A 'new coalition' of safe sex advocates is targeting our minor children using Anti-Bullying Programs as their latest MO. These advocates are the Old Guard Planned Parenthood and Safe Sex-perts that have indoctrinated generations and are now grooming our children for even earlier sexual experiences.
No one wants bullying in schools, but there are far more reasons kids bully each other than sexual orientation. Is tolerance the only character quality taught in schools these days? Why do our children, as young as 2nd grade and even kindergarten, need to learn about sexual orientation and gender identity to be nice and play well with others? And, who gets to decide if this type of information is 'age-appropriate' for my child?
Don't be fooled. This so-called 'new coalition' has been around for decades: Planned Parenthood, SIECUS, Advocates for Youth, ACLU, National Education Association, American Association of Health Education, the American School Health Association, National Education Association - Health Information Network, Society of State Leaders of Health and Physical Education, and Future of Sex Education Initiative. All of these groups have been funded for decades with your tax money and have vehemently fought to eliminate funding for character-based abstinence-centered programs, which promote healthy relationships and the importance of respecting others.
Now, flush with new taxpayer dollars for Anti-Bullying Programs and unfettered access to all federal and state infrastructures, they are eager to groom another generation of vulnerable youth to increase the demand for their services.
Under the guise of the Anti-Bullying movement, the coalition is recycling 'new', yet old guidelines. SIECUS wrote very similar guidelines in 1988 and 1994 for the CDC to be used across the nation. These proposed guidelines are just another attempt to systematically sexualize children at an early age so that they are groomed for sex. According to the AP report,
The nonbinding recommendations to states and school districts seek to encourage age-appropriate discussions about sex, bullying and healthy relationships - starting with a foundation even before second grade.
By presenting minimum standards that schools can use to formulate school curriculums for each age level, the groups hope that schools can build a sequential foundation that in the long term will better help teens as they grow into adults.
It calls for those leaving eighth grade to also be able to evaluate the effectiveness of abstinence, condoms and other "safer sex methods" and know how emergency contraception works. Many of these issues the groups encouraged to be further addressed in high school as well.
Antonia Tully, director of a leading parents advocacy group in London, England warns us that,
By the time the children are through the primary and secondary school programs, they are talking and thinking about sex, they're ready to have sex. When you study it, you can see there is a continuum. Teaching it in primary school and then facilitating it in secondary school.
Nothing new, just recycled trash.