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              Sex and the Single (Preteen)   Girl
		
		      Courtesy of BreakPoint Online 
                with Charles Colson
		
		 
               
              CBN.com  
                When writer Marcia Segelstein headed to the   bookstore to scout out books for her 12-year-old, she wasn't sure what to   expect. But she certainly didn't expect rampant drinking, drug use, profanity,   and explicit descriptions of sex and nudity. 
              Nevertheless, that's exactly what she found. 
              Segelstein's daughter had been clamoring to read   the Gossip Girl series, which "'all' of her friends were reading," she   said. After seeing what was in the books, Segelstein was floored. But a school   librarian confirmed, "They're very popular among sixth and seventh graders."   Even worse, the librarian added, "Some parents are so happy that their kids are   reading anything, they don't care what it is." 
              The series, described by Teen People magazine as "Sex and the City for the younger set," is set among a   group of wealthy, spoiled students at an elite New York high school. And the   drugs, drinking, and various kinds of sexual encounters aren't their only   problem behavior. Both teen and adult characters engage in binging and purging.   Also of concern is the unfettered materialism. With the constant name-dropping   of expensive stores, clothing designers, cosmetics, and other pricey name   brands, some of the pages in these books read like advertisements. 
              Perhaps the worst part is that no moral   judgments are made at all. As Segelstein put it in an article on our BreakPoint   Web site, "The fact that the Gossip Girl books are nowhere close to   being well written pales in comparison to the fact that they are utterly amoral.   . . . They smoke, they drink, they have sex, they do drugs—yet they never have   problems like getting AIDS or becoming pregnant or getting arrested or flunking   out of school. Consequences don't exist in the lives of these 'chosen ones,' as   they're called. The fictional world of the Gossip Girl books is a   dangerous one, yet it is never portrayed as such." 
              Gossip Girl author Cecily von Ziegesar   admits that she wrote the books that way for a reason. She told Colby magazine, "It's completely unrealistic to have a group of kids who are   constantly reforming or who are being punished because they're 'naughty.' And I   always resented that quality in books I'd read." She goes on, "I don't know what   it is that redeems the characters, exactly, but deep down, they're still good   kids." 
              I can answer the author's question—there's very   little redemptive about her characters. And that's why parents of preteen girls   need to do their job and keep these corrosive books out of their homes and out   of their daughters' lives. Von Ziegesar herself tipped her hand when she wrote   in one of the books, "Luckily Blair and her friends came from the kind of   families for whom drinking was as commonplace as blowing your nose. Their   parents believed . . . that the more access kids have to alcohol, the less   likely they are to abuse it. . . . The same thing went for everything else, like   sex or drugs—as long as you kept up appearances, you were all right." 
              There's no justification for that kind of   parenting, in fiction or in life. And there's no excuse for putting this kind of   literature into the hands of young girls who need to learn better.  
               
              From BreakPoint, Copyright  2006 Prison Fellowship 
                Ministries. "BreakPoint 
                  with Chuck Colson" is a radio ministry of 
                    Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission of Prison 
                    Fellowship, P.O. Box 17500, Washington, DC, 20041-0500." 
                    Heard on more than 1000 radio stations nationwide. For more information 
                    on the ministry of Chuck Colson and Prison Fellowship visit their 
                    web site at http://www.breakpoint.org. 
                     
               
              
              
               
              
 
 
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