A lawsuit was filed Tuesday in federal court by the Massachusetts Family Institute and the Child and Parental Rights Campaign on behalf of two separate sets of parents, who claim their children were encouraged by their Baird Middle School teachers to change their names and pronouns without parental consent.
The curtain has been pulled back on the teachers union's evil, small wins against their scummy "curriculum" will start the snowball rolling, cleaning house as it builds.
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone want to borrow my wood chipper?
ReplyDeleteHere is a photo of one of the defendants, librarian Jordan Funke (they/them).
ReplyDeleteFunke is the one with the yellow bowtie, if there was any confusion. I trust there are no other questions. Any comments about physiognomy are hate speech. And don't you forget it.
https://www.massresistance.org/docs/gen4/21b/Ludlow-MA-middle-school/Harassment-charge-against-teacher/index.html
Sorry but that's a freak. We don't need people like that talking with our kids about the "birds & the bees".
DeleteIt's interesting how the teachers groom kids -- with something as simple as approval. A friend has a child that is wholly forgettable in school: never an A student, never in trouble, just occupying space. Teachers basically ignored her. At some point she wore Tom-boy clothes to school, one of the teachers showed interest in her and the girl lapped up the attention and only wore boy clothes from then on. Eventually the teacher started asking if she thought the was a boy, "oh! You're so brave! You want to transition!"
ReplyDeleteLuckily Covid came along and the girl and the groomer lost contact. The girl went back to wearing dresses, talking about boys, and doing normal girl stuff.
These groomers are evil -- and must be treated as evil.
It's Massachusetts, both cradle and grave of America as we knew it.
ReplyDeleteI'm no longer particularly proud of my wicked strong South Boston accent now that I'm a southerner. I'm grateful that my neighbors give me a pass, but they're all refugees from NJ. Kinda makes us want to say "Hi, sorry." every time we meet someone new before they ask where we're from.
Sue ???????
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking a tall tree and several short ropes would cure this the first go round
JD