Austin’s school officials are dedicating an entire week to promote hazardous sexual behaviors and gender confusion to children.
The report says they’re instructing the kids to keep quiet about some of the school activities.
A spokesperson for the Austin Independent School District said that the circles were “confidential in the sense that makes students feel trusted and respected for their privacy when sharing in the conversations” and that it should not be misconstrued to mean “don’t tell your parents,” Washington Examiner reported.
Yeah, you read it right, Doss Elementary school in Austin, Texas had young kids participate in a gay pride parade where kids made drawings of rainbows and rainbow flags and walked the school hallways celebrating the LGBTQ lifestyle.
Just another reminder that you might want to think about homeschooling your children.
The children in the video are chanting “Pride! Pride! Pride! Pride!” in the cadence of a song called “Shots.”
Students at Austin’s Doss Elementary were filmed in a video posted to Twitter by the school’s assistant principal.
David J. Harris Jr. shared the video and commented:
Were all the parents alerted to this before it happened? Austin Independent School District in Texas held a pride parade. Students paraded through the halls celebrating pride and the LGBTQ+ community.
.@AustinISD held a pride parade. Students paraded through the halls celebrating pride and the LGBTQ+ community. Homeschool your kids. https://t.co/6uORMTynCZ
— Libs of Tik Tok (@libsoftiktok) March 21, 2022
I knew she would delete it so I saved it. The assistant principal posted this video of a pride parade in school to her Twitter account. pic.twitter.com/GrUdr9V4MS
— Libs of Tik Tok (@libsoftiktok) March 21, 2022
The school district called the events “a time to highlight the district’s commitment to creating a safe, supportive, inclusive environment.”
Pride Week: March 21-26, 2022
Every year, to celebrate LGBTQIA+ students, staff & families Austin ISD hosts its own Pride Week, a time to highlight the district’s commitment to creating a safe, supportive, inclusive environment.https://t.co/afRtuF51d6#AISDPride #AISDProud pic.twitter.com/ygbaui0Ew3
— Austin ISD (@AustinISD) March 21, 2022
One activity, called “community circles,” included rules that K-5 students couldn’t repeat anything.
“Please remember that we agreed to keep what happened in this circle confidential,” the school sheet states.
“What would a teacher be discussing during pride week that she’s worried the kids will tell their parents?” asked Libs of Tik Tok.
Doss Elementary, TX is holding a “community circles” activity for kindergarten-5th grade for Pride Week. One of the rules is students can’t repeat anything.
What would a teacher be discussing during pride week that she’s worried the kids will tell their parents? pic.twitter.com/68uxTkOdTw
— Libs of Tik Tok (@libsoftiktok) March 21, 2022
Doss Elementary Assistant Principal Hanna Wankel tweeted an image of the Pride pack AISD sent her for the week.
This is the assistant principal… of course… pic.twitter.com/pHjPwHEy9n
— Libs of Tik Tok (@libsoftiktok) March 21, 2022
More details of the story from Infowars report:
Infowars and the Washington Examiner both reached out to the school district for a comment on the “community circles” and received the same response.
The district explained, “Community circles are confidential in the sense that makes students feel trusted and respected for their privacy when sharing in the conversations –– it does not mean don’t tell your parents.”
“Every parent has the right to opt-out of these activities,” the district response added. “Circles are part of Social Emotional Learning and are used for a variety of speaking topics such as test anxiety, world events, internal conflict resolution, and social justice. The conversation template allows for a process and gives everyone an optional opportunity to speak. Everyone, not just parents, has access to the materials ahead of time.”
Throughout the week, schools in the district will be given an “inspiration guide of suggested activities for PRIDE Week” along with “Pride Swag” stickers, posters, flags, “pronoun buttons,” and other goodies.
Children as young as six will be taught about “Gender Stereotypes” where they will learn “Some people aren’t boys or girls, they’re just people.”
Kindergarteners, first and second-graders will be told they can be “trans” and “non-binary”, and what those terms mean.
Infowars also commented:
According to Texas law, parents are rightfully entitled to “full information regarding school activities of a parent’s child.”
Additionally, for school employees “to encourage or coerce a child to withhold information from the child’s parent is grounds for discipline.”
Sources: Welovetrump, Infowars, washingtonexaminer