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Gay)
School Days
(Caution
here folks!! This is sick but has to be said! )
Excerpt:
The new laws bar discrimination based on "sexual orientation" not only in public
schools, but in any private and religious schools that accept state money. They
charge teachers with identifying students with tendencies toward "hate violence,"
sometimes based on no more than routine verba linsults (aka "hate motivated
incidents"). They call for revised curricula to "foster appreciation" for diversity
and discourage discriminatory attitudes and practices. They provide for K-12
access to "supplemental resources to combat bias" including "gender or sexual
orientation" and require "tolerance programs." [Note: And here is the problem
with school vouchers, if you take money from the public coffers, you will forced
to accept government control. Sneaky huh?
(Gay)
School Days http://www.family.org/cforum/citizenmag/features/a0016607.htm
lWhat
would schools look like if they were run by homosexual activists?
In California, parents are learning the answer.
PARENTAL
ADVISORY: Portions of this article may be inappropriate for young readers.
by
Barbara Curtis
Marin
County, just north of San Francisco via the Golden Gate Bridge, is one of the
most affluent counties in the nation, with a median home priceof $529,000. Home
to U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer, it's also one of the most liberal. When Californians
voted overwhelmingly for Proposition 22, placing the state on record against
same-sex "marriages," Marin was one of only four counties to buck the tide .Even
so, Marin has its relatively conservative enclaves. Drive to the northernmost
city of Novato (population 47,000), with its lower home prices and family-friendly
atmosphere, and you'd think you were in a typical modest-sized American town.
So when Greg and Lisa sat down to dinner one evening in late February and asked
their fourth-grade son, Kenny, to tell them about his school day, they weren't
ready for what they heard.
"We
had an assembly today," Kenny said. "We learned that there are all kinds of
families," including "two mommies" and "two daddies." He also shared some of
the words he'd learned for the first time that day: homosexual, lesbian, faggot.
Kenny wasn't the only child to bring home such a report. All the second-through
fifth-graders at Pleasant Valley School had been called to an assembly, where
they learned slogans like "I'm gay and it's OK," reinforced by various skits-like
one in which Rapunzel cut her hair and ran away with her girlfriend. The show
made an impact. "Daddy, am I a lesbian?" one third-grade girl asked. "I like
girls better than boys." The group behind the assembly bore an innocent-sounding
name, Cootie Shots. But it turned out to be an offshoot of Fringe Benefits,
a theater group that gets public funds for "tolerance of diversity" performances
in high schools and middle schools throughout the Los Angeles Unified School
District. Now the group is targeting much younger kids, because -in the words
of a longtime FringeBenefits booster, Steven Hicks of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight
EducationNetwork (GLSEN) of Los Angeles-"It is imperative to begin addressing
these issues in the elementary schools as early as possible."
Lots
of parents were upset at the show and at the fact that they hadn't been given
any warning. Lots of them complained to the principal and the superintendent,
though so far to little effect. But few of them, includingGreg and Lisa, would
let their real names be used for this story. In MarinCounty, as one resident
said, "Traditional-minded folk stay in the closet if they don't want to be known
as hatemongers. People who don't live here just don't know what it's like."
Marin County isn't unusual, however. The Golden State is being swept by a lavender
wave, as gay activists overrun classrooms statewide. And if parents and churches
don't mobilize fast, that wave just might sweep the country. Coup d'etat's-
not that Californians themselves are overwhelmingly pro-homosexuality.They proved
that as recently as March of last year, when Prop 22 (14 simplewords: "Only
marriage between a man and a woman is valid and recognized in California") passed
with more than 60 percent of the vote.But homosexual activists have made substantial
gains in the past two years.They lobbied for a series of bills, mostly aimed
at schools, which the Democrat-controlled Legislature passed and Democratic
Gov. Gray Davis signed without hesitation.
The
new laws bar discrimination based on "sexual orientation" not only in public
schools, but in any private and religious schools that accept state money. They
charge teachers with identifying students with tendencies toward "hate violence,"
sometimes based on no more than routine verbal insults (aka "hate motivated
incidents"). They call for revised curricula to "foster appreciation" for diversity
and discourage discriminatory attitudes and practices. They provide for K-12
access to"supplemental resources to combat bias" including "gender or sexua
lorientation" and require "tolerance programs." In conjunction with the new
laws, California's liberal Superintendent of Public Instruction Delaine Eastin
formed a 36-member advisory task force to translate them into state Education
Codes. The task force - though billing itself as a champion of diversity -showed
little diversity in its makeup. It was stacked with gay activists and sympathizers
affiliated with such esoteric groups as Older Asian Sisters in Solidarity (OASIS)
and Lavender Youth Recreation and Information Center (LYRIC) as well as more
"mainstream" outfits like GLSEN and the National Education Association Gay and
Lesbian Caucus.
On
April 11, 2001, following months of closed-door meetings, the task force presented
its recommendations in a 21-page report. Going the Legislature a few miles more,
they included:
-
Surveying children to probe their attitudes about homosexuality.
-
Integrating pro-homosexual and pro-transgender (yes, transgender) messages into
"all" curricula, including science, history, language arts and even math
.-
Creating new policies "to reduce [the] adverse impact of gender segregation
. . . related to locker room facilities, restrooms and dress."
-
Posting "positive grade level appropriate visual images" that include"all sexual
orientations and gender identities" throughout the school
.-
Using taxpayer dollars to establish Gay-Straight Alliances on campuses, put
all school personnel through extensive and "ongoing" sensitivity training, pay
for a media blitz, "provide rehabilitation to perpetrators" of discrimination
and appoint a person in each school to monito rimplementation of the new programs.
Karen
Holgate, director of policy for the pro-family Capitol Resource Institute, says
it all adds up to large-scale indoctrination. "They clearly want all of our
children to accept homosexuality as a positive, normal, healthy lifestyle, regardless
of what their parents o rthe Bible or their churches might say," Holgate told
Citizen. "They're pitting the school and the state against the values and beliefs
of parents." 'There is no truth! 'Homosexuals didn't wait for a legislative
mandate to begin pressuringschools. Efforts began in some cities several years
ago. In Novato, for example, a Diversity Advisory Committee has for several
years been working on a revised curriculum, which it submitted to the school
board in April. If the plan is approved (a vote was pending at press time),
then starting this fall, Novato elementary school children will celebrate diversity
with supplemental materials like the slick pro-homosexuality film That's a Family
(for details, seeCitizen).
Local
parents complain they've been blindsided. Though as state law required they
were notified that they could review the curriculum in the weeks prior to the
school board vote, only a few weeks' notice wasgiven-and many parents reported
they went to the administration buildingonly to be told That's a Family had
been checked out, meaning that no copies were available for public review.One
mother-who said she wished she could give her name but "my husband is an educator
and we just can't take the risk of speaking publicly"-saw That's a Family and
found it "disturbing." She noted that it exposed young children to everything
from lesbian households to children raised by grandparents because of parental
drug abuse-but "not one was an intact heterosexual family." She said she tried
to speak with a school board member, who brushed her aside as naive: "Well,
it sounds like your child has never had a kid in their class with two mothers."
And
what's happening at the elementary level is just a prelude to what's going on
in California high schools.On April 9, Novato High students were subjected to
a survey by the Gay/Straight Alliance. The questions ranged from "How many times
a day do you hear the word 'faggot'?" and "Do you have any gay or lesbian friends?"
to "Would you attend a meeting of the Gay/Straight Alliance?" and "What isyour
sexual orientation?" Neither the purpose of the survey nor what would be done
with the results were made public. Once again, state law notwithstanding, parents
weren't notified. And by this age, their sons and daughters weren't likely to
share many details with them."I didn't think of it," 17-year-old Jason told
Citizen. "It wasn't that out of the ordinary. People are always trying to push
this agenda at school. Every classroom has a poster that says 'No Room for Homophobia.'
"The same day on a different front 25 miles north, Santa Rosa High School kicked
off Holy Week with a "Week of Diversity." Parents were notified of 82 workshops
to be held Tuesday through Friday but not of Monday's raunchy kickoff assembly,
featuring a group of students from Novato's San Marin High School who call themselves
Sex 'n' Stuff. According to a substitute teacher who was present, the group's
performance included "vulgar sex scenes" and everything from "sexual molestation,
rape, unwanted pregnancy, HIV, anorexia" to "kids being killed by drunk driving,
fighting and . . .suicide."
A
few dozen parents who attended workshops themselves were appalled at what the
kids were being taught - for example, that some people come out of the womb
in the wrong body, that being gay is nature's response to an overcrowded world
and that almost all of us are really "transgenders." At one point, a workshop
even made it clear what organizers' real target was. In a skit about creating
a "hate-free world," a parent reported, "Hatred is expressed by a person who
role-plays being a believer in a book (which she reads every morning and especially
on Sundays), and it is that book that gives her the right to hate and put others
down as lesser beings. She also says the book contains the truth; other students
yell out, 'There is no truth!'
Everyone knew which book she was referring to. "Yet in the eyes of at least
one observer-attorney and veteran family advocate Scott Lively, president of
the Pro-Family Law Center in CitrusHeights, Calif.- the event did have a perversely
religious character. Watching a parade of homosexual students tell their coming-out
stories, Lively noted that "the only comparable experience I've seen has been
in church settings where people have testified to how Christ changed their lives.
Only here the 'savior' was identified as the 'gay' community."
Shut
up Students who read the Bible aren't the only ones facing intimidation in schools
paid for by California taxpayers .Ask David Lapp, a physics teacher at Tamalpais
High School in Mill Valley. Lapp heard grumbling from students required to attend
politically slanted assemblies staged by leftist student clubs-events where,
Lapp said,"students, some as young as 14 years old, are being, in my opinion,
indoctrinated."
After
a National Organization for Women Club assembly during which teenagegirls advocated
abortion rights, Lapp voiced his objections in the schoolnewspaper, only to
be met with a student protest labeling him (among othe rthings) "racist." The
school administration seemed to find it all rather embarrassing, yet made no
effort to shake the students from their conviction that some groups are more
deserving of tolerance than others Or ask moms and dads who've sought to exclude
their children from"diversity" programs - an option being presented by pro-family
groups that are distributing opt-out forms to parents across the state.
Carolyn Neff, a West Hills mother of
two, heard about the opt-out forms on a March Focus on the Family broadcast.
She promptly ordered the forms for herself, gave one to a friend and passed
others on to local mothers who asked for copies.A few days later, Neff says,
she got a call from the principal of Pomello Drive Elementary School, who accused
her of hatred, intolerance and inflammatory remarks. The principal said she
would not be allowed to speak to other parents at the school, and when Neff
cited her right to free speech, the principal said she would have to exercise
it on the sidewalk
away from the building. "I just wanted to be the messenger," Neff says.
"People can do what they want once they have all the information."
But
information is dispensed selectively in Golden State schools these days - to
students, parents and teachers. Novato's teachers are sent to Los Angeles for
two days of Tools forTolerance training offered at the Simon Wiesenthal Center
Museum. Trainees experience emotionally compelling reproductions of prewar Germany
and Holocaust scenes, as well as more modern situations like sitting in a diner
listening to "hate radio," which leads to a man's murder. Just about every group
possible is represented as a victim of oppression-Jews, Muslims, homosexuals,
seniors. Yet one group is omitted: Christians, who are portrayed not as victims
but as victimizers. In one film about a man who spent years as a neo-Nazi, the
name of the church he attended during those years was prominently displayed,
as though Christianity went hand-in-hand with his bigotry
.
During another presentation, a teacher described a school district meeting on
the plight of homosexual parents and alleged that Christians had heckled the
speakers. (Confronted later by someone from the same district who'd heard a
different story, the teacher admitted, "Oh, they [the Christians] didn't really
say anything, but they just sat there and looked like they wanted to.") Wake-up
call, The parental response to the pro-homosexuality campaign may be late in
coming, but there are signs that it just might develop into a significant counterforce."I
can tell you that since the [March] Focus on the Family broadcast, thousands
of calls have been going in to the department of education, legislators and
the governor," Holgate said. "We know this because we've been hearing from people
in all those offices and from the parents, too."
Those
legal opt-out forms, developed by Lively and fellow attorney Gary Kreep of the
United States Justice Foundation in Escondido, Calif., are finding their way
into circulation and being downloaded from numerous Websites, including that
of the Capitol Resource Institute (see "TakeAction")."This form will become
a standard tool for parents to protect their children from harmful sexual matter
in the California public schoo lsystem," Lively predicted.
"Every parent should have it.""We're hearing from a lot of folk not only in
California, but lately from other states, too," Holgate said. "They're looking
to adapt the form in their own states, and we're encouraging that." But groups
like Capitol Resource aren't stopping at helping children escapepro-homosexuality
schools. They're trying to reverse the trend.
"Parents
need to tell their state legislators to repeal all of these laws that violate
our rights and beliefs," Holgate said. "We need to tell thepeople we elect,
'We want you to pass laws that support families and their values, not undermine
them.'"
TAKE
ACTION: California readers who need help resisting the homosexua lagenda should
contact:Capitol Resource Institute 1414 K St., # 200 Sacramento, CA 95814 (916)498-1940
www.captitolresource.org
The
group's Web site includes legislative updates, an analysis of the taskforce
report, the legal opt-out form and information on parental rights and legal
options.Barbara Curtis is a freelance writer in Petaluma, Calif.----
Coming
soon to your children's school?If you don't like what's happening in California
schools, heads up:
If the National Education Association has its way, it'll soon be happening everywhere
else, too. That's not quite the group's official position yet,but it likely
will be after the NEA's convention in July, when the nation'slargest teachers
union will vote on a resolution to meet the "diverse needs of
gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender students." [According
to a news story - this resolution was dropped on July 4, 2001, after the NEA
convention was picketed by hundreds of protesters. However a task force will
form to explore the issue in a 'holistic way' before proposing another public
resolution. ed.]
Among
the targets of their solution are state laws promoting abstinence. "We teach
abstinence only,"complained Phyllis Sorenson, president of the NEA's Utah chapter,
to an Associated Press reporter in March. "We don't even say the words 'gay'
or'lesbian' in this state in any context."
There's
little doubt that the measure will pass. Long immersed in left-wing politics,
the NEA signaled its embrace of homosexuality when its president, Bob Chase,
appeared as keynote speaker at last year's GLSEN convention. There, Chase declared
his organization's support for a "radical pro-civil rights agenda"-"civil rights,"
in liberal parlance, being a euphemism that includes special "gayrights." The
NEA is promoting an emphasis on gay issues in teacher training and encouraging
principals to use Just the Facts, a pro-homosexuality primer. "What we're
seeing in California is what large parts of the education establishment, especially
teachers unions, would like to put in place across the country," Focus on the
Family Education Analyst Dick Carpenter said. Not all classroom teachers are
happy about the trend. An internal survey of NEA members found many concerned
that the group's backing of homosexuality represented an unwarranted move from
educating kids to controversial social activism. " The
NEA has a captive audience of children," Carpenter noted. "And it's planning
to use that power to force-feed those children the homosexual agenda." -
Matt
Kaufman"... our efforts as educators must not be directed to restoring the past
order of morality but to participating in creating a new one... when it is shed
there will be a new moral order to take it'splace... a counterculture that will
burst through the surface."(Roberta T. Ash; "Durkheim'sMoral Education Reconsidered:
Toward the Creation of a Counterculture". In
SCHOOL REVIEW, November,1971, p. 112)End
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