School children were told prostitution is a ‘rewarding job’ by sex education providers who promoted wild kinks to pupils.
Organisations brought in to teach kids about sex have introduced children to hardcore kinks including being flogged, caned, locking people up in a cage and being slapped in the face, reported.
Children were even told to show where they liked to touch themselves by one organisation.
Private contractor Bish (Best in Sexual Health) is written by Justin Hancock and charges £500 a day to deliver sex education sessions at secondary schools.
Private contractor Bish (Best in Sexual Health) is written by Justin Hancock (pictured) and charges £500 a day to deliver sex education sessions at secondary schools
His website advises a 14-year-old girl in a relationship with a 16-year-old boy that her ‘risks of pregnancy are very, very low’ even if her boyfriend relies on pulling out rather than using a condom.
Mr Hancock did not tell her the relationship was illegal but instead suggested using lube during anal sex.
The ‘sex and situs judi slot online gampang menang relationships educator’ also told someone on his site that prostitution could be ‘rewarding’. He suggested if this was not the case for a sex worker, they could ‘get better clients’.
Writing about masturbation Bish suggested children could practice on plasticine models of their genitals to understand how to touch themselves, a move the Safe Schools Alliance told The Times was ‘sexual abuse’.
Bish suggested children could practice on plasticine models of their genitals to understand how to touch themselves (File image)
Although Hancock said the website should not be used in classrooms, Bish says more than 100,000 young people learn about sex from the site every month.
Meanwhile, LGBT youth charity the Proud Trust, asked children between the ages of seven to 11 whether they were ‘planet boy, planet girl, planet binary’.
Although gender is a social construct and can be chosen, sex is a biological fact and cannot be changed.
Last night campaigners said that ‘inclusiveness is overriding child safeguarding’ and that the materials were ‘bordering on illegal’.
Mr Hancock declined to comment when approached by MailOnline, while the Proud Trust did not respond.