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Video of young Tulsans having sex, fighting viewed more than 375,000 times on Facebook



An explicit video showing young people in Tulsa having sex and fighting has been viewed more than 375,000 time on Facebook.
and last updated 1:23 PM, Jul 25, 2017
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Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
TULSA -- An explicit video showing young people in Tulsa having sex and fighting has been viewed more than 375,000 times on Facebook.
The three-minute long video montage posted Friday night was up on social media more than 36-hours on Facebook, even after it was reported. 
Tulsa Police say even though the video was shared more than 3,500 times, they can only look into it if someone comes forward and files a police report. 
"It's a shocking video for anyone to see," Officer Jeanne MacKenzie with the Tulsa Police Department said.
Young people were recorded having sex with several of their faces easily identified. Others were recorded getting beaten up. It was all compiled into one video, put to music and shared on Facebook. 
The person who put the video together said all of the videos were sent in. 
"If a person came forward saying, 'This is me. I got jumped,' or 'This is me and I didn't share this photo,' or 'Someone took this photo without my knowledge,' then we would have some type of crime," Officer MacKenzie said.
Officer MacKenzie said as of now, they have not determined that a crime was committed.
She said to determine if one had been committed, officers would have to see if the people were underage, intoxicated or if they gave consent. 
"You can't have pictures of naked children, but trying to determine if those people in that video are children or not would be a hard task for us, because there are certain criteria we have to go by to determine whether or not they are a child," Officer MacKenzie said. 
It is obvious some of the explicit videos were sent out on Snapchat. 
"I've seen a lot of people say it goes away in 24 hours, but it still can be screen shot," Officer MacKenzie said. "Other people can see it." 
The person who made and posted the video wrote on their page that people in the video were laughing it off. 
"If that is true and everyone in that video gave her permission to post it, then that makes it legal," Officer MacKenzie said. 
She said laws are changing to incorporate crimes on social media. But as it stands now, police departments cannot force someone to take a video down. People offended by the video just have to report it to the social media site. 
"Just because we feel or think something someone has done is not moral, we can't do anything to them without a crime," Officer MacKenzie said. 
More than 1,000 comments were posted to the video. Some said they were proud to be from Tulsa after watching it. Others wrote they were appalled and said to pray for children involved. 
Officer MacKenzie cautioned parents to get involved in their children's social media accounts to monitor what they are doing. 
"There are cameras everywhere," Officer MacKenzie said. "You might think you are doing something that no one will know or see, but the possibility of someone filming it or sharing are great nowadays." 
Officers said if someone in the video is a minor or did not want their video published in the montage, they can contact police. 
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The Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade represents a low point in a series of low points for reproductive health and rights in this country.
Young people today have seen very few victories for education, reproductive rights and social justice in their lifetimes, and have instead lived through numerous attacks on their very selves. Sadly, this moment, though a crisis, is not new for them.
Youth activists have long been at the forefront of the movement for abortion rights, calling for intersectional, inclusive and equitable access. Disproportionately impacted by waiting periods and other existing abortion restrictions, young people have fought restriction after restriction through political action, protests, campaigns to end stigma and far more, even as politicians on both sides of the aisle ignored their efforts and dismissed their demands.
This is especially true after a year of unprecedented attacks on education —and sex education in particular, with state lawmakers and far-right extremists seeking to limit students’ access to information about their lives, their relationships and their bodies.
Just this year, politicians in Florida banned content and curriculum referencing LGBTQ+ lives and identities from classrooms, sparking copycat “Don’t Say Gay” legislation across the country . Extremist groups fueled and funded campaigns in Massachusetts urging parents to “opt out” of sex education, denying their children vital information about topics including puberty, healthy relationships, consent, self-advocacy and more. In New Jersey , Maryland and Pennsylvania, among other states, some conservative parent groups have called on officials to remove comprehensive sex ed from state guidelines, rallying against medically accurate, research-based, age-appropriate curriculum that provides students with the critical knowledge and skills to navigate interpersonal relationships and changing bodies.
These attacks on comprehensive sex education have left young people largely devoid of the potentially life-saving knowledge and tools they need to make healthy decisions for themselves and their partners, now and into the future.
As experts on youth activism and sex education, we know that young people deserve better and will not settle for ignorance.
Some will find their way to powerful online networks of their peers committed to fighting bans, funding abortion, providing practical support to help people travel and educating themselves and their communities about abortion care. Youth organizers with nationwide networks like Youth Abortion Support Collective (YouthASC) have committed to becoming expert resources on abortion and to making sure folks in their communities understand all their options and have the support they need.
Young people are also organizing to stand up and speak out about the sex education they need and deserve, most recently in Miami-Dade , where they organized to pressure the school board to ensure the district offers science-based, research-backed sex education .
Others are turning to social media to fill in gaps when traditional forms of education are either disappearing or insufficient. These platforms, now part of our daily lives, have the power to reach young people where traditional education may fail. But too often, these platforms (think: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook) also allow misinformation, unsubstantiated advice from non-experts, and false claims about abortion to proliferate.
There is clearly still a crucial need for parents and caregivers; educators; and LGBTQ-affirming, medically accurate and culturally responsive curriculum in this equation. Though comprehensive sex education has been stripped from some brick-and-mortar classrooms, lesson plans and digital resources compiled by experts have migrated online.
Digital projects like AMAZE provide affirming, inclusive and accurate information that young people (and their parents) can access no matter where they live or what school they attend. With videos that discuss contraception, pregnancy options, safer sex, abortion, online safety, sexual harassment, healthy relationships and more, AMAZE provides a barrier against misinformation and navigates complex topics with age-appropriate animation and engaging narration.
Our organization Advocates for Youth also created the Rights, Respect, Responsibility (3Rs) curriculum for students in grades K-12, available for free in both English and Spanish. Designed to be taught in a classroom setting and to help educators meet the ever-evolving sexual health needs of students with age-appropriate and medically accurate lesson plans, the 3Rs can be downloaded by any educator who wants to provide high-quality sex education in their classroom.
After more than two years of pandemic learning, we know that online education and digital tools have revolutionized how young people learn and how educators teach. Now, in the face of unprecedented attacks on bodily autonomy and sex education, these tools are filling a gap that should never have existed and meeting young people where they are: online.
Young people are curious, resourceful and determined. They will always seek out answers to their own questions, and we should encourage them to do so. We can also work to ensure the information they find is the best, most accurate it can be, and that the tools they encounter online pave the way to successful, empowered and healthy futures.
Tamara Marzouk (she/her) is the director of abortion access at Advocates for Youth, where she supports a national network of youth activists working to increase abortion access in their communities through practical support, policy advocacy and storytelling.
Nora Gelperin, M.Ed. is the director of sex education and training at Advocates for Youth. Nora is one of the national technical assistance providers on the Working to Institutionalize Sex Ed (WISE) initiative.
EdSurge reports on the people, ideas and tools shaping the future of learning.
© 2022 International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE), All Rights Reserved

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