04.14
If you ever wonder about your choice to homeschool your kids, just print this article and stick it in your file cabinet. It will become a handy reminder of one of the most important reasons why. The so-called “Day of Silence” coming up in public schools on April 18th is a complete farce. It’s a way to bring an explicit issue into your child’s mind with or without your approval. Here is how it’s described:
“Traditionally, this day invites students to wear black T-shirts that read “Day of Silence” in solidarity with those of the gay-lesbian-bisexual-transgender community who are forced on a daily basis to hide their sexuality from their peers.”
–Oscar Abello, The Villanovan
My first question is, why do they have to hide? The answer is because it’s highly unnatural, and things that are highly unnatural are usually disturbing to be around. And anyone who acts as if homosexuality isn’t disturbing is either gay or lying. But don’t take my word for it. Take Larry David’s. Everything involved with the gay agenda is directed toward one end: to force people to either accept it or shut up. That’s the only two options they will countenance. That’s their version of tolerance and diversity. I don’t know if you’ve ever carried on a conversation with a homosexual before, but they are across the board some of the most vicious people you will meet, when you tell them they are wrong. It goes beyond just normal disagreement. You can tell that they truly hate you. If you’ve ever been on the receiving end of it then you know what I’m talking about. How they can lecture anybody on “diversity” and “tolerance” is beyond me.
But it’s not just that. They are crying about being bullied too:
GLSEN’s 2005 National School Climate Survey reported that 74 percent of GLBT students feel unsafe in their daily school environment; 64 percent of GLBT students report verbal, sexual or physical harassment at school; and 29 percent report having skipped at least one day of school for fear of being abused.”
–Oscar Abello, The Villanovan
Forgetting any accuracy checking for the moment, why is this so shocking? I felt unsafe at school for half the time I was there. I got picked on and verbally harrassed on an almost daily basis until I was in the 10th grade. There were lots of times that I would have loved to skip school, but that wasn’t in the cards. I don’t remember getting a day of silence for nerdy kids. I guarantee you that this statistic is no different than if you took a survey of nerdy or effiminate kids. That’s just how schools are. They can be brutal. Either accept it or take your kids out. You’ll have to pardon me if I don’t have a whole lot of sympathy here.
That brings up another point though. If your son is effiminate in the least, you would be well advised to get them out of public school and homeschool them as soon as possible. I remember one boy that I went to elementary school with that was very effiminate. He was picked on and called “fag” and “queer” all the time, even though it was pretty obvious that he was nothing of the sort. But it went on and on throughout our growing up. I actually saw him a few years back when I was at the mall. This time, he was gay. Very gay. And I can’t help feeling that he was pushed in that direction against his will until he just broke and accepted what the other kids told him he was. These are the real problems that kids face and these GLBT groups don’t help anything. They’re just in it for themselves.
So is your kid’s school one of them?
“The success of the first day encouraged student organizers to bring the tradition to campuses nationwide and eventually to high schools, nearly 4,000 of which participated in the Day of Silence in 2005.”
–Oscar Abello, The Villanovan
You’d better check, because the gay agenda loves to talk about tolerance, as long as you agree with them. That’s like saying, “I’ll eat anything, as long as it’s chicken.”








