A Texas school board has voted to implement a sex education curriculum that will teach children various sex acts, including anal sex.
The Austin Independent School District Board of Trustees voted last month to approve a very radical sex education program that promotes the LGBTQP+ agenda and hyper-sexualizes children as young as the age of 11. Can you think of any reason why a child that young needs to know how to apply a condom or the best way to engage in anal sex? Because that is exactly what this new sex education curriculum will be teaching them. In Texas. Let that thought sink in for a little bit.
"Then said he unto the disciples, It is impossible but that offences will come: but woe unto him, through whom they come! It were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he cast into the sea, than that he should offend one of these little ones." Luke 17:1,2 (KJV)
Adolf Hitler knew all too well that, if you are going to
take over the narrative of any nation, you have to indoctrinate an entire generation of children with your beliefs so that, when they are adults, they will naturally create the type of society you have envisioned. Hitler created his
Hitler Youth in 1921, and by the time he came to power in Nazi Germany in 1933, he had an entire generation of children now adults who worshipfully did his bidding. In the same way, the
LGBTQ+P for Pedophile Movement is forcing their radical and demonica agenda into public schools all across America to create a structure that will remain in power for quite some time.
Pedophile Culture Approved In Texas Schools
FROM CHURCH MILITANT: The Austin Independent School District (AISD) Board of Trustees voted October 28 for a "
sex education" program which exposes 3rd–8th grade children to content that a number of parents are objecting to as inappropriate and harmful.
Protesters gathered to "
Stand Up for Children" at the meeting, gathering to address the crowd, but were interrupted by pro-curriculum advocates, including a black transgender who screamed in front of the podium, harassing the crowd.
Other protestors used loudspeakers and instruments to drown out the speakers, one waving a rainbow flag and another wearing a shirt saying, "I MET GOD. THEY'RE QUEER Y'ALL."
As many as 126 citizens came to the board meeting to voice their concerns. But the Board of Trustees was undeterred, and at the end of the meeting, which ran over five hours, the school board voted unanimously to pass the curriculum — to the applause of LGBT advocates.
AISD was forced to retract its prior sex education proposal during the summer, when the 86th Texas Legislative Session made it illegal for government entities to contract out to abortion providers for sex education curricula. To work around the law, AISD modeled its program after a Canadian pro-abortion/LGBT organization. The final product was created by AISD staff and not medical or scientific professionals outside of the school district, as critics noted.
Sarah Wheat, chief external affairs officer for Planned Parenthood in Texas, voiced her support for the curriculum: "On behalf of Planned Parenthood and our review of these lessons, they are LGBTQ inclusive and comprehensive and we support all your efforts in leadership tonight."
Jonathan Saenz, president of Texas Values and a licensed attorney, pledged to seek legal recourse against the school district should AISD vote to approve the curriculum.
Near the end of the meeting, concerned citizen Michelle Faviola asked, "Have y'all been to a gay pride parade? They are disgusting. People walking in the streets almost naked. What's next? Are y'all going to bring that into the schools next?"
Trustee LaTisha Anderson interrupted Faviola to call a point of order: "We said at the beginning, 'a culture of respect.' We don't have to be disrespectful." Faviola continued asking rhetorically if the Board saw the drag queen performance happening outside the meeting hall and if they were going to bring that into the schools. She asked what safeguarding mechanisms the school board would put in place to prevent teachers who instruct students on sensitive topics, to prevent the danger it poses for grooming students for sex with their teacher.
Anderson cut Faviola off again, denying her the ability to continue by talking through the full minute allotted to her.
The Board of Trustees did not address Faviola's concerns, failing to mention that drag queen,
J Wren Pennington, had already performed on school property with children. Pennington has prior convictions for prostitution. Numerous citizens also argued that AISD should invest in ways to improve the children's academic scores rather than spending taxpayer money on the controversial sex education program.
According to its website, Austin placed in the 80% range for reading and math, and 88% across the academic board. The academic distinctions show that a failing grade of 68% does not meet an academic achievement level for reading, but it does qualify a student for post-secondary readiness.
Another concerned citizen, Gary Moore, observed that the program is a "dream scenario for pedophiles" as it encourages children to roleplay sexual activities for an academic grade at the discretion of their educator.
Jennifer Fleck used her minute to read the school's curriculum taught to 11-year-olds (explicit content warning):
How to put on and take off a male condom. Carefully open and remove condom from wrapper. Place condom on the head of the erect, hard penis. If uncircumcised, pull back the foreskin first. Pinch air out of the tip of the condom. Unroll condom all the way down the penis. After sex, before pulling out, hold the condom at the base, then pull out while holding the condom in place. That is accompanied by a picture of a male and a female straddling each other. For eleven year olds!
Many more individuals offered statements, both for and against. James Wesolek, communication associate for Texas Values, did not have the tally of numbers out of the 126 who signed up to speak, but noted the majority opposed the sex education program, and provided a media statement following the Board's decision.
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