990 to 1991, found
only 18.7% of 16-19 year old women reported first intercourse before
their sixteenth birthday and 27.6% of men. A different survey found
rates as high as 40% but they only talked to those already having
sex so the result was distorted.
All of these recent results are generalisations, hiding
for example less than 1% of Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Indian women
reporting first sex before 16 years of age. Those with Christian
faith were also less likely to be sexually active before the age
of 16, with the exception of Roman Catholics who were slightly more
likely than the general population to be sexually experienced. This
exception might be because some teenagers can react against a strong
moral line. The Catholic Church also has a large nominal membership:
many people may say they are Catholics in surveys, yet have values
and beliefs more typical of those that have no faith.
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Three
quarters of new students in UK are virgins
(back to Index)
Education and background also affect age of first
sexual experience. You might think that students are likely to have
lots of partners in a liberated age. The opposite is true. Men going
on to higher education in Britain are an average of three years
behind the sexual experience of their friends at school who leave
at sixteen with no qualifications, while the figure for women is
two years.
Three out of four students starting college as adults
this Autumn have never had sex before - not even once. Even fewer
have a regular sexual partner or have had sex with someone in the
last year. This is a big shock to students when they start talking
to each other.
Before they turn up on the first day, the great majority
must be thinking that as virgins they may be in danger of being
labelled as part of a prudish minority, while the truth is that
they are in the vast majority.
I was talking to a medical student in her third year
of training just the other day. She told me:
"We are all very conservative. I was really surprised.
Conservative in every way, especially when it comes to relationships.
Not what I expected from what you read."
It may not be education or intelligence that discourages
early sexual activity. It could be culture: with general background
is inherited a whole set of social values and expectations. We can
debate the reasons but only a quarter of British A level students
are sexually active at eighteen.
The teenage magazine message that "everyone is
doing it" is dangerous, life-threatening and emotionally destructive
nonsense, because as we will see, early sexual activity harms many
teenagers emotionally and damages their health - killing increasing
numbers years later.
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Summary
(back to Index)
So then, the great pendulum of sexual culture is swinging
slowly towards a new conservatism, as radical a change as any we
have seen over the last three hundred years. And it is swinging
back from a far less extreme position than we thought judging by
recent scientific studies of sexual behaviour, which shows how restrained
we all are compared to our image.
If that is the case, where will we land up? Will the
swing be slight - or will it take us to a strict puritanism? The
answer will be found by looking at six key areas where the sex revolution
has let us down: the need to feel loved, the abuse of sexual power,
sexual illness, emotional cost of breakup and divorce, damage to
children and the huge costs of paying for it all. But first I want
to look at the need to be loved and the search for love, made worse
rather than eased over the last four decades.
Contents of above: Victorians
were more restrained Swing
against Victorian values Another
sexual revolution follows war Sex
today A cry for change
Back to basics? Parents
are worried about sex America
embarrassed by condom culture Erotic
condoms - but adults still hate them Condom
sex flops at the school gate Parents
against Thought Police History
speaks for itself Parents
confront "Thought Police" Sex
"experts" wiped out as "irrelevant"
Politicians follow the crowd
American "say-no"
campaigns grow Some
parents object to encouraging abstinence.... Many
pupils now say "True love waits" THE
TRUTH ABOUT SEX Many
sex polls are useless Kinsey
sampling was poor Much
less sex than men pretend Three
quarters of new students in UK are virgins
HOME
INTRO
CHAPTER
1 CHAPTER
2 CHAPTER
3 CHAPTER
4 CHAPTER
5 CHAPTER
6 CHAPTER
7 CHAPTER
8 Conclusion
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Dr
Patrick Dixon is author of "The
Rising Price of Love" published by Hodder 1995, director
of Global
Change Ltd - see Web
TV site on global trends
* Dr Patrick Dixon is author of The
Rising Price of Love (1995 Hodder Full text available FREE
on the web. It covers
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