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 and charges £500 a day to deliver sex education sessions at secondary schools

School children were advised that prostitution is a “rewarding job” by sex educators who encouraged students to engage in extreme habits.

According to The Times, organizations hired to teach youngsters about sex have exposed kids to extreme kinks like being flogged, caned, locking people up in cages, and being slapped in the face.

One organization even instructed kids to show where they loved to touch themselves.

Bish (Best in Sexual Health), a for-profit organization run by Justin Hancock, charges secondary schools £500 per day for its sex education programs.

His website claims that even if a 14-year-old girl is in a relationship with a 16-year-old guy who relies on pulling out rather than using a condom, her “risks of pregnancy are very, very low.”

Instead of informing her that the relationship was illegal, Mr. Hancock advised using lubrication during anal sex.

On his website, the “sex and relationships instructor” also claimed that prostitution may be “rewarding.” He said a sex worker could “get better clients” if this was not the case.

Writing about self-mutilation, Bish suggested youngsters practice on plasticine replicas of their genitalia to learn how to touch themselves.

The Safe Schools Alliance called this suggestion “sexual abuse,” and the Safe Schools Alliance disagreed.

Hancock recommended against using the website in schools, but Bish claims that every month more than 100,000 young people learn about sex from it.

Children between the ages of seven and eleven were asked by the LGBT youth organization the Proud Trust if they were a “planet boy, planet female, or planet binary.”

While sex is a biological fact that cannot be changed, gender is a social construct that may be chosen.

Last night, activists said that the materials were “bordering on criminal” and that “inclusiveness is overriding child protection.”