This is from there website, the ACLU.
ACLU Announces Nationwide Action Aimed at Combating Dangerous Abstinence-Only-Until-Marriage Curricula in the States
September 21, 2005
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: **********
NEW YORK – The American Civil Liberties Union today launched Not In My State, a nationwide action aimed at combating dangerous abstinence-only-until-marriage curricula. In a coordinated effort, ACLU affiliates across the country are sending letters to local officials calling for careful scrutiny of health and life-skills curricula.
“Today’s action should be a wake-up call for many states,” said Louise Melling, Director of the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project. “State officials need to ensure the health and safety of students by taking responsibility for the curricula taught in their classrooms.”
According to a recent report prepared for Representative Henry A. Waxman (D-CA), many abstinence-only-until-marriage curricula used by federally funded programs contain false and misleading information and perpetuate harmful stereotypes. Perhaps most alarmingly, these curricula misrepresent the effectiveness of contraceptives by vastly understating the effectiveness of condoms at protecting against sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) and preventing unintended pregnancy. Such misinformation is particularly alarming given that each year in the United States, nearly 9.1 million 15-24 year olds are infected with an STD and more than 800,000 15-19 year olds become pregnant.
ACLU affiliates in 18 states called on local officials to keep unsafe abstinence-only-until-marriage programs out of the classroom. The letters encourage officials to select health and life-skills curricula that present medically accurate, age-appropriate, and unbiased information about sex and sexuality.
“For too long the federal government has funded abstinence-only-until-marriage curricula that are based on ideology and religion rather than science,” said Jennifer McAllister-Nevins, State Strategies Attorney for the ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project and Not In My State campaign coordinator. “Studies show that the overwhelming majority of parents want their children to get all the information they need to protect themselves from unintended pregnancy and STDs. If the federal government continues to censor life-saving information, then it is up to the states to say enough is enough.”
Since 1997, the federal government has poured nearly a billion dollars into abstinence-only-until-marriage programs that deny teenagers critical information they need to prevent pregnancy and the spread of STDs. In addition, many of these programs promote gender stereotypes, discriminate against gay and lesbian youth and all too often proselytize on the public’s dime.
Recent studies show that most abstinence-only programs do not prevent teens from having sex before marriage and that many actually deter teens who become sexually active from using condoms and getting tested and treated for STDs when they start having sex.
On the other hand, evidence shows that teaching teens the importance of abstinence as well as the importance of effective contraceptive use helps teens delay sex and increases condom use among sexually active teens. Currently, no federal program is dedicated to supporting this commonsense approach to sexuality education, the ACLU noted.
The ACLU affiliates participating in today’s action include: Alaska CLU, ACLU of Arkansas, ACLU of North California, ACLU of South California, ACLU of San Diego and Imperial Counties, ACLU of Connecticut, ACLU of Delaware, ACLU of Georgia, ACLU of Illinois, ACLU of Kansas and Western Missouri, ACLU of Massachusetts, ACLU of Michigan, ACLU of Minnesota, ACLU of Eastern Missouri, ACLU of Nebraska, New York CLU, ACLU of Pennsylvania, ACLU of Rhode Island, ACLU of Tennessee, and ACLU of Wyoming.
To view a sample letter sent by ACLU affiliates to state officials, click here:
http://www.********.org/resources/?release=16.
Not In My State is part of the ACLU’s Take Issue, Take Charge campaign. Take Issue, Take Charge is a nationwide campaign to protect reproductive freedom coordinated by the national ACLU’s Reproductive Freedom Project in conjunction with ACLU affiliates throughout the country.
To view The Content of Federally Funded Abstinence-Only Education Programs, a report prepared for Representative Henry A. Waxman (D-CA).
Here is the sample letter.
Not In My State: Sample Letter
September 21, 2005
Dear Superintendent,
In recent years, the number of programs and schools teaching abstinence-only-until-marriage curricula has increased. Research shows that these curricula, which deny young people crucial information they need to prevent pregnancy and protect themselves from sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), are ineffective and dangerous. To ensure the health of young people throughout Missouri, we ask your assistance in keeping these unsafe programs out of our schools.
None of us want students misled in the classroom -- particularly when bad information can have lifelong consequences. Yet records indicate that sex education programs in Missouri teach some of the most problematic abstinence-only curricula -- including Choosing the Best; Me, My World, My Future; and A.C. Green's Game Plan. According to a recent congressional report, these programs are among the many abstinence-only-until-marriage curricula that contain false and misleading information and perpetuate harmful stereotypes.
Perhaps most alarmingly, these curricula misrepresent the effectiveness of contraceptives, giving teens the false impression that condoms neither protect against STDs nor prevent unintended pregnancy.(1) Such misinformation is particularly alarming given that each year in the United States, nearly 9.1 million 15-24 year olds are infected with an STD (2) and more than 800,000 teenagers become pregnant.(3)
Despite these statistics, and discounting research by the Centers for Disease Control and others highlighting the effectiveness of condoms at preventing the transmission of HIV and other STDs, abstinence-only-until-marriage curricula send the message that condoms are not worth using. A.C. Green's Game Plan, for example, falsely tells teachers: "[T]he popular claim that 'condoms help prevent the spread of [(STDs)]' is not supported by the data."(4) Choosing the Best and Me, My World, My Future are among the curricula that rely on a scientifically discredited study to dramatically understate the effectiveness of condoms in preventing HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.(5) Choosing the Best also misstates the effectiveness of condoms in preventing pregnancy.(6)
Research shows that this kind of misinformation puts teenagers at risk. According to a recent study by researchers at Yale and Columbia Universities, 88 percent of teenagers who pledge to remain abstinent before marriage, break that pledge, and when they do have sex, they are less likely than other teens to use condoms or be tested for STDs.(7)
Many of these programs also present harmful stereotypes about men and women. Choosing the Best, for example, teaches, "Generally, guys are able to focus better on one activity at a time and may not connect feelings with actions. Girls access both sides of the brain at once, so they often experience feelings and emotions as part of every situation."(

These biased messages have no place in our schools.
We ask that as the superintendent of schools you confirm that the health and life-skills curricula in your district present medically accurate, age-appropriate, unbiased information about sex and sexuality. Please let us know which curricula your school district uses and how the curricula address these issues. There is ample evidence that programs that include information about both abstinence and the effective use of contraception reduce sexual risk-taking and pregnancy among teens.(9) If you would like assistance identifying comprehensive sexuality education programs to use in your district, please do not hesitate to contact me at the ACLU of Eastern Missouri.
Thank you in advance for your attention to this matter.
Sincerely,
__________________________________________________
Resting in the hands, of Jesus.
Bob
Joshua 24:27 And Joshua said unto all the people, Behold, this stone shall be a witness unto us; for it hath heard all the words of the LORD which he spake unto us: it shall be therefore a witness unto you, lest ye deny your God.