Argumentative Essay On Teenage Pregnancy

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Teenage pregnancy has become more prevalent in popular music as time goes by. Whether it’s hip-hop, rap, country, pop or rock, much of popular music aimed at teens contains sexual overtones. Researchers have found that its influence on their behavior appears to depend on how the sex is portrayed (NBC News, 2006). In the United States of America, there are approximately 750,000 teenagers becoming pregnant each year, and an estimated four million contract sexually transmitted diseases (Daily Mail, 2006).
During the course of my twenty plus years on this earth and witnessing the drastic change in society, music, and sexual behavior in youth is heart wrenching. As a mother of two children (boy and girl), growing up in today’s society of vulgar and sexually immoral behavior I want my kids to be educated regarding sex, and not to become a statistic. Personal reasons aren’t my only motive for choosing teen pregnancy, but also if society worked together to prevent teen and unplanned pregnancy we could significantly improve other serious social problems including poverty, child abuse and neglect, father-absence, low birth weight, school failure, …show more content…

Madonna was interviewed in 2009 by Rolling Stone where she stated: "a message song that everyone is going to take the wrong way…” and "It just fit right in with my own personal zeitgeist of standing up to male authorities, whether it 's the pope or the Catholic Church or my father and his conservative, patriarchal ways" (Song Facts, n.d.). The infamous line "I 've made up my mind, I 'm keeping my baby," caused anti-abortion groups to praise Madonna and abortion-rights groups to criticize her (Song Facts, n.d.). All of the controversial media attention kept this pop song at the top of the charts and a hit that has been remade by

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