The Sky Isn't Falling
Opinion Editorial by John Stossel -
Aug 26, 2008
36 ratings from readers
Recent studies show that the rates of rape, divorce, and
teen sex have all gone down. Yet some conservative groups continue their
scare-mongering. And their solution, as always, is more government.
In
this column I often take a skeptical look at liberal scare-mongering
about global warming and cancer threats from pesticides, Teflon
frying pans, plastic bottles, cell phones, etc. The liberal
scaremongers’ solution is always: more government.
But
conservatives scare people, too.
When
I was growing up, most everyone agreed that it would be a terrible
thing if young people were exposed to sex. It must be kept out of
sight.
When
an obviously pregnant Lucille Ball appeared on “I Love Lucy,” it
was a controversial television breakthrough. Yet the word “pregnant”
was never uttered. Simply saying the word was taboo.
When
I was 11, the innocent movie Pillow Talk was attacked because
Rock Hudson and Doris Day argue about “bedroom problems”. Reviews said, it “comes close to the
forbidden border.”
Today,
parents would be relieved to find their kids watching
Pillow
Talk. The PG movie
Hairspray features a flasher and jokes
about teen pregnancy. Sex is a regular storyline on “family” TV
shows.
This
is terrible for kids, says Peter Sprigg of the Family Research
Council.
“They
are being exposed to sex and to talk about sex before they’re even
old enough to even think about having sex,” he told me in my recent 20/20 special “Sex in America.”
“Young
people who watch a lot of sexual content on television have distorted
attitudes about sexuality. That it must be that everybody’s who’s
not married is going around having sex all the time and having kinky
sex in all kinds of strange situations.”
Complaints
from groups like Sprigg’s inspire politicians to make noises about
“protecting” America by banning such sex from the public square,
even if it means legislating some of our liberty away. Sen. Joe
Lieberman promised action to stay “the rising tide of sex, violence
and vulgarity,” which he says “has coarsened our culture.”
Our
culture has become coarser. Young people swear loudly in public, have
vulgar tattoos and wear jeans that keep getting lower. Advertising
shoves sex in our faces.
In
fact, today, sex is more pervasive than my parents ever imagined it
could be.
Sprigg
says it’s a reason for problems like “the rise of sexually
transmitted diseases [and] the increase in out-of-wedlock pregnancies
and births.”
But
where is that increase in out-of-wedlock births, etc.? We were
surprised to find that although STDs are up and the ’60s sexual
revolution brought an increase in teen pregnancy, over the past 10 to
15 years, the rape rate, the divorce rate and the percentage of teens
having premarital sex have steadily declined.
I
told Sprigg the good news.
“I’m
not sure I accept the premise that negative effects aren’t
happening,” he said.
Sometimes
Sprigg’s group reaches far to make a point. It issued a press
release lamenting bad news from the Centers for Disease Control about
an increase in out-of-wedlock teenage pregnancies.
But
that increase was a one-year aberration from the 10-year trend. I
told Sprigg his release was deceitful.
His
answer was telling: “It has been going down, and the rate[s] of
out-of-wedlock births and of teen births have been going down. But
until they go down to zero, we have to keep trying to promote these
positive values in our culture.”
I
assume many people reading this agree with Sprigg. After my TV
special, I got hateful e-mail: “Stossel you are disgusting. ... ”
“[Your TV show] added fuel to the fire for the demise of our
society.”
But
let’s be realistic, says family therapist Dr. Marty Klein, author
of America’s War on Sex. Sex
isn’t going away, and it’s not poisoning our culture.
“The
truth is, children think about sex whether we want them to or not.
There are groups of people out there who are devoted to scaring the
heck out of Americans. ... I think it makes some people feel good
because they say, aha, there’s the enemy, and if only we could do
something about that, everything would be better.”
The
truth is, “doing something” means more government. And more
government doesn’t make life better. If government leaves us alone,
we will survive crude sex in the public square.
John
Stossel is co-anchor of ABC News’ “20/20” and the author of Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media (January 2005) as well as Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the
Shovel — Why Everything You Know Is Wrong (May 2007), which is now available in paperback.