Oh dear, someone needs to explain the facts of life to the folks who run the Montgomery County schools. Lesson 1: What do you call people who put condoms on cucumbers? Parents!
Listen to Miriam Grossman, M.D., author of Unprotected: A Campus Psychiatrist Reveals How Political Correctness Endangers Every Student, provide invaluable insight into the sexual insanity imposed on our children.
Liberals belittle Christian customs as so much hooey. Yet, they replace those customs with bizarre rituals of their own. In 2005, Montgomery, Md announced a new sex education curriculum in which 10th-graders were to be shown how to put condoms on cucumbers.
The condoms on cukes ritual was first practiced by early believers in Brazil, circa 1995, where 5000 adolescents and young adults attending night school in a poor urban neighborhood used cucumbers to practice putting on condoms correctly. Participants also practiced negotiating skills to refuse unwanted sexual relations, to propose sex without penetration, or to use a condom (see an AIDS workshop).
Montgomery County also teaches that homosexual couples are the newest American family.
School system officials have noted that some schools were unenthusiastic about testing the new curriculum, which also will teach students to “develop” a sexual identity and that gender identity is “a person’s internal sense of knowing whether he or she is male or female.”
“We have some schools that stepped up to do it, and we have some schools that were recruited to do it,” Russ Henke, the county school system’s health education coordinator, said in an interview days before yesterday’s announcement.
“A school may not be real pleased because of the controversy involved, but we need the representation from that area,” Mr. Henke said.
Bethesda Chevy-Chase’s acting principal, Sean Belson, yesterday said his school did not volunteer for the curriculum but was selected “by central office folks.”
“We were asked so that different folks around the county would be represented,” Mr. Belson said. “I felt it was something we could do.”
Seneca Valley Principal Suzanne Maxey said her school also was selected. “They were looking for schools in different geographic areas,” she said.







