Tuesday, June 27, 2023

They Really Are Out to Get Your Children

But don't take my word for it:

** 

“I believe, as Minister of Education — frankly, as a parent — it is completely inappropriate (for these materials) to be in a classroom,” Saskatchewan Education Minister Dustin Duncan said last week about his decision to ban Planned Parenthood from presenting in the province’s schools.
The ban stems from a June 19 incident at Lumsden High School, the main secondary school in Lumsden, a community of 1,800 located just north of Regina.
A Planned Parenthood coordinator had delivered a presentation to Grade 9 students that was billed as a standard course on sex education.
But one of the students — who were aged 14 to 15 — left the presentation with a complimentary deck of cards detailing extreme and even dangerous sex acts.
Sex: From A-Z” is a deck of 26 cards with a sexual term (and accompanying cartoon) for every letter of the alphabet.
The cards are targeted toward young people as a “discussion tool” in workshops, with the instruction to “affirm” and be “sex positive” about every one of the sex acts depicted. “Do not make fun of any of the topics, including ones you personally do not enjoy,” it reads, providing a sample phrase on how to properly react to some of the cards: “A lot of people think that’s really hot!”

Article content

Among the less controversial terms are “wank,” a slang term for masturbation, and “love muscle,” a euphemism for penis.
But several of the cards detail sex acts involving domination and risky sex, as well as urine and fecal matter. “Snowballing” gets the “s” card. “Yellow and brown showers,” which describing urinating and defecating on a sex partner, are paired with the instruction to “keep them on the outside of your body.” The “f” card is for felching. The “I” card is “irrumatio,” an aggressive form of oral sex.
Also included is “raw sex,” where the under-18 users of the card game are told that although unprotected sex leaves them much more vulnerable to HIV, it’s nevertheless a matter of personal preference.
“If you do decide to go condomless, use lots of lube and get tested regularly for HIV and STIS,” it reads.

Article content

The cards are produced and distributed by CATIE (Canadian AIDS Treatment Information Exchange) a Toronto-based non-profit funded almost entirely by government grants. CATIE is also the group behind the creation of a “safer snorting” guide that recently caused controversy in B.C. after it was similarly distributed to children by a public health nurse.
**

Despite a federal ban on conversion therapy being in place for more than a year, advocates fear the broader ideologies underpinning the practice continue to have a strong foothold in Canada.

New Criminal Code offences came into effect in January 2022, but it appears no charges or prosecutions have taken place yet.


That's right.

It is illegal to question this or ask if a student (ie - one's own child) is secretly meeting with a stranger who coaches the student into this.

**

If you wanted to confront Justin, find out where he is eating.

He never goes to his office unless there is a camera there:

A large demonstration protesting against gender ideology in public schools took place outside Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office on Wellington Street in Ottawa on June 24.
A significant number of participants were Muslims, with many carrying signs and chanting, “Leave our kids alone.” Videos of the event were posted on Twitter. The crowd of hundreds of protesters included women of all ages in hijabs along with men and children. At times the diverse crowd yelled, “No more silence.”
One protester carried a sign that read, “Dad/noun, a human male who protects his kids from gender ideology.” Another sign said, “Schools to teach intellectual sciences not to teach gender.” A teenage boy in a yellow shirt carried a sign that said, “They’re our kids, leave them alone.”

No comments: