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February 2008 Issue

Alarming Rise in Teen Births
The birth rate among teenagers in the United States rose in
2006 for the first time since 1991 along with the number of births
to unmarried women, according to preliminary data released by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The rise comes in a culture where Jamie Lynn Spears, the star
of a hit Nickelodeon children's show, is expecting a baby at age
16, popular clothing stores like Abercrombie & Fitch are promoting
shirts with messages like "Make Love, Not Babies," and
"Awkward Mornings Beat Boring Nights," and funding for
abstinence education in public schools is under fire.
CDC figures indicate the birth rate for girls aged 15-19 rose
3 percent, from 40.5 live births per one thousand females aged
15-19 in 2005 to 41.9 births per one thousand in 2006. The CDC
said this follows a fourteen-year downward trend in which the
teen birth rate fell by 34 percent from its all-time peak of 61.8
births per one thousand in 1991.
"It's way too early to know if this is the start of a
new trend," Stephanie Ventura, head of the Reproductive Statistics
Branch at the CDC, said in a news release in December. "But
given the long-term progress we've witnessed, this change is notable."
Unmarried childbearing reached a record high in 2006, the statistics
show, with the total number of births to unmarried women rising
nearly 8 percent to more than 1.6 million.
"This represents a 20 percent increase from 2002, when
the recent upswing in non-marital births began," the CDC
said. "The biggest jump was among unmarried women aged 25-29,
among whom there was a 10 percent increase between 2005 and 2006."
Hollywood actresses like Halle Berry and Angelina Jolie appear
to have no qualms about bearing children out of wedlock, and they're
praised as glamorous, trend-setting stars in the modern culture.
Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, said
those who want their children to buck the cultural trends and
comprehend the sacredness of sex and childbearing should be careful
to emphasize the goal of abstinence.
"Encouraging 'abstinence until college' rather than 'abstinence
until marriage' will not help the millions of children being born
to and raised by single mothers who are nearly five times
as likely to live in poverty as those raised by their married
mother and father," Perkins wrote in his Washington Update
December 19.
Chris Leland, executive director of college student ministries
at Focus on the Family, said Abercrombie's sexually suggestive
T-shirts and advertisements are meant to change perceptions of
what's morally right and wrong.
"They are not out to sell clothes, even though they are
a business," Leland told Family News in Focus. "They're
about something bigger, which is creating sort of a cultural identity
for kids. It's not surprising they would continue to push the
edge of not only the advertising envelope, but sort of an ideological
envelope as well."
Baptist Press
New Company Offers Family-Friendly DVD Rentals
Parents who sit on the edges of their seats worrying which
movie scenes they'll need to protect their children from next
can rest easy with a new company that offers family-friendly DVD
rentals in a manner similar to Netflix and Blockbuster.
"Ninety percent of all titles offered by these big-name
companies would be considered morally objectionable to the majority
of mainstream American families," Steve Thomas of Faith and
Family Flix said in a news release, adding that he believes people
want a change from the onslaught of degrading entertainment.
Faith and Family Flix "is part of a silent revolution
that is sweeping across the country," the company said in
a news release December 18, and FFF wants to be the main resource
center for those searching for moral entertainment.
Movies like Bella and the newly animated movie Ten
Commandments will be among FFF's future new releases, the
company said, and the current list of titles features classics
like Ben Hur, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, and
My Fair Lady along with popular television shows and more
recent films.
A person who signs up for FFF can rent as many DVDs as he wants
with no late fees or due dates, and DVD shipping is free both
ways. Plans start at $9.99, and the most popular plan allows people
to rent up to three DVDs at a time for $19.99 a month.
DVDs are shipped within twenty-four hours of an order placement,
and after a movie is watched, the renter can place it in a prepaid
envelope and mail it back to FFF. For details, visit www.faithandfamilyflix.com.
Baptist Press
Democratic Candidates Pledge To Nominate
Justices Who Support Roe
by Michael Foust
U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton and the other Democratic presidential
candidates pledged November 15 that if elected they would only
nominate justices to the Supreme Court who support the 1973 decision
that legalized abortion nationwide.
The candidates were asked during a debate in Las Vegas if they
"would require" their "nominees to support abortion
rights."
"[T]hey'd have to share my view about privacy, and I think
that goes hand in hand," Clinton said. "Privacy, in
my opinion, is embedded in our Constitution."
CNN's Wolf Blitzer then asked, "So the answer is yes?"
Clinton responded, "Yes, the answer is yes."
U.S. Sen. Barack Obama said he "would not appoint somebody
who doesn't believe in the right to privacy." Former U.S.
Sen. John Edwards went a step further and said, "I would
insist that they recognize the right to privacy and recognize
Roe v. Wade as settled law."
Roe v. Wade helped spark the modern-day social conservative
movement. If it was overturned, the issue of abortion would be
left up to each state; some likely would ban abortion, while others
would keep it legal. Of the nine justices, it is believed no more
than four support overturning Roe. Only two are on record
as stating their opposition.
"I would not want a justice to be appointed who would
even think about overturning that," U.S. Sen. Christopher
Dodd said to applause.
Said U.S. Sen. Joseph Biden, "I would not appoint anyone
who did not understand that Section 5 of the 14th Amendment and
the Liberty Clause of the 14th Amendment provided a right to privacy.
That's the question I'd ask them. If that is answered correctly,
that that is the case, then it answers the question, which means
they would support Roe v. Wade."
U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich, who less than five years ago was
pro-life, told the audience he would make it a "litmus test"
to appoint only justices who supported Roe.
Poker Gains Popularity on Campuses
A Harvard professor who has advocated looser attitudes toward
marijuana, which he admits to smoking, now is pushing an agenda
to teach poker to middle school children as a means of improving
their critical thinking skills.
"I'm thinking of kids who are into their video games,
but instead of Halo-3 and World of Warcraft, we
lead them into a game environment that has real intellectual depth
to it and feeds their curiosity rather than snuffs it out,"
Charles Nesson, a Harvard Law School professor, told The New
York Times.
Nesson's students at Harvard recently formed an organization
called the Global Poker Strategic Thinking Society, and they're
working to establish chapters at college campuses nationwide,
The Times said December 12.
"I tell my students all the time that if you want to do
something with your spare time, you can do a whole lot worse than
play poker," Nesson said, noting that the probability-based
game requires risk assessment, situational analysis, and a gift
for reading people.
Andrew Woods, the poker society's executive director, said
the group believes strongly in promoting the cognitive skills
that aren't taught effectively in most public schools, and the
article said the society doesn't wager money during play.
"We concluded that we'd be doing a disservice to the next
generation of students if we didn't help promote this idea of
poker as an educational tool," Woods, 24, told The Times.
Valerie Lorenz, founder of the Forensic Center on Compulsive
Gambling, suggested a game for building thinking skills that wouldn't
put students at risk for a destructive addiction.
"We don't teach kids how to drink in order to learn about
alcoholism," Lorenz told Family News in Focus. "But
we're teaching kids how to gamble in order to learn odds and probabilities
or cognitive skills? Teach them how to play chess."
Baptist Press
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© 2008 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
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