Believe it or not, but some of the religious edge cases either don’t have internet access, or don’t let their kids use it. One of my kid’s friends is insanely restricted in that regard, but that’s a public school, so I don’t doubt there’s some roughly factual information that gets to them anyway.
A private school though? I can see a person being a full adult and not even suspecting they were lied to until they run across something.
You might be surprised at how much supression of this information there is, how much fear and/or punishment tactics actually work.
Couple that with many people still having a family computer and not necessarily allowing children to have their own devices or monitoring/controlling everything they do on them, with religious homeschooling, book banning and abstenance only sex ed and you can have your answer about why some people still don’t know.
Nah dude. One of the few times I’m not trolling. Of course it was widely available overall but not for her in a religious sex ed class. It’s not like she can sneakily look shit up on her iphone in 1995.
America Online didn’t present easy access to porn unless you knew what you were doing. And even then, it’s like you could reasonably see video on a webpage at 14.4kbps speeds. (0.0137 Mb/s or a little under 10 minutes per megabyte.)
Information was not as easily accessible in the 90s so I don’t fault her. I don’t know what the excuse is for people these days though.
Believe it or not, but some of the religious edge cases either don’t have internet access, or don’t let their kids use it. One of my kid’s friends is insanely restricted in that regard, but that’s a public school, so I don’t doubt there’s some roughly factual information that gets to them anyway.
A private school though? I can see a person being a full adult and not even suspecting they were lied to until they run across something.
I believe it. I should have worded it better, I wasn’t even focusing on only religion in my 2nd sentence, just people in general lol.
You’re totally right.
You might be surprised at how much supression of this information there is, how much fear and/or punishment tactics actually work.
Couple that with many people still having a family computer and not necessarily allowing children to have their own devices or monitoring/controlling everything they do on them, with religious homeschooling, book banning and abstenance only sex ed and you can have your answer about why some people still don’t know.
Firstly, you’re totally correct. My 2nd sentence, that I should have been more clear on, was more directed at people in general.
You mean why most people in general don’t know? Yeah I took it as such.
I apologise if I came off rudely though.
People in general and things in general.
You didn’t come off rude or anything.
Oh okay, thank you for explaining and clarifying 🙂
Mummy Laid an Egg - Babette Cole
published 1994. literally all the information a kid needs.
I read it in Year R (the UK equivalent to Kindergarten)
Unfortunately, no one at her school handed out the official “Books PrettyFlyForAFatGuy Read as a Child” list so she could catch up.
I didn’t say they did. I’m pointing out the assertion “Information was not as easily accessible in the 90s” is false.
It was, and it was in an easy to read and fun format for children.
The 90s wasn’t a dark age.
Someone made an active choice not to educate this child properly. don’t blame the 90s
Yeah, it’s not that the information wasn’t there, it’s that religion withholds it.
Come on now, that info was widely available well before the 90’s.
This is some troll level bullshit.
Nah dude. One of the few times I’m not trolling. Of course it was widely available overall but not for her in a religious sex ed class. It’s not like she can sneakily look shit up on her iphone in 1995.
As a kid? In the 90s? No. It wasn’t.
America Online didn’t present easy access to porn unless you knew what you were doing. And even then, it’s like you could reasonably see video on a webpage at 14.4kbps speeds. (0.0137 Mb/s or a little under 10 minutes per megabyte.)