School Security Alert
In the wake of yet another school shooting, politicians are calling for more gun control. But their plans could lead to more violence in schools. The vast majority of states generally prohibit firearms in K-12 schools; however, almost all make some exception to their laws for law enforcement, school security, and individuals with permission from school authorities including employees. At the national level, President Biden rejects hardening school security through trained teachers and armed guards and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer rejected the Republican school safety proposal. Once again the real issue is being ignored: making our schools safer. Why is it so hard to secure our schools?
School boards in Alaska, New Jersey, and Florida are getting it right by overhauling their security policies. Current proposals include increasing funding for armed security, hiring retired cops, limiting points of entry and requiring school boards to adopt family reunification plans in the event of an evacuation. The Biden Administration wants to ban guns and proposes making schools safer with more mental health checks, but their support for social experiments in public schools has only made things worse. The same people who want you to believe 18 year olds can’t possess guns also say a 5 year old can choose a “gender identity”. Find out what security is like in your child’s school. And if you don’t like what you find, run for school board.
School Lunch Menu: Alphabet Soup
Drag queen story hours, pride prom for middle schoolers, a Wisconsin school district accusing three middle school students of sexual harassment after they reportedly called a classmate by the wrong pronouns—this kind of evil calls for more than just an angry comment on Facebook or sad emoji in your neighborhood playgroup chat.
The LGBTQIA+ agenda forces people to speak a language they don't believe and it is incumbent upon all of us to stop them from pushing gender indoctrination in the classroom. In March, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed Florida's HB 1557, quickly dubbed by critics as the 'Don't Say Gay' bill. The law takes effect July 1 and requires parents to be the first to be notified of any health or support services offered to their kids in school and allows them the chance to deny those services on behalf of their children. Critics would have you believe proponents of the bill are fear mongering or harming LGBTQIA+ youth, they could not be more wrong. As an example of where we’re headed, in 2020 Canadian courts ruled children can start hormone therapy without parental consent.
Something is desperately dark and wrong when adults want to expose their own and others’ children to adult nudity, sexuality, identities and behaviors. Parents all over the country are fighting back after finding out the public schools their tax dollars pay for are pushing gender theory on elementary-age kids. Join us on the front lines of this critical cultural battle to save our children and our nation.
Elections Deliver Results
Parents deserve to be respected, not treated like domestic terrorists. Last year, our PAC flipped three seats on the Lansing School Board in Leavenworth County, Kansas. This week, they passed the Parent's Bill of Rights on a 4-3 vote, declaring that parents have the fundamental right to direct the upbringing and education of their children.
Lansing Schools parents now have full curriculum transparency and the ability to object to any learning material their kids are being taught. Our movement is gaining power every day—and we won't stop until absolute victory.
In School Boards We Trust
For the sake of our kids, we must change the composition of local school boards to replace the Marxist indoctrination of our children with truth. 1776 Project PAC is fighting to protect children's minds from the genderless un-American mob attempting to destroy them. What happens in these school board elections directly impacts the future of this country. Get informed and register to vote!
Please explain what happened in GA? Our slates of candidates would love to have a conversation and assessment of what went wrong. We need to evaluate what happened.