Schoolchildren are told that prostitution is a ‘rewarding job’ by sex education providers who promote ‘kinks’ among students, including thrashing, beating and locking people in cages
Children were told prostitution is a ‘rewarding job’ by sex education providers
Organizations introduced children to hardcore nodding, including being flogged
Children had to show from one organization where they liked to touch themselves
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Schoolchildren were told that prostitution is a “rewarding job” by sex education providers promoting wild kinks in students.
Organizations set up to teach children about sex have introduced children to hardcore kinks, including being flogged and beaten, locking people in a cage and being punched in the face, The times reported.
One organization even instructed children to show where they liked to touch themselves.
Private contractor Bish (Best in Sexual Health) is written by Justin Hancock and charges £500 a day for conducting sex education sessions in secondary schools.
Private contractor Bish (Best in Sexual Health) is written by Justin Hancock (pictured) and charges £500 a day to provide sex education in secondary schools
His website advises a 14-year-old girl in a relationship with a 16-year-old boy that her “risk of pregnancy is very, very low,” even if her boyfriend relies on taking it off rather than using a condom.
Mr. Hancock did not tell her that the relationship was illegal, but instead suggested using lubricant during anal sex.
The ‘sex and relationship educator’ also told someone on his site that prostitution could be ‘paying’. He suggested that if this wasn’t the case for a sex worker, they could “get better clients.”
Writing about masturbation Bish suggested that children could practice on plasticine models of their genitals to understand how to touch themselves, a move the Safe Schools Alliance told The Times was “sexual abuse.”
Bish suggested that children can practice on plasticine models of their genitals to understand how to touch themselves (File image)
While Hancock said the website should not be used in classrooms, Bish says more than 100,000 young people learn about sex every month through the site.
Meanwhile, LGBT youth charities the Proud Trust asked children aged seven to 11 if they were ‘planet boy, planet girl, planet binary’.
While gender is a social construct and can be chosen, sex is a biological fact and cannot be changed.
Last night, campaigners said that “inclusiveness is more important than protecting children” and that the material “borders on illegal”.
MailOnline has asked Mr Hancock and the Proud Trust for comment.