Quoting LonelyPilgrim from 14:57, 20th Aug 2008
The problem re: STI's and sex education as I see it is thus:
If we treated sex ed this way, as I believe we should, by having public service announcements, and full education in safe sex practices in schools - then clearly, rationally, if someone goes out and gets pregnant or gets HIV we should regard that as their own damn fault, and not some great systemic flaw in the system. After all, we could say with some degree of certaintly that the person in question knew better.
I feel that I seem to be making myself better understood.
I certainly appreciate and agree with many of your points. The problem is indeed the lack of responsibility.
I do also agree with your point about education and responsibility allowing informed choices. Indeed sex education is needed, however as I have perhaps made clear earlier I and the Church could not endorse sex education which included advice on the use of contraception, which makes sex outside of marriage feasible.
This is because of our philosophy on the role of sex in human relationships. To suggest that it was licit to use contraceptives would be contradictory to the important and essential procreative nature of sex.
The opposition to contraception really is secondary to the opposition to sex outside of marriage.
Hopefully, I've shown over the last several posts that the Church's position on this is not as illogical or opposite for the sake of it, but rather a rational one. However it all depends on whether you accept certain initial principles, much like any other philosophy.
I'm not adversarial for the sake of it either.
"Progress should mean that we are always changing the world to fit the vision, instead we are always changing the vision."
- G.K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy, 1908