Another PITT-y partier #transphobia #crackpot pittparents.com

While I may be a TERF, I did not make this up. A quarter of the girls in my kid’s class identify as boys. One of them has had four names this year, all from anime series.

I keep seeing people say, both on the hell-site Twitter and in the popular media, that the trans population is a tiny minority, less than 0.1% of the population. If that is true, what is going on at my child’s school?

[…]

The first issue is with what the school is teaching children. My daughter’s trans identity started when the school taught a module on ‘identity’ during which they told a group of 11-year-olds that, if you feel uncomfortable in your body, it means you are transgender. My daughter had just had her first period two months prior to this class. Of course she was feeling uncomfortable in her body. She went home, looked up ‘transgender’ on Tiktok, and that was it. She was now trans.

The second issue is a related one, and that is to do with the school’s non-stop celebration of LGBTQI+ identities. […] But in the last two to three years, this has meant a relentless stream of identity flags and rainbows. […] I’m no prude, but I also don’t think a constant parade of sexual politics is appropriate for such young children.

[…]

([…] My child’s name and pronouns were changed by the school without my knowledge. We didn’t get so much as a phone call […])

[...]

When I spoke to the school about the harm they are doing, they would not hear it. They told me that they celebrate all identities, that they pride themselves on being inclusive. They cannot see the transgender issue as anything other than fun flags and inclusivity and respect. They do not see the dark side that we parents do: [made-up gore].

[…]

“I guess in the 90s, a lot of us were in anorexic friend groups,” said one mother. […] No school celebrated anorexia. But this time, the doctors and schools are helping the anorexics to diet.

7 comments

Confused?

So were we! You can find all of this, and more, on Fundies Say the Darndest Things!

To post a comment, you'll need to Sign in or Register. Making an account also allows you to claim credit for submitting quotes, and to vote on quotes and comments. You don't even need to give us your email address.