Standing at the entrance to Louisiana's state capitol building on a sunny morning in April, Dee Burbank paraphrased Jesus. "It's been said that if we know the truth, the truth will set us free," Burbank declared, pausing for effect as more than 1,000 teenagers gathered on the stone steps below her fell into a round of whooping. "But I add to that, if you follow a lie, the lie of the sexual revolution--if you follow a lie, you may die."
A small woman with glasses perched professorially on her nose, Burbank railed against sex outside of marriage in a cadence that brought skilled politicians and pastors to mind. "It's a privilege to be here with our greatest treasure, our young people--and our legislative officials, our other governmental officials, to celebrate the truth that will set us free!" she boomed. As Burbank reached a crescendo--shouting that "Ignorance, stupidity can only reign so long because the truth will emerge like the phoenix and rise and light the skies!"--one blond, ponytailed girl in the audience leaned over and marveled to her friend, "Wow, she could be a preacher!"
Dee Burbank is neither politician nor preacher. She is a doctor on the payroll of Louisiana's Governor's Program on Abstinence, or GPA--and one of many people whose zeal for eradicating sexual activity among young people has helped elevate a certain "truth," as she and many other advocates call their complete censure of all extramarital sex, into an official statewide message trumpeted by politicians, teachers and budding teen political advocates. The fact that Burbank and others were holding a rally to promote abstinence, which she calls "the age-old practice of self-government," at the seat of actual government speaks to the murky political territory that abstinence-only education has come to occupy.
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