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PARENTS OUTRAGED OVER SEX SURVEY OF 10-YEAR-OLDS LOS ANGELES -- Seven Mesquite School parents whose children were given a controversial survey that asked questions of a sexual nature have filed a claim against Palmdale School District of the Antelope Valley, about 50 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles. The survey had asked youngsters if they thought about having sex, if they thought about "touching other people's private parts" and if they didn't trust people because they might want sex. "Hopefully they will never do something like this again. We needed to protect our children's rights the best way we could." said parent Tammany Fields, whose 10-year-old son was given the survey. The school board is scheduled to consider the parents' claim at its closed-session meeting today. The claim filed May 30 by the parents of four children charges the survey was a violation of state and federal constitutional rights. "It wasn't unexpected. The board will determine what they will do with it," Superintendent Nancy Smith said Monday. "Parents have the statutory right to know, in advance, whether their children will be given sex education at a school, and if they choose, in their sole discretion, to exempt their children from such education. By robbing the claimants of the right to control their children's upbringing, the district simultaneously robbed the students of their innocence and the claimants of their status as parents," the claim said. Prompted by parents' complaints, the district in January halted the survey that was administered to 13 third- and fifth-graders by a mental health therapist for her doctoral degree. The district investigated the circumstances around the survey and adopted new policies to prevent its recurrence, including formation of a committee of parents and administrators to review requests to survey pupils. At the time the survey was stopped, district officials said the director of psychological services had reviewed the questions prior to the survey and told the therapist to take out about a half-dozen questions he deemed inappropriate, but that this was not done. Board president Sheldon Epstein said earlier that the investigation found there was not any inappropriate intent on the part of the therapist and that there had been a lack of communication between her and district personnel. "The district has deprived the claimants of
significant constitutional rights of privacy, equal protection and due
process and had significantly impaired the claimants' ability to control
and monitor the sexual education and development of the students,"
the claim said. PHILLIP DAY'S COMMENT: Once again, psychology and psychiatry's obsession with sex reaches into the classroom. It is a fact that psychiatrists are far more likely than any other branch of the medical profession to commit a sex crime. Therapists, over 10% of them in the US, have owned up to having sex with their patients, some of them actually billing that time as therapy to their patients' insurance companies. For instance, Dr Paul A Walters, a Riverside, California psychiatrist, was charged with 16 counts of 'inappropriate sexual activity', grand theft, fraud and prescribing drugs for no legitimate medical purposes. Lowinger billed medical insurance giant Medi-Cal for 'therapy' consisting almost entirely of having sex with his patients. The case was settled in August 1994 when a payment of $7.1 million was made to the plaintiff, ex-patient, Francine Rahn. In 2003, CTM is beginning a campaign to get psychiatry out of the classroom and replace it with great, nutritious food and a common-sense approach to raising our kids in an appropriate and wholesome fashion. Needless to say, there will be time enough for our children to learn all about sex. If you are unsure exactly what sex is, just turn on any weeknight TV programming and you can usually find out for yourself.
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