Are you a parent who wants to have a say in your child's education?
Too bad. Terry McAuliffe says you have to sit down and shut up. pic.twitter.com/YOja0FWxVJ
— Glenn Youngkin (@GlennYoungkin) September 29, 2021
Thought For the Day
- Donald R. McClarey
Donald R. McClarey
Cradle Catholic. Active in the pro-life movement since 1973. Father of three, one in Heaven, and happily married for 43 years. Small town lawyer and amateur historian. Former president of the board of directors of the local crisis pregnancy center for a decade.
Obviously his parents sat down and shut up when told. How else to explain this mind vomit?
Big Brother knows best.
Because – shut up.
Resist.
Gee, all those wasted years I had spent as a teacher, telling parents that my job was to try to assist them in the difficult job of raising their own children to become good knowledgeable citizens. Who knew then that it was the almighty government that really owned the kids?
Predators come in all shapes, sizes and governmental bodies.
Beware.
The Zombies are hungry.
Parents have the primary and inalienable right and duty to educate their children – schools are to support the parent in that duty, not subvert it.
Look what came up in today’s news because of that kind of statement:
https://www.dailywire.com/news/fcps-sues-special-ed-parents-for-possessing-embarrassing-records-mcauliffe
Soon after The Daily Wire published an investigation that was unflattering to Democratic politician Terry McAuliffe and the Fairfax County Public Schools, FCPS filed legal action against the story’s source: the mother of a special-ed parent who relayed records that the school system provided to her under public records laws.
It also sued another mother of a special-needs student who runs a blog that published portions of the records. The documents are billing records showing how FCPS paid Hunton Andrews Kurth, a law firm that hired now-Virginia gubernatorial candidate McAuliffe as a top advisor, to do much of what parents say is the school system’s dirty work, including seeking to dismiss a class action lawsuit filed by special-ed parents who allege that their children were systematically physically abused by educators.