A book that family organizations in Canada
had warned about just weeks ago found its way into the Wal-Mart
stock list, and while it calls God a "fat black dyke" and provides
how-to information for same-sex experimentation, the store said it's
the "stuff youth need to know."
It's called
"The Little Black Book for Girlz: A Book on
Healthy Sexuality", produced by St.
Stephens' Community House in Toronto, an organization that has fled
its Christian foundation.
[Editor's note: Since the publishing of
WND's story at 1 a.m., Wal-Mart has removed the book from its
website].
While Wal-Mart calls it "a great mix of
real-life examples and life-saving info," it includes sections
called, "My First Time F---ing a Girl" and other obscenities. It has
information on "safe" sex devices and assures its audience that
condoms are 100 percent effective in preventing sexually transmitted
diseases, even though the World Health Organization, a longtime
condom supporter, admits they fail one out of five times.
The alarm about the book initially was
raised by Joseph Ben-Ami, the executive director of
the Institute for Canadian Values,
who told WND this fall that Canadian officials were considering
using the book in public schools.
"We have to find a way to stop this from
happening," Ben-Ami told WND at the time. "People don't know this is
happening."
The graphic manual promotes lesbianism to
young girls, gives explicit instructions for engaging in oral or
anal sexual acts and instructs girls that only 10 percent of the
population is heterosexual.
A report from
LifeSiteNews.com
said the book also recommends sewing latex squares into their
underwear "for added fun."
The current online catalog for Wal-Mart
lists the book price at $11.58, and it says the manual is "not just
a book about sex, but a look at girl culture by teenagers. No stuffy
school textbook. No nosy adults. … "
"It's all stuff that youth need to know…The
Little Black Book for Girlz is an important, take-anywhere
empowerment guide. Girls shouldn't leave their teen years without
it."
When WND reported on the issue in September,
the text was available online at
St. Stephen's House
but it was removed shortly after the WND report surfaced.
Ben-Ami called it, "a thinly veiled
propaganda piece that undermines healthy parent-child relationships,
substitutes voodoo myths for actual science, and provides advice
that, if followed, will certainly result in real and serious harm to
those who follow it."
It tells girls that most parents are
homophobes. "So are children until they get minds of other own," it
said.
St. Stephen's declined several
opportunities to respond to questions about the book. But it was
started by the Anglican Diocese in 1962 and "was" a Christian-based
organization until 1974. It now gets government money, almost $8
million this year.
If "you need someone to represent God The
Holiness, then for me, it's a fat black dyke" the book tells
readers.
"What this statement has to do with healthy
emotional and sexual development is beyond us," Ben-Ami said.
His concern is that Canadian authorities
now are reviewing the guide for its possible uses. In Canada, which
legalized same-sex marriage about a year ago, school curricula that
refers to a man-and-woman as a couple has to be dropped.
"'The Little Black Book' is one of the most
obscene and irresponsible 'educational' books we have come across,"
said the Canadian family institute. "Canadians from all walks of
life need to take action now to ensure that children are not exposed
to its harmful influence."
Reminding readers that it's intended for
fairly young girls, the online version honored the 40th anniversary
of the Barbie doll with a list of recommendations for the occasion.
Those include "Shave her head and give her
a nose ring," "Have Barbie marry another Barbie," "Have her take
part in an orgy," and "Give her leather bondage gear, a whip and
chains."
It also lists "Fun alternatives to
intercourse: Petting, Cyber sex, phone sex, kissing, making out,
blowjob" and others.
It also offers tips about having sex that
"help you make the jump and land with a smile."
Wal-Mart, which confirmed to WND just this
fall that it had joined the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of
Commerce, also has contributed $60,000 to the activist group called
Out & Equal.
But it also is facing protests because of
its suddenly pro-homosexual advocacy.
As
WND reported
in
separate stories,
several workers have resigned their positions with the company over
its stance, and they aren't going away quietly; they are launching
protests in front of local stores to alert their friends and
neighbors to the company's sexual agenda.
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