There is a video at the site linked.ย How ever as you read through this remember that this is the group that wrote project 2025 and the main author of that Christian nationalist screed is Russell Vought who has a powerful position in the tRump administration.ย This is entirely about pushing a fundamentalist Christian lifestyle and worldview on the US public with heavy emphasis on quiverful which ishave as many children as possible for Christian families most of whom in that movement lived impoverished on one income.ย The idea is more kids butts in church pews now leads to more adult butts in those pews increasing tithes and money in the collection plates.ย Church attendance has decreased steadily and this is designed to increase it again.ย ย Plus it removes rights for women and LGBTQ+ families.ย ย The parents get the money only if women / the mothers marry young, forgo an advanced education, stay out of the work place, and have child after child after child like a breeding stock farm animal.ย It is only for the “right or correct types of families” and harms those who are not the “right” kinds of families.ย Plus it is totally racist with the poor people being cut out of the funds.ย The fact is minorities make on average far less than white families due to inherent racism and CRT, which is a real thing.ย Hugs
Last week,ย I wrote about the Heritage Foundationโs Saving America by Saving the American Family: A Plan for the Next 250 Years. The plan is, essentially, to make women drop out of school, marry young, have tons of babies, rely financially on their husbands, be unable to divorce, and wind up in the poor house if they donโt follow these rules. But I wanted to zero in specifically on the policy section of the piece, which comes at the very end and which I havenโt seen get the coverage it deserves. Because what the Heritage Foundation is proposing is a massive cash transfer from poor single mothers to better-off married couples. This really is the plan: Take from the poor to give to the โrightโ kind of families. Make poor mothers work, and pay better-off ones to stay home. Further impoverish single mothers to force them to marry.
The Heritage Foundation wants to eventually end cash welfare as we know it (โCredits designed specifically to benefit poor single mothers may be well intended, but they have proven to incentivize single motherhood in poor communities,โ Heritage laments). They donโt propose totally doing away with welfare benefits here, I suspect because they realize that would be a nonstarter. But they do propose taking resources that currently mostly benefit poorer families and redirecting them to wealthier ones, so long as those wealthier families have married parents. The Heritage proposal would only give its proposed benefits to married couples (policies should โprivilege marriageย as directly and explicitly as possible,โ Heritage writes, emphasis theirs). It would only give benefits to married couples in which one partner works and makes above a certain income. And it would incentivize women dropping out of the workforceโฆ unless theyโre poor or single.
Here are the specifics.
Child tax credits only for married couples who are the childโs biological parents, who are working, and who make at least $30,500.ย The Heritage proposal would get rid of the Earned Income Tax Credit, because that credit gives more money to struggling single parents than better-off married ones, as well as the Child Tax Credit, and replace them with what they call a Family and Marriage (FAM) tax credit of $4,418 per child per year for four years. But this credit would phaseย inย for families once theyโre earning $30,500 per year โ in other words, poor families wouldnโt qualify. It would only go to married parents โ single parents wouldnโt qualify. It would only go to biological parents โ step parents wouldnโt qualify. A person could be working full-time, but even if theyโre earning above minimum wage, they may not qualify for this tax credit.
Bonuses for larger families โ but only for married couples, only for biological parents, and not for the poor.ย Additionally, Heritage proposes a 25% per-child bonus to their FAM tax credit for third children and beyond. But, again, poor families are out of luck, as only couples with at least one working spouse qualify, and that spouse has to make at least $30,500.
More money for higher earners, none for the lowest.ย The FAM credit phases in at $30,500, and goes up from there relative to income. Thatโs right: This is government family support that givesย more moneyย to families that already haveย more money. And it gives the most money to families that are the most stable: Those with two married parents who make more than six figures. The credit doesnโt begin to scale down until a family makes $110,000, and even then, the wind-down is small (beginning at just 5%). Why set up a program that gives people more money as they make more money? Because โthe FAM creditโs phase-in would incentivize work.โ All of this means that a married couple with three children making $400,000 a year would get $14,000 additional dollars from the US taxpayer โ while a single mom making $20,000 a year would get nada.
No help after a childโs fourth birthday.ย As it stands, parents can claim the Child Tax Credit until a childโs 17th birthday. The Heritage plan cuts parents off when their kid turns four. They claim that these early years are when parents need the most help. But children donโt stop needing food and a roof over their heads once theyโre kindergarten age. The Heritage Foundation is clear that the purpose of this plan isnโt to support children, but to incentivize parents to have more of them: โThe FAM credit is designed specifically for families with newborns or young children. Lawmakers interested in family policy may be inclined simply to expand the CTC. However, this approach would be inefficient as a family formation incentive. Only a small fraction of the benefit would go toward new parents, while most of it would go to families that are already formed.โ They continue: โmany other family benefits, such as the CTC, are backloaded to later in life when many parents are on more solid financial footingย and may be past their prime child-bearing years.โ Emphasis mine, because this is truly stunning: The Heritage Foundation only wants to give parents tax credits for their (expensive) children if those parents (mothers) are in their โprime child-bearing yearsโ and might make more babies. Eggs too old? No child tax credits for you.
Pay women to stay home.ย The Heritage Foundation could have proposed a generous paid leave program, which would allow parents of newborns to stay home and care for them in that crucial first year. But their aim is not to make sure that young children receive the best possible care. Their aim seems to be to get women out of the workforce. And so theyโve instead offered a $2,000 per-child credit for one parent (almost always the mother) to stay home and care full-time for her child โ but again, this only applies to married couples where one spouse (almost always the husband) is working and makes more than $30,500 per year. Youโre a single mom who wants to stay home with your child? Tough luck, get to work. Youโre a low-income married parent who wants to stay home with your child? Tough luck, get to work. If the concern really were for children โ if the view really was that young children are best off being cared for at home by a parent โ then this policy would apply to all parents of young children. But thatโs not the concern. The concern is that women arenโt living their lives in the way Heritage deems acceptable.
Fund this whole scheme by getting rid of Head Start.ย Head Start is an incredible program that has had vast positive impacts, increasing high school and college graduation rates, adult incomes, health outcomes, and overall wellbeing. Studies have found it even decreases child abuse and neglect. This proposal would effectively end it, and use the money saved to give tax breaks to wealthy married couples with children.
Pay people to marry young.ย The final Heritage policy is a $2,500 deposit into a savings account for every new baby born in the US โ but the only way to get the full benefit of that money as an adult is to marry well before the age of 30. That is, when an American is born, the government will deposit $2,500 into a savings account for them, which they cannot touch until they either marry or turn 30. At either marriage or age 30, they can start to withdraw from the account, but only over three years โ so about a third of the original value per year. They get the full withdrawal amount each year (roughly one-third of the total account value) if, in each year, they are married but not yet 30. If theyโreย overย 30, whether theyโre married or not, they pay a tax penalty. In other words, to get the full benefit, you have to marry by 27 โ below the average age of first marriage for women (28.6) and men (30.2) alike. Again, the point is not to incentivize marriage; itโs to incentivize women especially marrying as young as possible, despite early marriage being tied to higher divorce rates.
xx Jill
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Again all this is about is a Christian nationalist desire to mimic Russia and remove all LGBTQ+ representation from the public view in the name of “protecting children from porn” as if just being or media representing LGBTQ+ people is pornographic and sexual.ย These people feel anything not straight and cis is sexualizing and abusing children simply because they do not want the LGBTQ+ people to exist. Hugs
Side note.ย Ron got home last night 3-2-2026 about 6 pm.ย I made him a supper of a salad and two hamburgers with the fixings.ย He was so happy.ย I was happy.ย We went to bed and snuggled which made Tupac who has snuggled me every night a bit unhappy but he pressed in from the other side.ย All day Ron and I have been together, unloading the car, doing laundry, Ron started on the floors in the kitchen, and we are making a pork tenderloin, potatoes, brown gravy, carrots, and greenbeans for supper.ย It is so good to have my husband home.ย I understood why he had been gone for the better part of three months but it sure is grand to have him home.ย I feel better, anxieties lower, and happy feeling up. Also for those worried I was not eating which I was not, I ate like a pig at a trough tonight, having a first heaping plate of everything and then going back for a second heaping plate.ย The end of the second one was a bit challenging to finish but I did.ย I offered to pick up the last bits of left overs but ron said he would do it.ย I think he noticed I was trying to hide that I was swaying and wobbleing when I walked due to my pain levels. Hugs
Discussion of gender is not sexualization. Making books available to students that represent the diversity of their experiences and showcase the numerous ways to be a person in the world is not sexualizing them. Such an interpretation says far more about the adults and the perspectives theyโre applying to books than it does about the books or their intended audiences.
Following this weekโs State of the Union Address, House Republicans worked quickly to advance legislation to ban books from public schools nationwide. House Resolution 7661 (H.R. 7661), also known as the โStop the Sexualization of Children Actโ would modify the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 by prohibiting use of funds under the act โto develop, implement, facilitate, host, or promote any program or activity for, or to provide or promote literature or other materials to, children under the age of 18 that includes sexually oriented material, and for other purposes.โ
The bill was introduced by House Representative Mary Miller (Republican, Illinois). 17 additional Representatives cosigned it.
H.R. 7661 is an anti-trans bill, and tucked within its provisions are those that ban books for those under 18 that โinclude sexually oriented material.โ This is the same vague language used in numerous states across the U.S. to ban books from public schools and public libraries. This bill includes โlewdโ and โlasciviousโ dancing as prohibited topics or themes. No such books for young readers exist, but facts donโt matter to a regime seeking total and complete control.
The bill goes on to further define โsexually oriented materialโ asย anythingย broaching the topics of โgender dysphoria or transgenderism.โ The latter is an intentionally harmful word used as a cudgel to harm trans people. Such a broad definition also ensures that this kind of bill could be applicable in any situation where it would benefit the banners. It isnโt a stretch to see a bill like this used to outright ban all books by or about LGBTQ+ people under the guise of it being โsexually oriented.โ
Though this legislation would apply to institutions using funds from the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, thereโs little question that it would expand to include all public libraries, not just those in public schools. Weโve already seen this very thing play out across the country.
These local-level policies, alongside state-level policies likeย Iowaโs Senate File 496ย andย Idahoโs House Bill 710โboth still working their way through numerous lawsuitsโprovided the roadmap for the proposal of federal-level book ban legislation. It was only a matter of time, and theย ongoing onslaught of anti-trans legislationย and rhetoric that has grown exponentially under the Trump-Vance regime made this the prime moment.
ย
Discussion of gender is not sexualization. Making books available to students that represent the diversity of their experiences and showcase the numerous ways to be a person in the world is not sexualizing them. Such an interpretation says far more about the adults and the perspectives theyโre applying to books than it does about the books or their intended audiences.
You can read theย full text of H.R. 7661 here, including its list of cosponsors. Right now, your best way to have your voice heard about this hateful and discriminatory bill is to call your House representatives and urge them to veto this bill at every opportunity. There are yearsโ worth of resources from which you can pull about where and how all of these bills are calculated and targeted, and you can pull from the numerous ongoing lawsuits challenging similar bills and policies at the local and state level. Let your lawmakers know that youโre watching them and their voting records, especially if theyโre among the roster of those proposing the legislation.
These bills arenโt about removing books; books are just one of the tools. These bills are about the complete and total erasure and removal of queer people from American life.
Don't be fooled by this bill's name– this is a book banning bill that will exclude LGBTQ books from all public schools NATIONWIDE.Call your congresspeople and tell them to VOTE NO on this nakedly bigoted book banning bullshit. http://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-c…
The conflation of porn and LGBTQ (but specifically trans) issues is purposeful. It's part of the Project 2025 plan to criminalize LGBTQ+ ppl.It starts with books. It moves to bathrooms. Then it moves to govt IDs. We're in it already.You don't need to be an expert to see where this goes next.
Nazi Republican Mary Miller who has quoted Hitler in the past now wants to ban strippers in public schools…and she's all in with banning any book that dares mention LGBTQ+ issues…www.lgbtqnation.com/2026/02/gop-…
I love this video.ย Rev. Ed Trevors correctly says there are more problems and harms to children caused by people who look like him than there are from trans people.ย Ge calls trans haters cowards.ย Hugs.
A recent article from Jesse Singal in the New York Times seemed to indicate the organization might be quietly retreating from supporting trans youth care.
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Yesterday, anti-transgender activist and columnist Jesse Singal published aย pieceย claiming there were “cracks in the wall” around gender-affirming careย (which you can find fully fact-checked here). To make that case, he relied heavily on a statement from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons thatย bypassed the organization’s normal scientific review processย and was advanced under pressure from leadership aligned with the Trump administration, including a president who is aย major Republican donor. Singal also invoked the American Psychological Association, suggesting the organization was retreating from itsย 2024 positionย supporting transgender care and rejecting claims that gender identity is “caused” by external factors. But a representative for the APA tells Erin In The Morning that the organization stands firmly by its 2024 guidelines supporting transgender youth care and provided documentation indicating Singal mischaracterized its position.
โNo, APAโs position has not changed,โ says a representative speaking for the APA, attaching a link to theirย 2024 policy statementย which provided broad support for gender-affirming care. โAPA continues to support unobstructed access to evidence-based care for transgender and gender-diverse individuals of all ages.โ
The 2024 policy statement is to date one of the most significant supportive stances of any medical organization for gender-affirming care. Itย statesย that gender-affirming medical care is medically necessary, opposes bans on gender-affirming care, declares that being transgender is not caused by autism or post-traumatic stress, establishes the organizationโs support for combatting disinformation on transgender healthcare, and finds that rejection of a trans youthโs gender identity can increase their risk of suicide and harm their psychological wellbeing. The policy was passed overwhelmingly, 153-9, with each voter representing a large subset of the organizationโs 157,000 members. Now, the organization says that it is not accurate to claim that there is any regression on support for transgender youth care from the organization.
The organization also disputes Singalโs portrayal of a 2025 letter written by Katherine McGuire to the Federal Trade Commission. In his piece, Singal claims the APA โcautioned that gender dysphoria diagnoses could be the result of โtrauma-related presentationsโ rather than a trans identity,โ and noted that โco-occurring mental health or neurodevelopmental conditions (e.g., depression, anxiety, autism spectrum disorder) โฆ may complicate or be mistaken for gender dysphoria,โ framing this as evidence that the organization is retreating from its 2024 policy supporting transgender youth care. That interpretation is incorrect, according to an APA representative, who says the letter does not contradict the organizationโs 2024 position and does not represent a regression in its support for evidence-based transgender care.
The FTC letter sent by APA Services was not saying that transgender identity can be caused by autism or depression. Rather, it was describing what any competent psychologist does with any patient: assess the whole person, including whether conditions like depression or anxiety are present. The letter does not say that depression or anxiety or autism cause gender dysphoria; it says that psychologists are careful about not mistaking these conditions for gender dysphoria. Notably, the letter was written in direct response to the Trump administrationโs FTC, which hadย accused gender-affirming care providers of deceiving consumers, and McGuire was explaining that psychologists conduct thorough, individualized assessmentsโnot that the organizationโs position on care or โcausesโ of being transgender had changed. Had McGuire not indicated that psychologists were making these determinations, the FTC would likely then accuse the organization of not investigating its crank theories on gender dysphoria.
You can view the letter here:
American Psychological Assocation Response To Ftc Rfi Gender Affirming Care 9 26 2025 Signature (1)
โThe 2024 policy statement and the 2025 FTC letter are consistent. The 2024 statement reflects the organizationโs policy position on access to care. The 2025 FTC letter describes what competent psychologists do in individual clinical practice: they do not make generalized claims to families but instead provide individualized, evidence-based assessment. Both documents reflect APAโs consistent commitment to evidence-based psychological care,โ says the representative.
The American Psychological Association’s reaffirmation of its support for transgender youth health care is significant. The organization is among several reportedlyย under FTC investigationย as part of a broader effort to pressure medical bodies to retreat from transgender youth care. It is also facing a coordinated pressure campaign from anti-trans activists like Jesse Singal and outlets such as The New York Times, both of which have repeatedly sought to cast doubt on established standards of care. That context makes Singal’s portrayal especially consequential. Readers were left with the impression that the APA was backtracking. According to the organization itself, that is false. What Singal presented as evidence of “cracks in the wall” was yet another attempt to manufacture doubt around the professional consensus supporting transgender youth care.
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