Dutch Sex Ed Video SPARKS Fury Over Teaching Kids Masturbation

Resurfaced Rutgers Foundation clip shows adults pressing young children on private pleasure and body parts

A disturbing Dutch sex education video has exploded across X, igniting fierce backlash from parents who see it as a blatant attempt to sexualize children under the banner of “comprehensive” education.

The clip, produced by the Rutgers Foundation in the Netherlands, features facilitators in a classroom setting quizzing elementary-age kids about touching their genitals and experiencing pleasure.

Rutgers pulled the original video in 2025 after the initial outcry but the damage—and the questions—keep spreading.

The program is part of Rutgers’ “Spring Fever” (Lentekriebels) initiative, rolled out in Dutch primary schools as early as age 4. In the resurfaced footage, adults ask boys questions like “Do you ever play with your dick?” or “Do you ever touch your willie?” while probing girls on orgasms, clitorises, and vaginas.

Dutch politician Nicki Pouw-Verweij weighed in on the broader Rutgers approach: “Many parents have no problem with sex education, but they do have a problem with sex education at school. We have been teaching teenagers how to prevent STDs for decades, and that has never caused any problems. Teaching children about diversity or masturbation is something completely different.”

The controversy isn’t isolated to one video. Critics point straight to the World Health Organization’s 2010 “Standards for Sexuality Education in Europe,” a document Rutgers helped shape. On page 44 of the matrix, it lists under “Information” for ages 9-12: “pleasure, masturbation, orgasm.” The full PDF is here.

Rutgers, which operates in 27 countries and has received funding tied to global health initiatives including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, scrambled to contain the damage. They deleted the original upload and cited “misinformation” while insisting the content promotes consent and boundaries rather than activity.

With similar “comprehensive sexuality education” programs creeping into schools worldwide, the Dutch example serves as a warning. It’s not just about one clip. It’s about a coordinated push that treats childhood innocence as an obstacle instead of something worth protecting. Critics see it as part of a larger pattern—eroding parental authority while sexualizing kids earlier and earlier under the guise of health and rights.

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