Seems to me these folks are crazier than anybody I know. They have no real place in normal society and any mistreatment they experience is brought on by their own actions. They won't take any responsibility for their actions but expect for me too. It just floors me. If it was not for the reality of it, it would be very funny. We know enough to put shoplifters in jail but not these crazy perverts. Go figure.
http://google.com/search?q=cache:IY0TiCIx0wAC:www.aegis.com/news/sc/1994/SC941101.html+Bruce+budnick+&hl=en
Bruce Budnick of San Francisco will never forget what his daughter said she learned in her sixth-grade class one day. Two years later, it still makes him angry.
Two gay speakers, a man and a woman, spoke "pornographically" to the children, Budnick said, and told how they used dildos and performed oral and anal sex.
The talk was sponsored by a district-recommended program, Community United Against Violence, which often sends speakers to junior high and high schools to "demystify homosexuality" before AIDS lessons begin.
"If this had happened outside of the school, they would have been arrested for lewd and lascivious behavior," Budnick said.
Terry Person, program director of Community United Against Violence, said Budnick has blown everything out of proportion.
"I understand there was one isolated incident . . . an answer to a student who asked a very explicit question about dildos. It's been dogging us for years," she said.
Such questions would be answered in general terms, she said. On dildos: "That some people of either persuasion utilize sex toys. Period."
Others oppose AIDS programs because they fail to advocate straight, married monogamy.
In California's Del Norte County, a conservative group tried unsuccessfully to stop AIDS education in sixth, eighth and tenth grades, saying the message failed to stress the virtues of matrimony.
In Fremont, a group of parents has tried to get rid of a Kaiser Permanente Hospital-sponsored AIDS play for junior high and high school students. They said the play, called "Secrets," taught too much about sex and drugs.
It was "absolute censorship," argued "Secrets" director Scott Kessler.
Sex is a reality for teenagers, Kessler said at a school meeting. "We have a truly terrible crisis on our hands, and we are trying to save lives," he said.
The play has been approved for high schools in Fremont.