School Kids Porn

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School Kids Porn
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I write about policy and practice in K-12 and higher education.
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More fundamentally, it’s unclear why anyone would want to routinize the idea that helping students ... [+] assert their gender identity means driving a wedge between them and their parents.
When it comes to the explosive, hugely sensitive question of how public schools support transgender students, there’s frequently been more heat than light. The debates have featured more invective and charges of “transphobia,” frequently from those who seem more interested in sweeping declarations than in considering what policies actually say.
That has been especially true in Virginia, where Governor Glenn Youngkin recently issued new model guidelines regarding parental rights, schools, and transgender students. Youngkin replaces an unworkable, widely ignored set of directions issued by his predecessor with the direction that schools “respect parents’ values and beliefs,” “keep parents informed about their children’s well-being,” “serve the needs of all students,” and “partner with parents.”
In practice, the rules stipulate that no student “shall be required to participate in any counseling program to which the student’s parents object” and that “parents must be informed and given an opportunity to object before counseling services pertaining to gender are given.” They further state that school systems may not “encourage or instruct teachers to conceal material information about a student from the student’s parent, including information related to gender.”
While sensible, responsible, and in accord with public sentiment, Youngkin’s guidelines have provoked howls of rage from progressive activists and made national headlines. Enter Andy Rotherham, veteran Democrat, one-time special assistant for education to President Bill Clinton, member of the Virginia board of education, co-founder of Bellwether Education Partners, and author of the Eduwonk blog. Last week, at his blog, Rotherham penned an invaluable examination of the issue that managed to be simultaneously empathic, practical, and unflinching. Any school community struggling with these questions would benefit from sitting down and starting the conversation with Rotherham’s brief essay.
For starters, the debate is frequently driven by advocates whose familiarity with the particulars of the guidelines may not match their strong views. Indeed, Rotherham ruefully says, “I've interacted with plenty of people, including professional media, who have strong views but haven't read them,” and that Youngkin’s policy has generated 59,000 public comments but the page actually featuring the document has only been visited about 7,000 times.
The result has been backlash fueled by ideology and symbolic politics. Indeed, Rotherham points out that many of Youngkin’s Democratic critics “have decided that concealing things from parents” is “a hill to die on.” One can almost sense Rotherham’s incredulity when he shares a Democratic fundraising missive lamenting that, before Youngkin, schools “only” had to notify parents about a student’s gender identity if they thought it was “in the best interest of that child.” As Rotherham witheringly writes, “You'd be excused for thinking a political communication about notifying parents only at the school's discretion as to what constitutes ‘best interest’ on a sensitive issue like this was a Republican ad rather than a Democratic fundraising pitch.”
More fundamentally, it’s unclear why anyone would want to routinize the idea that helping students assert their gender identity means driving a wedge between them and their parents. There are, obviously, situations in which home environments are unsafe. But there already exist legal mechanisms for reporting and addressing such concerns. The idea that schools should habitually try to hide important aspects of children’s lives from their parents seems destructive and short-sighted.
Rotherham puts it well, observing, “I don't support policies encouraging schools to withhold information like this from families because it's not good for trans kids or LGBT kids more generally.” As he writes, “Concealing information from parents is at odds with the common sense notion that if having supportive adults is important to helping transgender youth, then cutting key adults out of their life is counterproductive.”
The very notion that educators who’ve known a ten year-old for three months should be empowered (much less encouraged) to cut parents out reflects a bizarre, reflexive distrust of parents. It’s tough to think of something more calculated to fracture the parent-teacher relationship.
While there are legitimate debates about how much influence parents should have over school curricula or pedagogy, the idea that parents should be routinely deemed bad actors or cut out of their own children’s lives is truly shocking—and a recipe for poisoning the relationship between parents and their schools.
Governor Youngkin has offered a sensible path for doing better. And Rotherham has offered a vision of how we can think about the needs of students, parents, and educators in a way that trades hyperbole for hard-headed problem solving. Now we’ll see who’s willing to set down their pitchforks and roll up their sleeves.
JD Vance said it's "crazy" that 7-year-olds are identifying as chipmunks in school and going by "Fido" and he's "entitled to know" about it as a parent.
By Alex Bollinger
Friday, October 14, 2022
J. D. Vance speaking at a Turning Point USA in Phoenix, Arizona. Photo: Gage Skidmore
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Republican Senate candidate J.D. Vance appears to agree that it’s “crazy” that schools are putting out litter boxes for students to defecate in and that kids are being allowed to act like chipmunks in schools.
Vance is just the latest Republican to publicly say that he believes in one of the most bizarre urban legends to gain popularity this year: that students who call themselves furries are demanding that schools provide them litterboxes and let them act like animals in schools.
Vance was on The Bill Cunningham Show – a Christian talk radio show – this past Wednesday when the host brought up student-furries.
“There are some students identifying as cats and they bring kitty litter with them to school,” Cunningham said. “Some identify as dogs and they have to be called Fido and ‘little pussycats’ instead of human beings.”
“One of the worst things is, if they do not use the proper preferred nouns and pronouns of other students, K through the 12th grade, schools will be required to socially transition using child-selected names and pronouns in school,” he continued.
“Minor kids like yours J.D. Vance will not be notified if your child wants to socially transition to a different gender or to an animal species,” he said. “Should you be entitled to know if your seven-year-old identifies as a chipmunk?”
Instead of telling Cunningham that his question was ridiculous, Vance took it seriously: “Uh, I think I’m very much entitled to know that. What a crazy point we’ve reached in this country, Willie, where schools are doing this stuff without the approval of parents.”
Vance then said that he supported Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ (R) Don’t Say Gay law, saying that it bans books that “are sexually explicit material that propagandizes and encourages children to take different identities and to engage in sexually explicit acts.”
The Don’t Say Gay law did not ban pornography in schools, it banned discussions of sexual orientation and gender identity in younger grades and severely restricted such discussions in older grades. And despite outlandish statements about schools handing out pornography to children, conservatives haven’t been able to point to any examples of schools actually stocking porn for students to use.
Vance is facing Rep. Tim Ryan (D-OH) this November in the general election. The seat is open after Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH) announced that he would not be seeking reelection this year. RealClearPolitics’s average of recent polls shows that the two candidates are neck-and-neck in the race with Vance averages a 0.8% lead.
Vance is just the latest Republican to say that they believe in the bizarre myth of student-furries running amuck in schools. The myth has disrupted schools across the country and forced them to respond to angry parents who believe that this is happening, all while no one is able to provide any proof that this supposedly widespread phenomenon is actually happening.
Just this week, popular conservative radio host Joe Rogan told former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii that he knows someone who knows someone who said that a school had a student who is a furry and that they had to put a litter box in the restroom for her.
“So this girl goes into the litter room or to the girl’s room and urinates or whatever — I don’t know if she poops in it, that’s pretty gross,” he said.
“That’s the worst thing in the world about owning cats, you gotta clean that box of piss every day,” Rogan continued. “Imagine how f**king crazy that is. You’re a human and you prefer a litter box? You want to piss into a pile of sand rather than use a bathroom, flush a toilet, wipe yourself, like a normal person. Like, you’re so crazy with what you think an animal is that not only have you said this, but you’ve conned the school into putting this f**king litter box in a girl’s room. That’s just bananas.”
An early example of the stories about students identifying as house pets and demanding litter boxes was Michigan activist Lisa Hansen . Because Hansen opposed federal regulations allowing trans students to use school restrooms matching their gender identities, she claimed that students who identify as cats were allowed to use litter boxes in one school’s unisex restroom.
A Michigan school superintendent was forced to write an email to parents debunking such a lie. An Oregon public school district superintendent was also forced to send a similar email after one social media user claimed that furries were wearing leashes and being petted by other students at local schools.
Nevertheless, the lie has been repeated by right-wingers, including by Nebraska Sen. Bruce Bostelman (R) .
During a televised debate, Bostelman claimed that student “furries” were allowed to interact with teachers by meowing and barking. He also said that one student who was denied a litter box later defecated on a classroom floor. Bostelman later admitted that the story wasn’t true.
It has been spread online by anti-LGBTQ activists like Chaya Raichik of LibsofTikTok, when she pushed a lie that a second-grade Texas schoolteacher encouraged students to become furries . The Austin school district disavowed the claim as misinformation.
Similarly, Christian hate pastor Aaron Thompson and anti-LGBTQ televangelist Andrew Wommack both said that schools allow students to identify as animals and demand litter boxes in classrooms. Michigan Republican Party Co-Chair Meshawn Maddock also repeated the lie , as did Heidi Ganahl, the Republican candidate for governor of Colorado. She claimed that student “furries” are identifying as cats in over 30 different schools in the state.
Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) has claimed that a father in Michigan told her that his son got into trouble when he stepped on the tail of a student who identified as a furry.
Reuters published a fact check in July that said there is “no evidence of them disrupting classrooms or schools developing a policy of including them as a formal identity.”
Riley Gaines tied for fifth with a transgender swimmer. It’s now her entire identity.
Requests for appearances from Buttigieg have surpassed those for Vice President Kamala Harris.
She accused “the left” of supporting trans people for financial reasons. “Follow the money.”
“I’m definitely not going to this event,” wrote Colorado governor Jared Polis.
He cited the name of a novel that no kindergartner is reader as proof.
“Why in the world are they fighting so hard for the ability to indoctrinate kids?” Adam Laxalt said of LGBTQ opponents of the Don’t Say Gay law.
“I’m just not going to let another generation of young, LGBTQ+ young people be put back in the closet. Not on my watch.”
She defended Alex Jones while her intern called for “meaningful penalties for insulting, irreverent or contemptuous language about Our Lord.”
She shared a possibly fake story about a mother who asked people if she should buy her trans daughter anal beads
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