I was glad to read the story about local churches helping
circulate the petition to stop AB 48, the mandate to include
perversion in the K-12 curriculum. Immediately upon reading it I
went and signed.
Dear Editor,

I was glad to read the story about local churches helping circulate the petition to stop AB 48, the mandate to include perversion in the K-12 curriculum. Immediately upon reading it I went and signed.

It is no surprise that some local “educators” support this sick measure, giving a bad name to their peers. The socialist left has long used public education – particularly, social studies – as an indoctrination tool to support its political agenda, picking and choosing the portions that they prefer. Read their U.S. history books; they fawn over the labor movement and what they call civil rights, and they dwell on racial preferences (nearly every page has an insert).

I remember back in the 1970s, when I attended Las Animas Elementary School. They had some clod from the district come in, with a stern look on her face, and show us a short film about racism and then asked us to raise our hands if our parents were racists.

At the time, that topic was meaningless (everyone shrugged it off), but looking back, it was definitely an indoctrination tool and had no place in the school curriculum.

I was a Gilroy High School student the last time Gov. Moonbeam was in Sacramento. He supported a handgun ban that made it to the ballot (and was soundly defeated). I remember a “teacher” telling us that we would be safer if our parents voted for said ban.

Last year, a “teacher” at Christopher High used the entire first semester of her “English” class to promote the gay agenda. Such people are cancers to public education and a disgrace to their more professional peers, but they get away with this because public education is dominated by the far left. But we the people can take it back.

The “separation of church and state” lie was pushed through (via the activist courts) because the plaintiffs didn’t want a different religion or denomination influencing their children.

The most key factor in the success of Proposition 8 (2010) was the reminders that the schools were teaching (in a positive light, of course) about the court ruling defeating Prop. 22. Clearly, most people would like to keep political agendas, especially perversion, out of the schools, and the schools would be best off if their “leaders” would keep it out.

Blocking AB 48, or building that nice, tall bridge, would help.

Alan Viarengo, Gilroy

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