This evidence was posted before, but since some continue to claim that that abstinence "doesn't work" or that it simply cannot be expected of the youth, I am posting it again for those new to the thread. It's a study that actually shows that ABSTINENCE IS A REALITY FOR MOST TEENS.
http://www.abstinenceworks.org/image..._abstinent.pdf
Click on the thumbnail below to see a JPEG file of the original PDF. Some of the text from the PDF is also quoted below.
The full-size JPEG can be seen at: http://img34.imageshack.us/img34/245...cesurvey01.png
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What the Data Shows:
A large majority (2/3) of high school students in the U.S. are not currently sexually active and most students (52%) have never had sexual intercourse. While the past two years have seen a slight increase in teen births (+3% in 2006, +1% in 2007) the overall teen birth rate is down sharply (34%) since 1991.
Abstinence is a reality for most teens.
We should give our kids abstinence education, not condom/contraceptive "education". Abstinence works.
On the other hand, studies show that contraceptive usage INCREASES unwanted pregnancies and demand for abortions. And yet abstinence is exactly what the RH bill doesn't support. Instead, it funds artificial and abortifacient contraceptives. -- precisely the methods that DON'T reduce teen pregnancies or abortions overall.
NO TO ABORTION. NO TO THE ABORTIFACIENT-PROMOTING RH BILL (HB 5043)
Please sign the petition AGAINST the so-called Reproductive Health Bill (HB5043)








Journal of Adolescent Health. It adds to a body of recent research in recent years suggesting that abstinence-only programs have limitations. The new study found that teaching about contraception did not increase the risk of sexual activity or sexually transmitted diseases. It also found that abstinence-only education did not reduce teen pregnancy or sexually transmitted infection and did not delay first ***. The analysis of 2002 federal data from the National Survey of Family Growth looked at the records of 1,719 heterosexual teens ages 15-19, of whom 67% received comprehensive *** ed, 24% received abstinence-only *** ed and 9% received no *** education.