Denver Archdiocese sues Colorado over right to exclude LGBTQ people from universal preschool

Of course they are.ย  Another attempt at establishing extra rights to discriminate and be above any laws Christians don’t like.ย  “We don’t have to follow laws because of our god special rights”.ย  But we still deserve to not pay taxes and still get taxpayer money from the state because again we are most special because of our god.ย  Pay us to discriminate against taxpayers.ย  ย Because hate and bigotry are more important than inclusion.ย  Way to spread Chritistan love and the message of Christ.ย  ย Hugs

Stateโ€™s non-discrimination requirements โ€œdirectly conflict with St. Maryโ€™s, St. Bernadetteโ€™s, and the Archdioceseโ€™s religious beliefs,โ€ the lawsuit says.

Archbishop Samuel Aquila speaks during a ...
AAron Ontiveroz, The Denver Post
ย In this file photograph Archbishop Samuel Aquila speaks during a press conference to address sexual abuse in the Catholic church on Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2019.
PUBLISHED:ย ย | UPDATED:ย 
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The Denver Catholic Archdiocese along with two of its parishes is suing the state alleging their First Amendment rights are violated because their desire to exclude LGBTQ parents, staff and kids from Archdiocesan preschools keeps them from participating in Coloradoโ€™s newย universal preschool program.

The program is intended to provide every child 15 hours per week of state-funded preschool in the year before they are eligible for kindergarten. To be eligible, though, schools must meet the stateโ€™s non-discrimination requirements.

The Denver Archdiocese, St. Mary Catholic Parish in Littleton and St. Bernadette Catholic Parish in Lakewood filed suit against Lisa Roy, executive director of the Colorado Department of Early Childhood, and Dawn Odean, director of Coloradoโ€™s Universal Preschool Program, on Wednesday.

The Denver Archdiocese and the Colorado Department of Early Childhood could not immediately be reached for comment.

โ€œThe Department is purporting to require all preschool providers to accept any applicant without regard to a student or familyโ€™s religion, sexual orientation, or gender identity, and to prohibit schools from โ€œdiscriminat[ing] against any personโ€ on the same bases,โ€ the lawsuit said. โ€œThese requirements directly conflict with St. Maryโ€™s, St. Bernadetteโ€™s, and the Archdioceseโ€™s religious beliefs and their religious obligations as entities that carry out the Catholic Churchโ€™s mission of Catholic education in northern Colorado.โ€

The Denver Archdiocese said in the suit they do not believe adhering to their religious beliefs against accepting LGBTQ people qualifies as discrimination. The Denver Postย published written guidance last year issued by the Denver Archdioceseย to its Catholic schools on the handling of LGBTQ issues, including telling administrators not to enroll or re-enroll transgender or gender non-conforming students and explaining that gay parents should be treated differently than heterosexual couples.

The lawsuit said St. Maryโ€™s and St. Bernadetteโ€™s each require their preschool staff sign annual Archdiocese-approved employment contracts affirming that staff abide by traditional Catholic teachings on life, sexuality and marriage. They require parents who send their kids to their preschools โ€œto understand and accept the communityโ€™s worldview and convictions regarding Catholic moral issues like life, marriage, and human sexuality,โ€ the lawsuit said.

The Denver Archdiocese argues in the lawsuit that the state has โ€œcornered the marketโ€ for preschool services by providing universal funding and any preschool providers who donโ€™t participate will be โ€œseverely disadvantagedโ€ and forced to charge โ€œsignificantlyโ€ higher fees, disadvantaging low-income families whose children attend Archdiocesan schools.

โ€œColorado did not have to create a universal preschool funding program, but in doing so it cannot implement that program in a way that excludes certain religious groups and providers based on their sincerely held religious beliefs,โ€ the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit said enrolling children with gay parents into an Archdiocesan school โ€œis likely to lead to intractable conflictsโ€ because a โ€œCatholic school cannot treat a same-sex couple as a family equivalent to the natural family without compromising its mission and Catholic identity.โ€

The lawsuit is seeking a jury trial and for the state to reverse its decision and allow the Denver Archdiocese to participate in the universal preschool program while giving them the ability to exclude LGBTQ students, staff and parents from their schools.

Texas University Forced To Close LGBTQ Center

This part of the plan to wipe out the LGBTQIA from society, from public view.ย  Because if you can not see us, we won’t exist.ย  ย But they can put crosses and churches on every street.ย  It seems strange to me that in Texas which is a state that is already minority majority with whites staying in political power by the dirty tricks of voter suppression and gerrymandering.ย  Suppressing the brown people’s votes as much as possible.ย  So here are a bunch of white cis men trying to remain the most powerful group by outlawing and banning diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives at public higher education institutions.ย  Hugs

Theย Texas Tribuneย reports:

Jamie Gonzales, a former program coordinator at the University of Houstonโ€™s LGBTQ Resource Center, hasnโ€™t slept well ever since she heard that the center will be disbanded in accordance with Senate Bill 17, a law banning diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives at public higher education institutions.

Although she knew the closure was coming after the bill passed in April in the Texas Senate, she still found herself emotionally ill-prepared to grapple with the reality: an end of an era for a place that served as a beacon of acceptance, safety and support for thousands of queer โ€œCoogs,โ€ as UH students often call themselves.

โ€œThere were a lot of special moments held in that space,โ€ said Gonzales while crying during a phone interview this week. Before Thursday, the effect of the law at UH was unclear to many students, alumni and faculty. But all that changed last week when students noticed a flyer taped to the door of the center that read, โ€œIn Accordance with Texas Senate Bill 17, the LGBTQ Resource Center has been disbanded.โ€

Read theย full article.

The lawโ€™s author, Sen. Brandon Creighton [photo], is also behind his stateโ€™s โ€œDonโ€™t Say Gayโ€ bill for public schools. Creighton first appeared on JMG in 2019 for his bill seeking to overturnย LGBTQ protectionsย enacted by Texas cities. In March 2023, he appeared here for his bill that would deny theย prospect of tenureย to newly-hired university professors. Creighton hasย spearheadedย the Texas campaign to protect Confederate monuments.

ย 

This isnโ€™t even about children. College students are adults

Itโ€™s about erasing LBGTs out of existence

This isnโ€™t even about children. College students are adults

Itโ€™s about erasing LBGTs out of existence

They want us dead, simple as that.

The CultPAC spoke,
Eradicate (people) from public life.

This is but one step.

Private colleges should begin offering public school tuition rates to LGBTQ students.

IT’S ABOUT ANYTHING THAT IS NOT WHITE!

many years ago I was a student at Northern IL university and during this time I was confused and questioning my sexuality. I found out there was a small office for Gay and Lesbian folk so I went and had an interesting and worthwhile discussion with a wonderful lesbian who shared her story with me. i still remained in the closet for a few more years but I have never forgotten what she told me, in her own way she helped me come out some years later. I still wonder what if I had not gone to that office that day,.

That kind of affirmation is exactly what Republicans are trying to prevent.

Itโ€™s an amazing feeling when you first realize you arenโ€™t the only one in the world. Iโ€™m not gay, just an ally but I went through a somewhat similar experience when I first found out I wasnโ€™t the only atheist in the world. I didnโ€™t even know there was a word for it. We need connections to survive and thrive.

In the mid 80’s, I was at a homophobic, major university in Indiana. The chancellor declared in a speech, there were no “homosexuals” there.

By accident, I found a gay, then gay/lesbian group across the street from the student union, but actually iff campus in the Wesley Foundation. It was jointly sponsored by the Methodist / Episcopalian outreach programs. No religion was pushed. We met in the church basement.

It was truly life saving, during the era of lethal, rampant AIDS, police stings, discrimination, and other abuses.

The University couldn’t touch them. They were off campus, and inna church.

โ€œa law banning diversity, equity and inclusionโ€

There is NO question what Republicans have in mind.

Yes: All out unapologetic white nationalism.

White straight nationalism.

They want us dead, peeps.

How do we respond?

By driving them out of elected office, a process that will likely take as long as it took *them* to seize power. Which is to say, it needs to be a sustained and unrelenting effort that over the course of many election cycles.

As a survivor of the HIV/AIDS crisis, I see uncanny similarities in how today’s Republican Party is attacking our community.

Back then, it was “let them die, they deserve death.”

Today it’s “do what we can to make their lives, their beings, invisible and non-existent.”

Taking the courts back as well is part of that.

we have to start local (county and city, then state), then work our way up to federal, challenging and changing judges as we go. it is a multipronged effort that all too many don’t want to take time to do. that was how the “moral majority” did it, they started with school boards and city councils, then county level and state level. when they had a strong base in place, then they took federal offices quite easily. once in place there, they appointed judges from within their ranks and owned the country. we will have to fight tooth and nail to get this reversed.

Political mobilization is super important, but I would also gently encourage folks to also give space to what is necessary to protect their own health and wellbeing, and that of their friends and family.ย Don’t panic, prepareย has been my mantra for a while now.

Guess what, knuckledraggers? You have one, maybe two presidential election cycles before the generation you keep fucking over is the majority. They will decide what nursing homes you end up in as well as a host of other issues that will affect your hateful lives.

Thatโ€™s why theyโ€™re trying to destroy democracy – itโ€™s to create minority rule. Remember that whites were always a minority in South Africa, and Apartheid lasted almost 50 years.

I remember in the 60s and 70s colleges having sit ins to create these centers. I think it is time for such activism to start again.

Those 60s and 70s college students are today’s college students’ grandparents. I don’t know what happened.

ย 

Arkansas: Turn In All Black History Material For Review

Because we must make slavery look as beneficial as possible to the black slaves.ย  White people were doing these subhumans a favor by enslaving them and they gave them a chance to find the true god, have shelter, to have food, and work which every republican thinks black people should do more of.ย  ย Sickening, but she is a true believer in the white race and in the need to have her god in every aspect of everyone’s life, enforced by the Christian Taliban moral police gang thugs.ย  Hugs

Anti-LGBTQ+ hate incidents tripled during Pride month this year

https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2023/07/anti-lgbtq-hate-incidents-tripled-during-pride-month-this-year/

The violence underscores a year that included hundreds of anti-LGBTQ+ incidents.

By Daniel Villarreal Saturday, July 22, 2023

a colorful group of people march in the Los Angeles Pride Parade holding a sign that says "All are welcome here"

Los Angeles Pride paradePhoto: Shutterstock

The incidents included theย deadly Club Q shooting, theย murder of a lesbian womanย at a gas station, vandalismย against Pride flags, bomb threatsย sent to LGBTQ+-associated venues, public protestsย against inclusive brands like Target, andย death threats against doctorsย and politicians.

โ€œSince many anti-LGBTQ+ hate and extremism incidents go unreported, the true numbers are likely far higher,โ€ the report said.

Trump judge upholds Donโ€™t Say Gay law because bullying is โ€œa fact of lifeโ€

https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2022/10/trump-judge-upholds-dont-say-gay-law-saying-bullying-fact-life/

This is crazy.ย  Another religious right wing judge pushing her views.ย  She dismissed the suit saying there was no harm because a reasonable person wouldn’t think that the law precludes talking about gay people and same sex families.ย  Just what the other trump judge said, but that is a lie.ย  The law is written to allow any religious bigot to burden the school with lawsuits.ย  Here are a couple examples from the article.ย  ย Hugs

Based on the law, the Florida Board of Educationย recently instituted a new rule that says any K-3 teacher who is found to have taught their students about LGBTQ issues can have their licenses suspended or revoked.ย  And in September, the Miami-Dade School Boardย voted againstย recognizing October as LGBTQ History Month over fears that it would violate the Donโ€™t Say Gay law.


ย 

“It is simply a fact of life that many middle school students will face the criticism and harsh judgment of their peers,” wrote the judge.

By Molly Sprayregen Monday, October 24, 2022

Supreme Court, law, legal, case, court, judge, gavel, ruling

Photo: Shutterstock

But U.S. District Judge Wendy Berger dismissed their request.

The Donโ€™t Say Gay law, which went into effect on July 1, continues to make its mark on Florida schools.

Trump-appointed judge dismisses challenge to Floridaโ€™s โ€œDonโ€™t Say Gayโ€ law a second time

https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2023/08/trump-appointed-judge-dismisses-challenge-to-floridas-dont-say-gay-law-a-second-time/

It is clear she supports the law.ย  In the article, a man chaperoning kids felt he couldn’t mention his husband or their family as others were doing.ย  That is the point of the law, to make the LGBTQIA disappear from society.ย  Not mentioned, not heard about, don’t exist.ย  Make it a weird fringe thing, instead of a large segment of the population.ย  I don’t know how we get around the legal road blocks that the maga right has installed.ย  Think of it, this judge says students, parents of students, and their legal representatives don’t have standing, yet the religious liberty legal groups can create a fictional business that doesn’t even exist and the court rules yes Christians have a pass to discriminate.ย  What next, Christians suing to not serve black people?ย  What about Jewish people.ย  Yet if someone tried not to serve Christians their heads would explode and that would be illegal.ย  ย Please note the related story of a trump appointed judge saying that gay kids shouldn’t be protected from bullying.ย  โ€œIt is simply a fact of life that many middle school students will face the criticism and harsh judgment of their peers,โ€ wrote the judge.ย  Well that was changing just as acceptance of people of color stopped a lot of the tolerated bullying of black children, so the acceptance of the LGBTQ+ kids with anti-bullying programs was working also.ย  Those programs were stopping the bullying and gay kids felt accepted and included at school.ย  That is what the republicans were desperate to stop.ย  That what these laws are doing.ย  ย Hugs


ย 

U.S. District Judge Wendy Berger ruled that most of the plaintiffs lacked standing and accused them of โ€œlegal posturing.โ€

By John Russell Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Judge with gavel

Photo: Shutterstock

A Trump-appointed judge has dismissed a challenge to Floridaโ€™s infamous โ€œDonโ€™t Say Gayโ€ law for the second time. ย 


RELATEDย STORIES

Trump judge upholds Donโ€™t Say Gay law because bullying is โ€œa fact of lifeโ€

โ€œIt is simply a fact of life that many middle school students will face the criticism and harsh judgment of their peers,โ€ wrote the judge.


A majority of queer youth feel hopeful despite widespread bullying & stress

https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2023/08/a-majority-of-queer-youth-feel-hopeful-despite-widespread-bullying-stress/

ย 
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LGBTQ+ students, youth, schools,
Photo: Shutterstock

Nearly half of all LGBTQ+ youth feel unsafe in school settings, and over half said they had been bullied due to their queer identities,ย a new report from the Human Rights Campaignย (HRC) found.

But even though over half of queer respondents also showed signs of anxiety and depression, majorities of LGBTQ+ youth have also come out to their families and feel hopeful for the future nonetheless.

Approximately 54% of transgender and gender-expansive youth and 46% of LGBQ+ youth surveyed said that they felt unsafe in at least one school setting. Nearly 60% of all LGBTQ+ youth said that they had been โ€œteased, bullied, or treated badlyโ€ at school over their LGBTQ+ identities.

Only one in five LGBTQ+ youth reported school bullying to a school staff member. While 23.3% of these kids said the adult โ€œdidnโ€™t help me at all,โ€ 20.0% said the adult โ€œhelped me a lot.โ€

Additionally, 55.1% of survey respondents screened positive for depression, 63.5% screened positive for depression, and 64.7% rated their ability to manage stress as โ€œfairโ€ or โ€œpoor.โ€ These rates were on average five points higher for transgender and gender-expansive youth. 48.9%ย of LGBTQ+ youth had received therapy in the prior year.

The HRC noted that these findings have likely been affected by the spike in anti-LGBTQ+ legislation nationwide. During the most recent legislative session, 10 have passed transphobic โ€œbathroom bills,โ€ 23 states have passed transphobic โ€œsports bans,โ€ six have passed โ€œforced outingโ€ bills requiring schools to out trans and gender-expansive youth to their parents, and six have passed โ€œDonโ€™t Say LGBTQ+โ€ bills banning queer content from classrooms.

Despite this, 90.3% of LGBTQ+ youth said they were proud to be part of the LGBTQ+ community, and nearly 83% of queer youth said that they had come out to at least one member of their immediate family.

Trans and gender-expansive youth who feel free to express their gender identity around their families and those whose family members use their correctย pronounsย and names also reported the lowest levels of depression and anxiety among trans and gender-expansive youth.

Additionally, 56.8% of LGBTQ+ youth said they somewhat or strongly agree that โ€œthe LGBTQ+ community is accepted more and more every day.โ€

If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 or chat atย 988lifeline.org. Theย Trans Lifelineย (1-877-565-8860) is staffed by trans people and will not contact law enforcement. The Trevor Project provides a safe, judgement-free place to talk for youth viaย chat, text (678-678), or phone (1-866-488-7386). Help is available at all three resources in English and Spanish.

An Iowa school district is using ChatGPT to decide which books to ban

https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2023/08/an-iowa-school-district-is-using-chatgpt-to-decide-which-books-to-ban/

But notice what book they don’t submit to the bot scan is the bible, which includes everything they programmed into it for getting rid of LGBTQIA inclusive material.

Official: “It is simply not feasible to read every book” for depictions of sex.

A book wrapped in chains.
Getty Images

In response to recently enacted state legislation in Iowa, administrators are removing banned books from Mason City school libraries, and officials areย using ChatGPTย to help them pick the books, according toย The Gazetteย andย Popular Science.

The new law behind the ban, signed by Governor Kim Reynolds, is part of a wave of educational reforms that Republican lawmakers believe are necessary to protect students from exposure to damaging and obscene materials. Specifically,ย Senate File 496ย mandates that every book available to students in school libraries be โ€œage appropriateโ€ and devoid of any โ€œdescriptions or visual depictions of a sex act,โ€ per Iowa Code 702.17.

To determine which books fit the bill, Exman asks ChatGPT: โ€œDoes [book] contain a description or depiction of a sex act?โ€ If the answer is yes, the book will be removed from circulation.

The district detailed more of its methodology: “Lists of commonly challenged books were compiled from several sources to create a master list of books that should be reviewed. The books on this master list were filtered for challenges related to sexual content. Each of these texts was reviewed using AI software to determine if it contains a depiction of a sex act. Based on this review, there are 19 texts that will be removed from our 7-12 school library collections and stored in the Administrative Center while we await further guidance or clarity. We also will have teachers review classroom library collections.”

Unfit for this purpose

In the wake of ChatGPT’s release, it has beenย increasinglyย common to see the AI assistantย stretched beyondย its capabilitiesโ€”and to read about its inaccurate outputs being accepted by humans due toย automation bias, which is the tendency to place undue trust in machine decision-making. In this case, that bias is doubly convenient for administrators because they can pass responsibility for the decisions to the AI model. However, the machine is not equipped to make these kinds of decisions.

Large language models, such as those that power ChatGPT, are not oracles of infinite wisdom, and they make poor factual references. They areย prone to confabulateย information when it is not in their training data. Even when the data is present, their judgment should not serve as a substitute for a humanโ€”especially concerning matters of law, safety, or public health.

“This is the perfect example of a prompt to ChatGPT which is almost certain to produce convincing but utterly unreliable results,” Simon Willison, an AI researcher who oftenย writes aboutย large language models, told Ars. “The question of whether a book contains a description of depiction of a sex act can only be accurately answered by a model that has seen the full text of the book. But OpenAIย won’t tell usย what ChatGPT has been trained on, so we have no way of knowing if it’s seen the contents of the book in question or not.”

It’s highly unlikely that ChatGPT’s training data includes the entire text of each book under question, though the data may include references to discussions about the book’s contentโ€”if the book is famous enoughโ€”but that’s not an accurate source of information either.

“We can guess at how it might be able to answer the question, based on the swathes of the Internet that ChatGPT has seen,” Willison said. “But that lack of transparency leaves us working in the dark. Could it be confused by Internet fan fiction relating to the characters in the book? How about misleading reviews written online by people with a grudge against the author?”

Indeed, ChatGPT has proven to be unsuitable for this task even through cursory tests by others. Upon questioning ChatGPT about the books on the potential ban list, Popular Scienceย found uneven resultsย and some that did not apparently match the bans put in place.

“There’s something ironic about people in charge of education not knowing enough to critically determine which books are good or bad to include in curriculum, only to outsource the decision to a system that can’t understand books and can’t critically think at all,” Dr. Margaret Mitchell,ย chief ethicist scientist at Hugging Face, told Ars.

House Republicans Cite Noahโ€™s Ark In Motion Backing Texas Using Circular Saws, Razor Wire On Rio Grande

ย 

Theย Houston Chronicleย reports:

More than 20 members of Congress want to join a federal lawsuit to help protect Gov. Greg Abbottโ€™s buoy barrier in the Rio Grande, referencing Noahโ€™s Ark and questioning if the river can be considered a โ€œnavigable waterwayโ€ despite being the fourth largest river in North America.

In a motion filed on behalf of U.S. Rep. Jodey Arrington, R-Lubbock, and other GOP members, lawyers for the conservative Texas Public Policy Foundation have asked to be part of the case and targeted how a key law is interpreted in it.

The U.S. Justice Department sued Abbott last month for deploying a 1,000-foot buoy barrier in the Rio Grande without first getting permission from the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers as required by the federal Rivers and Harbors Act.

From their amicus brief:

Indeed, if one takes the Book of Genesis literally, then the entire world was once navigable by boats large enough to carry significant amounts of livestock. Under the federal governmentโ€™s theory, these anecdotes would render any structure built anywhere in Texas an obstruction to navigation subject to federal regulation.

Arrington was among the 126 Republican House reps who voted to overturn the 2020 election.

ย 

Send the goddamn Army Engineers to turn that shit into a scrap pile TODAY

The cruelty is always the point. And the point is always pointless. By their lack of reason, anytime there’s a flood, no one can do a thing about it, because Noah has an ark.

“Indeed, if one takes the Book of Genesis literally….”

Well, we have a problem already because no rational person takes those stories literally.

Indeed, if one takes the Book of Genesis literally, then drunken incestuous impregnation is a handy way to perpetuate the human race.

Dumb Idiot Ham has something like this in his putrid attractions. There’s a placard at his “museum” claiming that it was OK for anyone to commit incest back then because it was a way for humans to produce children like rabbits in the mythical Pre-Flood world.

ย 

To be certain, had Noah’s family been the only surviving one, then humanity would’ve quickly inbred itself out of existence.

From that same book in their bible theyโ€™re always so fond of quoting to condemn LGBTโ€™s,

โ€œWhen a stranger sojourns with you in your land, you shall not do him wrong. You shall treat the stranger who sojourns with you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.โ€

The evangelicals cherry-pick Bible verses that seemingly justify their own cruelty. Verses about welcoming strangers are ignored.

If we’re going to use the Bible to justify drowning and killing people looking for a better life, it’s important to remember that Jesus first and foremost commanded us to treat others as we want to be treated. Moreover, the Bible is full of verses telling us we should help the poor, needy, and strangers.

None of the things you mention there seem very christian, not in my experience. All I remember is bootstraps, poor people are bad and queers rot in a lake of fire for eternity. They are quite adamant about all of that. Then it gets weird.

ย 

Most of the stuff that the fundies rally around is from the Old Testament, even though Jesus said to ignore all the old teachings (which is why the Christians think it’s okay to eat pork).

Yes, but cherry pickers ignore those bits, especially if the strangers are the wrong color

again

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Yet another reason why every time Texas whines about seceding, I wish they’d put their money where their mouth is

That state is like a petulant child that is always threatening to run away from home but never does for all the obvious reasons.

An independent state of Texas would last for about 15 minutes. Then the power would go out and the cartels would take control. Texas would be reabsorbed into Mexico. Past is prologue.

ย 

I don’t think Mexico wants them either.

The Texas Republicans have gerrymandered and dirty tricked their way into staying in power, even though they don’t actually have majority support anymore. It’s a very divided state that remains in the hands of lunatics, for now. Eventually the majority will just be too big to suppress anymore, and it will flip.

ย 

Conroe ISD trustee argues displays of racial inclusivity and pride in classrooms should be removed

https://abc13.com/conroe-isd-trustee-melissa-dungan-racial-inclusivity-at-schools-pride-flags/13628737/

Who thought these types of self entitled people who have seen a sudden rise in the power of their bigotry would stop at just erasing positive messages of the LGBTQIA.ย  Well these right wing bigots are also racist.ย  Please tell me how teaching kids to be nice to each other and work together is an ideology that must not be taught?ย  What they really are saying is it is against the conservative right wing maga way to push white cis superiority.ย  ย  Just as they hate the pride flags and demand that any positive anti-discrimination against the LGBTQIA be removed from school, they are now saying that a poster showing inclusion of non-white people is traumatizing to their white snowflake children.ย  Yes that is correct, black kids sharing a school and activities with white kids is unacceptable.ย  It is an ideology just like rainbow flags.ย  No shit.ย  This is what the school board member said after a parent complained about it.ย  In 2023 we have white people saying in public school we shouldn’t have mixed race positive messages, and we should allow the terrorizing and bullying of gay, lesbian, and trans kids because they don’t like them.ย  I warned everyone this was their next step, DeathSantis along with the Huckabeast in Arkansas trying to outlaw the teaching of the real brutality of slavery / racism in the US history is just an opening to try to return the country to the open racism of the 1950s.ย  ย Hugsย 

ย 

https://abc13.com/video/embed/13628602

Thursday, August 10, 2023
ย 
ย 
ย 
Conroe ISD debates what items can be displayed in classrooms
ย 
ย 

A trustee says a child was traumatized by a poster showing different colored children holding hands and had to switch classrooms. Now, she’s arguing to remove displays of racial inclusivity and pride.

CONROE, Texas (KTRK) —ย Some Conroe ISD trustees want to crack down on displays of racial inclusivity and pride, saying they represent, “symbols of personal ideologies.”

One trustee says a child was traumatized by a poster showing different colored children holding hands and had to switch classrooms.

School officials against this say a policy prohibiting political displays, not related to curriculum, already exists. The trustee who brought this forward didn’t realize that.

When it was brought to her attention, the trustee said she wants that policy to go further. Citing “a number of parents reaching out to her about supposed displays of personal ideologies in classrooms,” Melissa Dungan asked her fellow board members to crackdown on them.

“I wish I was shocked by each of the examples that were shared with me, however, I am aware these trends have been happening for many years,” Dungan said.

When pressed to share one of those examples, Dungan referred to a first grade student whose parent claimed they were so upset by a poster showing hands of people of different races, that they transferred classrooms.

“Just so I understand, you are seriously suggesting that you find objectionable, a poster indicating that all are included,” Stacey Chase, another trustee, said.

Dungan wouldn’t say whether she found that poster objectionable, just that she wants to avoid “situations like that” by having the board adopt stricter standards and adhere to state policies already in place, prohibiting teachers from displaying political items not relevant to curriculum.

Another trustee even asked if the poster was illegal and went on to claim previous displays of pride flags were.

“We do have violation of this law,” Misty Odenweller said.

ย 

When asked if bible verses were also in violation of existing policy and should be removed, Dungan struggled to respond.

“Right? Would you agree?” trustee Datren Williams asked Dungan.

“I don’t know,” Dungan replied.

ย 

Somehow, I think it was really the parent who was traumatized at seeing the poster.

This is why you don’t give these very dramatic, very racist people an inch.

Exactly. What’s next? What if the child was “traumatized” by seeing Black classmates or Black teachers? Then what?

These bigots have been emboldened by Trump, Abbott, DeSantis, and others, to publicly and proudly promote their racism. They are horrible people and should be publicly shunned.

One trustee says a child was traumatized by a poster showing different colored children holding hands and had to switch classrooms

And they call us snowflakes…

I assume they are not singing “Jesus loves the little children” in Sunday School there.

(“Jesus loves the little children,
all the children of the world.
Red and yellow, black and white,
all are precious in his sight…”)

Sesame Street scares them, doesn’t it?

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These days, it does actually. The fascist fucks have been trying to get shows like Sesame Street canceled.

These days? They were trying to cancel it from day one for its depiction of children of different races/ethnicities interacting.

Imagine if they saw the Mr. Rogers episode where he and his Black mailman friend both dipped their feet into a kiddie pool to cool off on a hot, summer day. The horror!

Conroe is a northern suburb/exurb of Houston. It’s not exactly the boonies but on the edge of one of the largest metropolitan areas in the US and according to many sources the most diverse city in the US. People who think of race as black/white need to visit Houston where there are people from pretty much everywhere in the world where there are humans. Conroe, however, is about 72% white and as is typical in the outer burbs, these are people who fled Houston because they freaked out when an Indian or Chinese family moved in next door.

If children are being traumatized by posters showing inclusion, I’d take a good hard look at the parenting style of their fucking parents.
Flags, all red.