Sunday, October 6, 2013

Can This Be the Law of the Land?

I urge my readers to get the book "From Crayons to Condoms."
The author discusses how parents have had to fight in court to have a say in the pornographic sex ed classes and assemblies that were held in their child's school as part of "health education."
Some parents are banned from seeing the materials that are being taught and opting out of these programs is a real fight.

"The Homosexual Classrooms Act contains a laundry list of anti-family provisions that will:

*** Require schools to teach appalling homosexual acts so "homosexual students" don’t feel "singled out" during already explicit sex-ed classes;

*** Spin impressionable students in a whirlwind of sexual confusion and misinformation, even peer pressure to "experiment" with the homosexual "lifestyle;"

*** Exempt homosexual students from punishment for propositioning, harassing, or even sexually assaulting their classmates, as part of their specially-protected right to "freedom of self-expression;"

*** Force private and even religious schools to teach a pro-homosexual curriculum and purge any reference to religion if a student claims it creates a "hostile learning environment" for homosexual students.


Kevin Jennings, Obama’s "Safe Schools Czar," has clearly stated that "every school, public, private or parochial has an obligation" to teach a pro-homosexual curriculum. Google his name and see who he is.

In fact, Jennings denounced school choice programs as "very dangerous" because they make it much harder to impose the Homosexual Agenda on our kids.

If they pass the deceptively named "Student Non-Discrimination Act," (H.R. 998 & S. 555) that’s exactly what they’ll do.

Better named the "Homosexual Classrooms Act," its chief advocate in Congress is Rep. Jared Polis, himself an open homosexual and radical activist.  Al Franken sponsored the bill in the Senate. 

Unfortunately, this agenda is nothing new.

In fact, other countries like Britain are already experimenting with this kind of legislation, such as mandating public schools inject pro-homosexual content into every aspect of education.

Word problems in math classes are now to include homosexual characters.  History classes will document the "civil rights" struggle against the "oppressive" pro-family establishment. Actually this agenda has been included in textbooks for years.

Some states have passed legislation that a student that believes him/herself to be the other gender, they must to be allowed to use the restrooms, gym, locker rooms etc. in the gender they believe themselves to be.   A man who said he was a woman, in his brain, was allowed access to the girls locker room and spread eagled himself nude on the floor.  Girls as young as six were exposed to this demonstration.
In California, lawmakers want to "require schools to portray lesbians, homosexuals, transsexuals ... as positive role models to children in all public schools."

Sexual deviants being held up as models of virtue?  All sex used to be considered private.  No more!

The sad truth is that the president can add one more Executive Order to the 1000 plus that has already executed and it will be the law of the land.  (FDR only had 11 EO's in 16 years.)

We are in a battle for America’s children.  We are in a battle for our country.

From Wikipedia:

The Student Non-Discrimination Act H.R. 998, S. 555) is proposed United States federal legislation that aims to protect LGBT students against bullying and discrimination in school. It is modeled after Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which addressed discrimination on the basis of sex.[1]
The legislation was first introduced in the 111th Congress (2010-2011) and it died in committee.[2]
On March 10, 2011, Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo) introduced the legislation in the House of Representatives and Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) introduced it in the Senate.[1] Its prospects for passage were uncertain. Polis hoped the bill could become part of the annual re-authorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA).[2] It has 99 co-sponsors in the House and 27 co-sponsors in the Senate.[1] Franken cited the 2010 suicide of Justin Aaberg, a 15-year-old Minnesota high school student, and appeared the same day at a press conference with Aalberg's mother, a critic of the record of the Minnesota Anoka-Hennepin Public School District on LGBT harassment.[3] The introduction of the legislation was part of a week of events that focused on the problem of bullying, including a White House conference on bullying prevention and the introduction of two related bills, the Safe Schools Improvement Act (SSIA) by Sens. Bob Casey (D-PA) and Mark Kirk (R-IL) and the Tyler Clementi Higher Education Anti-Harassment Act by Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) and Rep. Rush Holt (D-N.J.).[2]
The legislation provides a federal prohibition against discrimination against LGBT students in public schools. It forbids schools from discriminating based on sexual orientation and gender identity and prohibits them from ignoring harassing behavior.[1] The bill defines discrimination as "harassment, bullying, intimidation, and violence based on sexual orientation or gender identity."[2] Distinct from state legislation, the legislation can be enforced with the loss of federal funding.[2]
Franken co-authored an article in support of the legislation with Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign in October 2010[4] and produced a video in its support a year later.[5]

Neal McCluskey of the Cato Institute warned that "The definition of harassment could be so broadly interpreted that anybody who expressed a totally legitimate opinion about homosexual behavior could be made illegal. That's a violation of those kids who want to express opposition to LGBT opinions or behavior." Another opponent said it represented "the radical homosexual agenda" of Kevin Jennings, assistant deputy secretary for the Department of Education's Office of Safe and Drug-Free Schools .[6] On March 8, 2012, the American Federation of Teachers, the Communications Workers of America, the American Counseling Association, the NAACP, the National Council of Jewish Women, and several dozen other groups supported the legislation in a letter to President Obama.[7]



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