line.
And there are several reasons why this is bad for everyone—men and women equally. First, in the 21st century, children and teenagers get the majority of their sex education from the Internet. Long before school or parents will have mentioned it, chances are they’ll have seen the lot on the net.
But it’s not just their sex education—which is a series of useful facts and practicalities, and the basic business of what goes where, or what could go where, if you’re determined enough—that kids are getting from the net. It’s also their sex hinterland. It informs the imagination, as well as the mechanics.
This is why—however limited, patchy, or centered on Trevor Eve the pornography I scavenged in my teenage years—there was, at least, a balance to all the stuff I was finding—a variety. I had petticoats and spies and woodlands and nuns and threesomes on sun
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