We are talking about what I would like to see, after all.
I don't want to get into a he said/she said thing. And I don't blame you for not remembering exactly what was going on here (I had to read back through). But it appeared that it was not just what you wanted to see but what you felt would be the best sex ed course.
My argument was, and still is, that a phys discussion will hit all of the necessary points to help anyone in any situation (and of any culture) deal with the full physical repercussions of sexual activity. Thus a relatively uniform set of points can be created and used.
Once one tries to deal with other issues in addition to the physical, one allows cultural biases and loads of extra information in which could swamp the CRITICAL information people MUST have on sexual safety.
This would also include agendas which you might be against. Given that you are in the minority opinion on some of these things (including on legal aspects) it seems odd to recommend a course of action which others would accept and use against you (or your kids at any rate).
The legal one, if it exists.
There is no singular legal concept of consent, much less one that embraces the many faceted nature of claims to "consent".
We don't need to reopen this whole argument and I'd prefer we drop it so I can focus on other (more recent) topics.
holmes
"What a fool believes he sees, no wise man has the power to reason away." (D.Bros)