John Dewey (1859-1952) was the father of the modern American public school system, a
leading progressive who promoted the philosophy of pragmatism and an activist for secular humanism in American
society. Dewey was also an original signatory of the “Humanist
Manifesto” and ridiculed moral absolutes and traditional religion, especially Christianity
in favor of an evolution/atheist worldview.
Sex Taught to Kindergarteners?!! WARNING: This page includes
discussion of topics that are sexually graphic.
Crimes of the Educators
- Red Ice Radio - Alex Newman -
Published on May 7, 2015
Alex Newman is an international journalist,
educator, author, and consultant. In addition to serving as president of a small media and information consulting
firm, he writes for a wide array of publications in the United States and abroad. He currently serves as a foreign
correspondent for The New American magazine and teaches advanced economics to high school seniors. He has
co-authored two books, including a just-released major exposé, "Crimes of the Educators: How Utopians Are Using
Government Schools To Destroy America's Children," the topic of our discussion. Alex starts the conversation with a
brief overview of UNESCO, the largely socialist and communist-led United Nations organization designed to influence
and create standards for education, science and culture on a global scale. He explains UNESCO’s Education for All
initiative, which seeks to make mandatory changes in the values and beliefs of all of humanity under the guise of
educating. Alex reveals some of the very startling ideas that hatched this international scheme, along with the big
money that has funded its methodology. We delve into Common Core and the “look-say” reading method, curriculums
that are destroying early literacy education and usurping the role of parents into the state. Further, we discuss
how billions of dollars of Obama stimulus money has been used to strong-arm state education systems into
surrendering to the Common Core consortium. We take a close look at the role public schools are playing in the
globalist agenda to socialize Western civilization via dumbing down the population and chipping away at family
values. In the second segment, we talk about homeschooling’s tremendous opportunity for parents in combatting this
war on intelligence. Alex speaks about how the "sustainability" movement has snuck into schools, where our children
are being prepared to be "green, global citizens, " in order to fulfill the vision of UN’s Agenda 21. We examine
the heightening levels of immigration across Europe and America, where native populations are plummeting while
individual liberties and Western traditions are being destroyed. Alex points to the blatant criminal activity of
our educational system, including treason and contributing to the delinquency of minors. At the end, we touch on
the declining state of Sweden, which appears to be the blueprint for flushing all of society right down the
totalitarian drain.
One does not have to scratch very deeply into the surface
of pop culture to see that “schools” are nearly universally portrayed in our culture as boring, stultifying,
prison-like environments where students have to struggle to maintain consciousness.
As we examined last week, this state of affairs is not the result of random happenstance or a failure of
the government to throw enough money at the problem, but a structural feature of the modern education system
that was consciously constructed by the industrial robber barons and financial giants of the early 20th century,
including the Carnegies and the Rockefellers, and promoted by the politicians under their influence, including
Woodrow Wilson, who, years before coming into office as President of the United States, delivered a lecture on
“The Meaning of a Liberal Education” where he stated:
“We want one class of persons to have a liberal education, and we want another class of persons, a very much
larger class, of necessity, in every society, to forego the privileges of a liberal education and fit themselves to
perform specific difficult manual tasks.”
Sadly, this agenda, to the extent that it had not already been enacted at the time of Wilson’s speech, has been
fully realized today.
The next logical step in this agenda is the implementation of Common Core, a set of educational standards so
poor that those tasked with validating those standards refused to do so. [See this and this and this.]
But for those who are opposed to this conception of schooling, the rote memorization and endless standardized
testing, the introduction of biosensors and other devices into the classroom to monitor students’
behaviour, the prolongation of childhood and arbitrary grouping of individuals by age, the unquestioning
obedience to authority that is inherent in the classroom dynamic, the training for the workforce implicit in the
segregation of tasks into arbitrary work periods, the Pavlovian conditioning of the bell, what is the
alternative? What can be positively proposed as a counterbalance to this palpably destructive form of modern day
schooling?
This is not a rhetorical question, it is a very real question that has real answers in the real world. One clue
as to an alternative system can be found in the Netherlands, where the prestigious University of Groningen,
celebrating its 400th anniversary this year, is establishing a new University College Groningen that promises to challenge preconceptions about schooling,
education, and the learning environment. One of the professors helping to establish the UCG curriculum is
Tjeerd Andringa, an Associate Professor in Sensory Cognition who will be leading a course on
the intersection of geopolitics and cognition that will push the boundaries of content and form of
education.
Another professor who attempted to provide a challenging, radical, anti-establishment learning environment of
self-directed education was Denis Rancourt, who, in his tenured position at the University of Ottawa, experimented with
a course on activism in society until railroaded out of the university by threatened bureaucrats and
administrators. In 2011 he appeared on The Corbett Report to discuss his experience.
There is no one set method for education. Every child is different; each will learn in their own way, respond to
challenges and tasks in different manners; benefit from different approaches and different levels of outside input
and self-direction. But that is the real task of education; not teaching children to memorize names, dates and
figures out of a textbook and regurgitate them on the test paper, but to understand who they are as individuals,
what they can contribute to the world, and how to connect with those around them. There are classrooms around the
world where these experiences are a core part of the education environment, as well, and in very rare instances, as
in the case of Toshiro Kanamori’s fourth grade class in Kanazawa, Japan, followed throughout the year by NHK’s
cameras in 2003 for a remarkable documentary, the results are as powerful as they are undeniable.
For parents, teachers, school administrators and others who have a genuine concern about the Common Core
approach to education, it is important to note that there are educational alternatives out there. Alternatives that
have nothing to do with larger school budgets, rewritten textbooks or biometric scanners in the classroom.
Alternatives that are not funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation or evaluated on a standardized testing
regime that rewards rote memorization. Alternatives that encourage children to become an active part of their own
education, and shape their own course toward adulthood. But do the American public, or indeed the public of the
world, have the courage to explore these alternatives, or will they lay down yet again and give in to the
institutional inertia of the status quo?
Ron Paul: “Common Core Is Really The
Last Straw”
Exclusive interview: Former Congressman slams deliberate
plan to create dumbed down, obedient population
Kit Daniels
Infowars.com
May 5, 2014
In this exclusive interview with Infowars, former
congressman and presidential candidate Dr. Ron Paul talks about the failure of and alternatives to public
education, how politicians want an obedient population dependent on the government, the continuing rise of
alternative media, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s statement calling supporters of Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy
“domestic terrorists” and the expansion of government power at the expense of individual rights.
To counter the federal government’s takeover of public education through Common Core, Dr. Paul has introduced
the Ron Paul Homeschooling Curriculum for students from kindergarten to 12th grade which
features courses that are self-taught through daily lecture videos. To find out more and to enroll, please click here.
Kit Daniels: Dr. Paul, could you explain the Common Core State Standards Initiative to
those who may be unfamiliar with it?
Ron Paul: Well, the whole thing is that Common Core is an example of how the federal government
wants to take over, totally and completely, the educational system. They’ve been doing this for a long time, I mean
for more than 50 years they’ve encroached upon control of local schools with the federal government getting
involved back even in the 50s with the Department of Education – HEW [Department of Health, Education, and Welfare]
– being established.
Common Core is really the last straw and people are very upset about it because they [federal officials] want to
set the standards for the curricula for every single school, which means control over the individual education of
all the children. At the same time, we hear our president constantly saying, “well, we’ve got to get to these kids
sooner.” So it’s not just grade school, high school and kindergarten: it’s pre-kindergarten down to three and
four-years-old.
It’s once again establishing and sticking to the principle that the children belong to the government and not to
the parents. Anyone who cares about truth in education and not a monolithic education by the central government,
they have to be concerned about this and yet unfortunately it’s marching right along and too many schools are going
along with it.
So it is one common feature that’s really upsetting a lot of people once they find out about it. Of course, the
people already upset with education for many years who are in private schooling and homeschooling know about it.
But there is a lot of people who either don’t have the opportunity or the knowledge of how to get out of the public
school system, so they are going to get exposed to it and I think it’s going to be devastating. It’s the wrong way
to go.
KD: And Dr. Paul, do you feel that politicians can use Common Core in order to prey on the
ignorance of the public, as we see that Common Core is, in a way, dumbing down the population?
RP: Yeah, I think that’s a good description of just about everything the government does,
whether its education, whether its to keep people from falling through the cracks or whether its medical care. With
everything they do they are “all wise” and they “will take care of us” and “people are stupid and they don’t care
and they are not responsible and that’s why you have to have government to take care of everybody and protect them
from themselves” and in this case the government argues that we have to do this [Common Core] to protect the
children against the parents because the parents are irresponsible.
So yes, I think it is [a good description,] I believe those who think they’re superior want the population, the
populace, to be as obedient as possible in case they need to send them off to war, in case they want them to work
and pay taxes. The whole thing is that “the state is sacred” and in order to have a state, the government, continue
to grow, it’s always at the expense of liberty. So it is the big challenge and I think we’re seeing a conflict
between these two movements.
Government’s been around for as long as history’s been around and I think they’ve exhausted their
experimentation. We’ve had some experiments with individual liberty and one great experiment was here and I think
right now we’re seeing the fruitions of how we left that experiment in the last 100 years and it continues yet
there’s a spirit right now amongst the people and many parents who are starting to realize that.
The unfortunate thing is that we’re still in the minority and the majority still feel that government has to
take care of them because there’s too many people out there that say “well, I have to vote for this person because
he believes that government should take care of me. So if I have trouble the government is going to feed me, give
me a job, they’re going to take care of my medical care and they’re going to educate me.”
So they have this total dependency but what we’re witnessing is the failure of that system too. You know, our
American system of economics, of Keynesian economics and deficit financing, it’s coming to an end.
But yes, those in government would like to dumb down the population to be obedient and it’s been that way for a
long, long time. Over the many centuries it’s usually by threats and intimidation but now they still do the threats
and intimidations but they also try to bribe people to go along. As long as the people do what they’re told to do,
then they believe they can get better treatment from the government.
KD: Sen. Harry Reid declared that [Nevada rancher] Cliven Bundy’s supporters were
domestic terrorists and then a White House counter-terrorism chief suggested that if
your child is confrontational, he could be a terrorist. Do you feel that these statements could tie into how [it seems
that] as government gets more and more involved in education, we see more and more radical talking points from
politicians [and bureaucrats?]
RP: Yes and they have certainly in the last 13 years, since 9/11, taken advantage of this whole
thing of “terrorism.” All they have to announce is “terrorism, terrorism” and the people are supposed to roll over
and sacrifice all of their liberties. Just think of how much liberties we have given up in the last 13 years
because we’re always fighting terrorism.
Even with the recent history over in Ukraine, the western Ukrainians were going in with their military to
suppress the “terrorists.” They will use that term any time they can. They went in and were surprised that there
weren’t any terrorists there and they actually backed down and didn’t want to fight their fellow Ukrainians, so the
whole thing sort of fizzled.
But this is way overworked. It has conditioned us, especially since the Bush administration, that we’re in a
perpetual war and its always against terrorism, terrorists can be anyplace in the world, the war never ends and
under war conditions you have to sacrifice your liberties. So what we’re doing is exactly what Bin Laden was
fighting towards: to bankrupt our country and to destroy our Constitutional rights here at home.
So Bin Laden even from the grave is still winning this fight and like you said, they are now even suggesting
that whether you support land owners, individuals who are ranching or people who are going to private schools and
are challenging the government, “ah, you’re a terrorist!” They have to be called on this and the American people
have to have a better understanding and a greater love for liberty.
Of course, this has been one of the goals of our homeschooling curricula [the Ron Paul Curriculum] is to teach what liberty really means and how to spread a message so
that they [children] don’t call into this baloney about how “the government does good, the government will take
care of us, everyone else is a potential terrorist, thank goodness the government can tax me and use the NSA and
the military to suppress all threats of terrorism and we’ll have perfect safety.” That is deeply flawed but
fortunately a lot of Americans are starting to wake up.
KD: Do you have a response to Sen. Reid for suggesting that political activism is terrorism
or even common behavior, like what the White House chief suggested could be terrorism?
RP: Well, first off, people should probably just laugh at them because it’s so ridiculous and I
would think that he is practicing a bit of terrorism himself by making these threats and intimidations. The best
way to answer to people like that is to either refute them, ignore them, laugh at them or refute them with a better
idea. I mean they just throw these things out and they have no meaning whatsoever and yet unfortunately the major
media is always on their side and would never call them on this. But somebody has to and fortunately we have
alternative media now and I think that’s the reason we’re making some headway with the Internet and other methods
of spreading a message.
KD: Yes, and it’s interesting that you mention the Internet because back in the 1970s,
Austrian economist Murray Rothbard pointed out the difference between formal schooling and education whereas
education is a lifelong learning process. Now with the advent of the Internet and your homeschool curriculum, we
see that education doesn’t necessarily evolve from government-run schools. Do you think that there’s going to be a
mass awakening in the future in which a large degree of the population discovers the same thing?
RP: Well, let’s hope so and I think that’s the movement because government schools are the
opposite of education. I felt at many times that after I got out of college, especially in the social studies, sort
of a relief because I still had enough introduction to world events were that my curiosity really struck me.
But even when I got out of college we didn’t have the Internet but we did have a few foundations like the
Foundation for Economic Education [FEE] where I was able to seek out information and that’s where I was able to get
hold of [Friedrich] Hayek, [Ludwig] von Mises and later on I got to be good friends with Murray Rothbard. That is
when I discovered what education was all about.
I think a lot more people are noticing this and not only is it the quality of education – that strikes some –
but I think also it’s the violence in schools. It really frightens the parents when they put this together without
getting an education [for their children.] But the one thing that is really neat about all this is that fact that
our side of the argument is very appealing to a broad base. It isn’t appealing to the very wealthy – they’re sort
of own their own and they preach all this government control of schools like all the politicians in Washington but
where do their kids go to school? Their kids go to private schools!
But the middle class and many in the poorer class are recognizing this if they have any understanding for their
kids to get ahead. They have to get a better education and the schools are not providing this. Right now you see a
great transition: colleges are going bankrupt, people aren’t applying as much, degrees that don’t mean anything,
they have all this debt but they can’t get a job.
It is a disaster because of government planning: government economic planning failed and government planning on
education failed and this is why Common Core is going to be a total failure and make things so much worse. It is
just trying to make people obedient to the state. It can’t work, there’s too much availability of information
outside [of public schools.] So as bad as it is, we have reasons to be optimistic about some of the changes going
on.
KD: I’ve noticed that in the past century, Keynesian economists and the Federal Reserve
have avoided blame for the damage they have done to the economy. But now we’re seeing an explosion of interest in
Austrian economics and I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that students are going around formal schooling
and are self-educating and are learning about Austrian economics in that way. So do you feel that parallel
institutions [such as self-educating and homeschooling] could be a great way to break the hold that government has
on society?
RP: There’s no doubt about it and there are two things going on. Alternative sources for
education are there and we’ve talked about that, the Internet and different vehicles, but also something that we
are witnessing is the failure of a system.
I thought the greatest event of the 20th century politically speaking was the failure of the Soviet system: the
collapse, the breaking up and the secession of 12 republics from the domination of the Soviets because it failed,
communism failed.
Although how many intellectuals in this country cheered it on? They cheered on communism and of course there
were some that were cheering on fascism. Fascism, communism, and now welfare-ism and Keynesianism that preaches
“spending is good, deficits don’t matter, print the money when you need it, have central economic planning, have
the government control our education, take over medical care…”
It’s not the old-fashioned type of socialism but it’s an interventionism that pretends it’s a little bit freer
than fascism but the failure always comes and that’s what we’re witnessing right now.
So we have the vehicle to get the information out and at the same time everyone knows that there is something
seriously wrong and people are very frightened and concerned. The job of us who believe in the alternative are
obligated to promote the alternative because this system is going to collapse and we’re witnessing that. What has
to be done is that they have to be offered an alternative and fortunately it’s a wonderful alternative as is the
concept of liberty which is progressing in understanding.
You mentioned the Federal Reserve and the monetary system, today we have a better understanding of how a gold
standard would work than we did in our early history because back then they had things like bimetallism and they
allowed states to expand credit so there’s things that we’re advancing on and even the concept of liberty has
advanced.
You don’t need governments to preach to individuals on how they’re supposed to run their personal lives and what
their habits should be. So we’re making these advancements but the conflict is there and the challenge is there and
those individuals who weld the power will not give it up easily so it’s going to be a struggle for the next decade
or two.
KD: And do you feel that the struggle between homeschoolers and proponents of government
education is a microcosm of the struggle between individualism and collectivism?
RP: There’s no doubt about it because you have the collectivist notion about education and the
individual notions about homeschooling. One goal that I had on the homeschooling proposals is the system that I
[now] have that is designed [for students] to understand liberty. It’s not a homeschooling program which is
evangelical and directed to one place, but I’m not opposed to any of that. If people understand what I am talking
about, it legalizes and encourages all varieties of homeschooling. So you might have a very secular or you might
have a religious one. But mine is designed to say that what we need is liberty and then the people would have more
options.
But I think it’s a conflict between the two: the state versus the voluntaryism and I think the education is a
perfect example. You can find that in medicine as well and despite what government has done, there are still
private sources of medical care in this country that are delivering care very cheaply and with high-quality.
This is what’s happening in education too because it’s not like you have to be super wealthy to homeschool your
kids. You need dedication, effort, encouragement and you don’t need a whole lot of money. The rich who take their
kids to very, very wealthy, private schools and of course that doesn’t guarantee them a better education. I think
the people that go into the right homeschooling program are going to get a better education [program] than the very
wealthy do by sending their kids to very rich, private schools.
KD: Lastly, could you describe your homeschool curriculum and at what point did you decide
to pursue your curriculum?
RP: Well, I thought about education as a goal for a long, long time. Even in the years I spent
in government, I was never thinking [about it] first. I always thought of myself as a physician who took a break to
talk about things that I thought were important. Education was most important to me.
I don’t believe the politicians have much control over anything. Ideas have control and that is why I have my
own FREE [Foundation for Rational Economics and Education] foundation and that is why I support the
Mises Institute and education.
Nixon once said “we’re all Keynesians now.” Well, I’d like to see the day where we say “we’re all Austrian
economists now” and understand it in a different factor. So my motivation has always been there and of course in
talking with Gary North and Tom Woods who are principles in the homeschooling curriculum, they helped me design
this and devise the courses and the whole goal is to teach the freedom philosophy, which is not available anyplace
else. Like I said earlier, it doesn’t negate what other people want to do, it just legalizes and permits people to
have their own homeschooling.
Right now we have a curriculum set up that’s free from pre-k to the fifth grade that’s available at ronpaulcurriculum.com and every year we’re going to be adding more grades and classes.
There’s going to be an opportunity first to study and understand what liberty is all about, where it comes from
and the relationship of the individual to government, and also to help teach people how to defend it because we
get a bad rap, conservatives, constitutionalists, and libertarians that we’re heartless and that we don’t care.
Well, we have to learn how to show that if you really care about people, you don’t want to go with an
authoritarian dictatorship, you want to go with more liberty because that’s when more people eat better, live
better and are happier.
We start with those two things and then if people want to go to college, which we obviously encourage, if that’s
what their goal is because you hardly get to be a doctor without going to college and to medical school, that it
[the curriculum] is a preparation for college testing and getting into college.
Many homeschoolers, we haven’t had ours test yet, but others have been able to get into college at 15, 16, and
17 years of age. They get in sooner, they do well and also if people say “well, I want to go in a different
direction, I want to go into business,” there’s going to be a lot of courses available to teach people how to do
home businesses and we found that not only have we had young people interested in that, we’ve had their parents
saying “hey, some of this stuff sounds pretty good so we better look at it.”
But it’s not for everybody. We’re hoping to direct it to those elites who are desirous of sowing this message
that requires self-discipline and they have to be motivated. They won’t have to buy any textbooks that they don’t
want to buy because everything is going to be available, like the lectures, on the Internet. Although it will be
similar in some ways to others, it is going to be unique in that it’s designed to promote the understanding of
liberty and how important it is for the future of this country.
The Ron Paul Curriculum
As Ron Paul explained in the interview, it is critical for the liberty movement to develop alternatives to
government-run schools which provide real education to children. When government officials dictate school
curriculum rather than the parents, the result is an educational system with a built-in bias towards large,
unconstitutional government. Prosperity only comes from liberty but children taught under government programs such
as Common Core may never fully understand this. Government-run education benefits politicians and bureaucrats at
the expense of children and parents.
This is why last year Dr. Paul introduced his own homeschool curriculum consisting of a rigorous program of study in economics,
mathematics, history and science while also teaching children the benefits of a free society.
Through the use of the Internet, students in the program are able to actively engage with each other and to work
together on the subject matter. This combined with frequent written assignments allow them to develop excellent
communication skills which are essential to many career paths.
And while the program addresses the significant role that religion played in the development of Western
civilization, it is not biased towards any religion so that Christian, Jewish, Muslim, pagan, agnostic and atheist
parents can feel comfortable using the curriculum for their children.
Students will also learn the basics of the United States Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the free market and
how liberty was won in America, how it’s been lost and how it will be restored.
The program’s first six years, from kindergarten to fifth grade, are free of charge and there are no textbooks
or workbooks to buy. The Ron Paul Curriculum also offers daily lecture videos for each course and the courses
are self-taught, meaning that parents won’t have to teach any of it, not even advanced courses such as chemistry
or physics.
As of this writing, the courses from sixth grade to 12th grade cost $50 each and the tutorial forums cost $250
per family per year, an outstanding value for an education which rivals the most prestigious private schools. It
also should be noted that a high-speed Internet connection is required for the courses.
To find out more and to sign up, please click here.
The United Nations' Sexual Child
Agenda
[VID]
Published on Jul 4, 2014
Children are being harshly punished for things like
dropping their pants in public. Meanwhile, schools are teaching 5 year olds to
masturbate. What's wrong with this picture?
Tonight, on History... So It Doesn't Repeat: we discuss the past, present, and future of
public schooling, with Charlotte Iserbyt, former Sr. Policy Advisor for the U.S. Department of Education. We'll
discover the root cause of the Deliberate Dumbing Down of Americans.
Learning's the answer. What's the Question? It's all coming up on History... So It Doesn't Repeat!
2nd Grader's Homework Teaches 'The Government GIVES Us
Rights'
Published on Nov 14, 2014
Apparently according to a homework sheet being given to our 2nd graders in this country
about how to be good citizens, the government *gives* us our rights. Did you know that?
Common Core's Communist Programming Exposed:
Chinese Immigrant Speaks Out
[VID]
Published on Feb 21, 2015
Liberty Activist and Former Libertarian
Candidate, Lily Tang Williams, has a dire warning for America; Common Core reminds her of the Communist Core she
went through in China.
Hear her powerful testimony describing how parents had zero parental rights, children were forced
to keep daily tattle-journals, Chinese children were taught to do well on tests and conform--no critical thinking
allowed, and if you were a late bloomer or student with special education needs, forget it, you'd be relegated to a
life of poverty. Students were also tracked throughout their school years so their file could be turned over to all
government agencies and potential employers.
A big and powerful government always has reasons and excuses for using force to make people do what
they want, but in the end, it is always the ruling class and their cronies that benefit from these mandates, not
the people.
Satanic books handed to US kids after religious freedom
ruling
Published on Oct 5, 2014
Teaching Satanism in schools sounds like the stuff of horror movies. But a US court
ruling on religious freedoms, has enabled devil worshippers in Florida to hand out educational material about
their beliefs - to kids at state schools. Marina Portnaya reports.
2nd Graders Given Sex Kits on Field
Trip
[VID]
Published on Mar 25, 2015
"Hygiene" bags meant for homeless and at-risk youth made it into the hands of a
second-grade classroom. While the organization for at-risk-youth says it was a mistake, this isn't the first time
young children have been exposed to sexual methods and behavior that aren't exactly age appropriate. This type of
sex-ed curriculum was suggested as mandatory by the United Nations in 2009.
Help us spread the word about the liberty movement, we're reaching millions help us reach
millions more. we all want liberty. Find the free live feed athttp://www.infowars.com/watch-alex-jo...
School Takes Little Girls on Field
Trip To Porn Shop
[VID]
Published on Jun 6, 2015
A school field trip to the Smitten Kitten adult toy store is raising some eyebrows, and
may soon involve the Minneapolis Police Department. School leaders at Gaia Democratic School in Minneapolis still
fully support the trip to the Smitten Kitten in Uptown, a self-proclaimed “progressive sex toy store for
everyone.” http://www.myfoxtwincities.com/story/...
Help us spread the word about the liberty movement, we're reaching millions help us reach
millions more. Share the free live video feed link with your friends & family:http://www.infowars.com/show
Nebraska Schools Forbid Terms Boys
and Girls
[VID]
Published on Jul 9, 2015
Weird internal school documents promote
"metrosexuality" and 'gender spectrum'; refer to 'genderbread person' instead of 'gingerbread man.
Help us spread the word about the liberty movement, we're reaching millions help us reach millions
more. we all want liberty. Find the free live feed at http://www.infowars.com/watch-alex-jo...
At Anti-Bullying Conference, Middle
Schoolers Learn About Lesbian Strap-On Anal Sex, Fake Testicles Iowa Safe Schools, an activist group out of Des Moines, hosted the
conference
by Daily Caller | July 26, 2015
In rural, small-town Iowa, a group of parents and community leaders
is seeking to prevent students from the local taxpayer-funded middle school and high school from attending future
versions of an anti–bullying conference for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender teens.
Iowa Safe Schools, an activist group out of Des Moines, hosted the conference.
It was quite something.
Among the nearly two dozen speakers, “only two” addressed bullying, one attendee estimated, according to EAGnews.org.
The rest of the sessions involved issues such as “how to pleasure their gay partners.”
Middle school girls from Humboldt (pop.: 4,690) had the opportunity to learn “how to sew fake testicles into
their underwear in order to pass themselves off as boys.”
One speaker wore a dress made out of condoms to which could be “used as needed.” Another speaker raised the
important middle-school issue of using the Internet to locate an orgy.
A father from Des Moines whose daughter attended the conference described the girl’s experience.
Anti-Bullying Conference For Middle Schoolers Turns Into
Gay Sex Class
[VID]
Published on Jul 27, 2015
In rural, small-town Iowa, a group of parents and community leaders is seeking to prevent
students from the local taxpayer-funded middle school and high school from attending future versions of an
anti–bullying conference for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender teens. http://www.infowars.com/at-anti-bully... http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2015/...
“She thought she was attending this conference to learn
how students can be supportive of their homosexual peers,” he explained, according to EAGnews.
“When she got there, it wasn’t really on bullying; it was basically a sexual education class for same-sex
couples,” the mad dad said. “It was crude. One presenter told students who asked whether anal sex hurt that, as a
lesbian, it really depended on how big the device is that their partner straps on.”
The main, featured speaker, drag performer Miss Coco Peru, cussed a lot and encouraged attendees to vandalize the
property of critics.
Peru also sang a song. It went: “People suck. They don’t give a fuck about you. People thrive on smashing our
pride to the ground. People that suck, fuck you.”
Still another speaker discussed “how pleasurable it is for gay couples to eat each other’s behinds” and how
using flavored oils can improve the taste, notes EAGnews.
Thousands of middle schoolers and high schoolers from the region attended the April event.
He said he could do nothing to prevent the club which sponsored attendance at the event from fundraising for it
next year or sending local students.
“We support all clubs in the school that meet the polices and procedures,” Darling told WHO-TV. “We are an equal
opportunity school and do not discriminate against anyone. We strive to have a positive learning environment in the
district but we do not support any group of individuals who uses profanity in presentations.”
“It’s incredibly frustrating that adults are being the problem and being the bully,” Monson told the Des Moines
NBC affiliate. “We can do better in Iowa.”
The Truth About Your
Education The Greatest History Lesson - John Taylor
Gatto
[VID]
John Taylor Gatto (born December 15, 1935) is a retired
American with nearly 30 years experience in the classroom, and author of several books on education. He is an
activist critical of compulsory schooling, of the perceived divide between the teen years and adulthood, and of
what he characterizes as the hegemonic nature of discourse on education and the education professions.
In his youth he attended public schools throughout the Pittsburgh Metro Area including Swissvale,
Monongahela, and Uniontown as well as a Catholic boarding school in Latrobe. He did undergraduate work at Cornell,
the University of Pittsburgh, and Columbia, then served in the U.S. Army medical corps at Fort Knox, Kentucky, and
Fort Sam Houston, Texas. Following army service he did graduate work at the City University of New York, Hunter
College, Yeshiva University, the University of California, Berkeley, and Cornell.
This is a compilation of work from TragedyandHopeMag. I claim none of it. The lessons contained in
this video are invaluable.
Jakari Jackson talks with Kallen Diggs about the success and pitfalls of the college
education game. How Obamas plan of free college might work for some but not all.
How Global Elite Use The Education System To Control
You
[VID]
Published on May 21, 2015
also talk with international journalist, educator and consultant, Alex Newman. He has a
degree in journalism from the University of Florida and has worked
"Education is favorable to
Liberty. Freedom can only exist in a society of knowledge.Without learning, men are
incapable of knowing their rights, and where learning is confined to a few people, Liberty can neither be equal nor
universal."
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