Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Deliberation Experience

After finally going to one of the last of the deliberations I realized how many people could actually show up in a room to discuss something and end up staying silent. I went to the deliberation "Who Decides? A Discussion on Reproductive Rights", I was very excited because I love talking about women's rights. However there seemed to be some false advertising because instead of women's reproductive rights it was about teenage pregnancy. Understandably still a big issue but not what I was expecting at all. A lot of people came and the group hosting the deliberation even ran out of issue guides. When the deliberation started there was about four people to carry on the conversation as well as voice their opinions, one of those people being me.

The questions and points discussed were things like, is their a lack of sex education in public schools? The group immediately cut out private and Catholic schools which is the type of school where a majority of the people attending the deliberation went. There was good discussion about whether teaching just abstinence or the actual reality which is safe sex, STD's, etc. There was some argument about whether or not the school, the state, or the national government should be in charge of implanting the kind of system they think is right. The conversation moved to the next topic which was contraceptives, excluding abortion...so that kind of closed a large door on the conversation. The moderators asked whether the pills should be made over the counter, whether the age to start the pill be moved up, and if getting on the pill made teenagers think they could have sex. The questions were not phrased well and were more talking to the women which was not fun. Yea condoms were talked about but it seemed like a lot of the responsibility for contraceptives was on the female. Either way most people were in agreement that the pill should be made accessible over the counter but with a proper discussion with an OB/GYN first.

The last topic was asking how to make the "sex talk" easier between parents and children. A lot of the times children have issues discussing sex with their parents so ideas were shared about special classes for parents on how to talk to their kids and online programs as well. Most people agreed that parents will talk to their kids about it in whatever way they want too. It is their decision and a class can't be made mandatory because of the parents set in stone ideologies. The deliberation was run just ok, the lack of other people discussing was not fun, and the conversation seemed very limited in what we could actually talk about.

2 comments:

  1. That kinda sucks, it's never fun when you're one of the few people that actually talk, because then you're kinda stuck in that role for the whole thing. Also, I feel like if you cut out where a lot of the community members went to school by excluding private and Catholic schools, you're not going to get a good discussion.

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  2. From what it sounds like, the three approaches seem like they were a bit disjointed. This is a really relevant issue so I think it would have been more useful had the group spent time to cover the issue thoroughly and thoughtfully.

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