Teen Anal 16

Teen Anal 16




⚡ 👉🏻👉🏻👉🏻 INFORMATION AVAILABLE CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻




















































Posted Thu 15 Sep 2016 at 3:40pmThursday 15 Sep 2016 at 3:40pm, updated Thu 15 Sep 2016 at 11:21pmThursday 15 Sep 2016 at 11:21pm
The legal age for consensual anal sex in Queensland has been brought into line with all other lawful sexual acts, ending "archaic" legislation against homosexuals.
While 16 has been the legal age for most sexual activity, it was illegal to engage in anal sex until the age of 18.
Queensland was the only state in Australia that had different ages of consent for different consensual sexual acts.
The Labor Government and independents voted to pass the laws last night, along with 28 Opposition MPs.
The other LNP members did not vote.
The two Katter's Australian Party members, Robbie Katter and Shane Knuth, were the only MPs to oppose the changes.
The word sodomy will also be replaced with anal intercourse in the Criminal Code to help reduce stigma.
Health Minister Cameron Dick said the laws finally corrected an injustice and protected the health of young people.
"By removing anachronistic value laden language and ensuring equality in the age of consent, the bill will not only improve sexual health outcomes, but also mental health outcomes for young Queenslanders."
He said health experts found the older age limit could lead to people feeling compelled to withhold information about their sexual history from health practitioners for fear of legal consequences.
"Withholding this information could have serious implications for a young person's medical treatment, particularly as unprotected anal intercourse is the highest-risk behaviour for transmission of HIV."
AIDS Council Queensland director Michael Scott said it was imperative to remove any barrier to access of healthcare for all people.
"An unequal age of consent has been a barrier to equal access to healthcare," he said.
"We are concerned that with the current inequality of age of consent, young people who are sexually active are reluctant to access sexual health services including HIV and other STI testing and preventative health education for fear of being prosecuted."
Opposition health spokesperson John-Paul Langbroek supported the changes but called on the Government to clarify how it would educate 16 and 17-year-olds about the changes.
"The Queensland sexual health strategy includes little to no detail on how it would be delivered," he said.
"There's also no information on the Queensland sexual health strategy that mentions advice about education programs, that refer to physical side effects of sexual activity, on bodies that may not have developed completely, or the mental health aspects. "
Consensual anal sex between adults in Queensland was decriminalised in 1991.
Environment Minister Steven Miles said the "outdated" law had stigmatised sexual relationships of gay men.
"It is the kind of stigma that contributes to the isolation and loneliness of young LGBTIQ Queenslanders," he said.
"We all know that this archaic law does not prevent anyone from having anal sex.
"What it does is prevent young people from accessing important healthcare and safety information."
Posted 15 Sep 201615 Sep 2016, updated 15 Sep 201615 Sep 2016
NSW COVID-19 lockdown set to be extended by a week, ABC understands
What is expected to change or stay the same in NSW as another week of lockdown looms
Blistering Barty storms into Wimbledon semi-finals
Retired senior police officer among candidates to lead veteran suicides royal commission
Live: Italy and Spain meet with a spot in the Euro 2020 final on the line
Tibetan monks receive 'apocalyptically harsh' sentences in secret Chinese trials: report
As China vowed 'peaceful reunification' with Taiwan, Australia was holding trade talks with the island
'It's obscene': NSW Health apologises after Catholic school boys receive Pfizer jabs in 'error'
Lachlan was 'getting into trouble', but this program is helping him think about the future
We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work.
This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, AAP, CNN and the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced.
AEST = Australian Eastern Standard Time which is 10 hours ahead of GMT (Greenwich Mean Time)
Read our editorial guiding principles

The supposedly progressive piece, intended for teenage girls, refers to women as 'non-prostate owners', ignores the organ for female pleasure and fails to mention any potential dangers
Find your bookmarks in your Independent Premium section, under my profile
Find your bookmarks in your Independent Premium section, under my profile
Despite the steps towards equality, when it comes to sex women are still defined by male desire and anatomy
Defining women by the men around them is an issue feminists have sought to address, and correct, for years.
The recent death of Sheila Michaels has reminded us of just how revolutionary it was that a woman’s relationship to a man should not dictate her value in society when she popularised the term Ms in the 1960s. She is not a Miss nor Mrs; she is neither waiting for a man nor owned by one.
It would stand to reason that we could assume that in 2017 any work aimed at women would be sure to avoid such regressive patterns. However, in Anal Sex: What You Need To Know for Teen Vogue, sex educator and feminist activist Gigi Engle managed to harp back to a time where women were defined by their relationship to men.
Describing the way anal sex can feel pleasurable to men and women in different ways, she starts by describing the pleasure felt during anal sex when the prostate is stimulated in a male body. The male anatomy is labelled as “anatomy of a prostate owner”.
Engle goes on to discuss how anal sex can feel pleasurable for women and uses this diagram of the female anatomy:
Not only is any potential pleasure a woman may feel during anal sex reduced to the lack of male body parts (she is a “non-prostate owner”) but the clitoris, the actual hub of female sexual pleasure, has been removed. The lack of a male body part is the focus of what defines the female body, and what is actually there isn’t identified at all.
What is this teaching the audience of a magazine aimed at teenage girls? It tells them their identity is not “woman”, but rather “non-man”. It tells them that should they consent to anal sex, their body is just a hole for the man to penetrate, and the part of their body that is most sensitive and reliable for the female orgasm is so irrelevant that it doesn’t even warrant a label. It tells them that consenting to anal sex is not about their pleasure, but about their partner’s.
Emma Watson talks about feminism in promotion for her upcoming role in Beauty and the Beast
What it fails to tell them is the potential dangers of anal sex. The possibilities of fissures and tears which can become infected very easily due to contamination by faeces, severe enough to need surgery, or lead to anal abscesses which increase the chances of catching HIV. By treating anal sex as an equivalent to vaginal sex, you increase the chances that your audience will not understand the potential damage they can do to their own or their partner’s body, and in turn increase their chances of becoming seriously ill.
Just as importantly, teaching young girls that their identity, their value, is dependent on a man removes their sense of self and puts them outside of humanity, as described in The Second Sex by Simone De Beauvoir: “Thus humanity is male and man defines woman not in herself but as relative to him; she is not regarded as an autonomous being.”
The current surge in queer politics would seem to explain this decision. Engle asks: “What about the LGBTQ young people who need to know about this for their sexual health?”
Seeking to include teenagers who do not identify themselves as women, despite having the female biology, embraces those who may feel outside of an article which discusses anal sex with biological terminology. Whilst well intentioned, it erases the young women who desperately need to be educated about their anatomy and empowered about their value. It treats women as second class citizens whose only identity comes from the men around them.
Instead of reducing a teenage girl to her male counterpart, we should be teaching them about their biology independently and as worthy in its own right. Our responsibility as adult women influencing the next generation is to raise them up to be confident in their self-worth, and fighting against a culture that seeks to define them by their sexuality and what they can do for men. Regardless of whether they consider their vulva to be part of their woman’s body, their clitoris exists, and they are more than just a hole for a penis.
Teen Vogue’s target audience is not non-prostate owners seeking to provide sexual satisfaction to men through their anus. Teen Vogue’s target audience is teenage girls, most under the legal age of consent, who are deserving of adult women to teach them to value themselves for who they are, not by what they are in relation to men.
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Elevate your home with these like-new items for less on eBay
How to put the bounce back into your jog and uplift your mind
Take the pain out of printing with the HP+ smart wireless printer
Clarins’ new Calm-Essentiel range is a soothing saviour for sensitive skin
The guide to an eco-friendly picnic by sunshine concept store Twiin

Russian Sex For Money
Vanessa B Sex
Krasiviy Sex Rakom
Sex Emulator Torrent
A Good Sex Beforing For Skinny Teen
yandex.com
10-year-old girl dies after anal sex with 16-year-old boy ...
Queensland lowers anal sex consent age to 16, ending ...
Teen Vogue's bizarre anal sex article shows women are ...
Emma Raducanu: British teen tennis star through to final ...
Teen Anal 16


Report Page