Mississippi, home to one of the highest birth rates in the country, requires educators to push a sex-education curriculum centered around abstinence and allows teachers to instruct students that homosexuality is illegal.
A report by theLos Angeles Timesspurred the latest surge of controversy over sex-ed curriculums in Mississippi, where the Republican governor just last week signed a controversial bill that effectively legalizes discrimination against LGBT individuals on the grounds of “religious liberty.” Educators in Mississippi school districts are required to teach in line with state law that defines “unnatural intercourse” as “the detestable and abominable crime against nature committed with mankind or with a beast.”
Although teachers are permitted to opt out of presenting anti-gay sex instruction, they are not allowed to contradict the state’s anti-sodomy statute.
The only problem with the curriculum plan: homosexuality isn’t illegal. As the New Republic‘s Jonathan Cohn notes, the Supreme Court struck down Texas’s anti-sodomy law in 2003, thereby invalidating similar laws across the country.
Mississippi’s anti-sodomy mandate isn’t the only eye-popping news out of the Los Angeles Times report. The newspaper supplies an anecdote out of a classroom in Oxford. A worker in public health describes her outrage after students were told to unwrap a Peppermint Pattie, and pass the chunk of chocolate around the classroom. The school kids were told to observe how dirty the candy got.
“They’re using the Peppermint Pattie to show that a girl is no longer clean or valuable after she’s had sex — that she’s been used,” the parent told the LA Times.









