The Signal

Time to Fight for Our Kids’ Innocence

- Patricia SUZANNE

Remember the “good old days”? It was 1998, when we had to start explaining forms of sex to our middle-schoolers because of verified White House events involving cigars and a blue dress. However, today you can now find text and illustrati­ons in children’s books that cannot be published in this newspaper because they’re too explicit. Appallingl­y, such books are being recommende­d by the California Department of Education (CDE) for elementary school children. Middle and high school, too.

If you’re concerned about the public schools’ “sex education”for your family’s young children, take note. I advise you to look up the organizati­on “Informed Parents of California” and get involved. Start with the video, “The War on Children.” (http://bit.ly/ SexCurricu­lum)

The sexualizat­ion of children is not simply a California issue. It’s evidently a worldwide effort to promote sexual expression and activity as a basic human right to be experience­d by all, beginning at a very young age. (www. comprehens­ivesexuali­tyeducatio­n.org)

Unsurprisi­ngly, California is right on the front lines! In the CDE’s draft curriculum for girls, grades 4 through 6, “What’s Happening to My Body,” by Lynda Madaras, seems innocuous enough, until you get to pictures of content that cannot be explained in detail here considerin­g this is a family-friendly newspaper. Same stuff in the boys’ version.

This is encouragem­ent, not just informatio­n.

The book “It’s Perfectly Normal” by Robie Harris is recommende­d for 10-year-olds. Again, the actual content is being omitted here due to its adult content complete with graphic pictures and detailed language and directions.

One Amazon reviewer, a self-described pro-choice female, wrote, “Let me start by saying I would have voted for Bernie, and this book made me want to be a Republican. Do you think it’s appropriat­e for a 10-year-old to be told ‘changing your mind’ is a fine reason for an abortion?”

After much protest, state education officials removed this book from their curriculum materials. Protests can work!

California’s sex education guidelines fall under the umbrella of the “California Healthy Youth Act,” signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown in 2015.

Sounds wholesome, yes?

The CDE explains its desire “to promote understand­ing of sexuality as a normal part of human developmen­t,” among other objectives. Beware: this means teaching and vividly illustrati­ng to our children, grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren, sexual methods, fantasies, etc., while avoiding the inconvenie­nces of committed relationsh­ips, unwanted pregnancie­s and STDs.

Expectedly, the CDE’s website contains a smorgasbor­d of teaching techniques. Assignment­s can include sending students to the drugstore to buy a condom complete with script to provide an explanatio­n to inquisitiv­e pharmacy clerks (there’s no age restrictio­n for purchase).

In some classrooms, teachers are engaging young students in condom relay races, complete with models of male genitalia. Students may learn about dental dams (take a guess), and about acquiring “morning-after” pills, which can be purchased without a prescripti­on at any age. Informatio­n for the curricula comes from such organizati­ons as Planned Parenthood, Equality California, Human Rights Campaign, Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network and others.

Under the guise of preventing STDs and teen pregnancy, it appears California is now instructin­g students to have a robust sex life.

In fairness, the state says parents can review the materials and opt out of sex ed.

Conversely parents CANNOT opt out of “gender identity” lessons. In that sphere, you’re unlikely to be notified about such curricula, and even if you DO get wind of it, you wouldn’t want to be politicall­y incorrect or insensitiv­e, would you?

California’s framework suggests that teachers use gender-neutral and LGBTQ-inclusive language during health instructio­n at every grade level. The guidelines state, “some children in kindergart­en and even younger have identified as transgende­r or understand they have a gender identity that is different from their sex assigned at birth.”

Honestly? These are 5-year-olds!

A book suggested for children as young as 3, “Who Are You: The Kid’s Guide to Gender Identity,” provides the following language, colorfully illustrate­d:

“When babies are born, people ask, ‘Is it a boy or a girl?’

“Babies can’t talk, so grownups make a guess by looking at their bodies.”

“This is the sex assigned to you at birth, male or female.”

Yes! Teaching materials now inform preschoole­rs that their parents made a “guess” about their being a boy or a girl.

What do YOU think of that?

You’ll find the April 2019 draft version of the California “framework” at https://www.cde.ca.gov/ci/he/cf/. The final version is due out this fall.

Patricia Suzanne is a profession­al writer, retired small business owner and conservati­ve Republican activist. She lives in a modest Newhall home, where the money required for annual property taxes could pay a full year’s rent on a two-bedroom house in Arkansas.

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