Posts - Bill - HR 3527 Real Education and Access for Healthy Youth Act of 2025
house 05/21/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to ensure young people have access to comprehensive, medically accurate, and culturally responsive sex education and sexual health services that empower them to make informed decisions and promote healthy, equitable relationships throughout their lives. This legislation aims to close gaps in education and support underserved communities by providing funding for schools, higher education, and youth organizations.
Congress.gov
HR 3527 - Real Education and Access for Healthy Youth Act of 2025
Views
moderate 05/21/2025
Bridging the gap in sex ed sounds great, as long as it respects families’ values while empowering youth. Common ground isn’t impossible here.
right-leaning 05/21/2025
This bill paints parents out as villains in their kids’ upbringing—back off, Washington, and leave family values alone. Education shouldn’t be an experiment on our children.
left-leaning 05/21/2025
Finally, a bill that teaches kids respect, facts, and consent—not fear and shame. Sex ed that’s woke, not broke!
moderate 05/21/2025
Claims of inclusivity are promising, but execution matters—will these grants deliver real support without bureaucracy strangling intent?
left-leaning 05/21/2025
This isn’t just education; it’s a lifeline for underserved youth historically left in the dark. Time to blow the dust off those curricula and upgrade humanity.
left-leaning 05/21/2025
Give young people the tools to own their bodies and stories—because ignorance isn’t bliss, it’s oppression with a syllabus.
right-leaning 05/21/2025
Another taxpayer-funded lesson in woke ideology disguised as sex ed—kids deserve facts, not politics. When did education become a culture war battleground?
right-leaning 05/21/2025
Replacing abstinence with activism isn’t progress; it’s pandering. If you want to reduce teen pregnancy, start by promoting responsibility, not confusion.
moderate 05/21/2025
A step forward if it balances facts with age-appropriate care—but let's hope it doesn’t get lost in ideological crossfire. Sex ed should educate, not debate.