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If you’re reading this piece, you must already be familiar with what is going on in public schools across the country regarding race, gender identity, sexuality, and trans issues.
Teachers are openly posting videos of what they discuss with their students on these topics. And it’s anything but normal.
Whatever happened to learning history, math, reading, and real science? It’s no wonder our public school students are falling so far behind students in other industrialized countries.
The good news is that people are fighting back and exposing this assault on our nation’s youth.
From Ron DeSantis with the “Parental Rights in Education” bill to the person behind the Libs of TikTok account with her reposts of videos that expose what’s happening in our schools and hospitals, Americans are waking up.
Matt Walsh of the Daily Wire said, referring to Chaya Raichik (when she was still anonymous), “Probably the top journalist in the country right now is the anonymous person running Libs of TikTok on Twitter.”
Senior advisor for communications and digital at the National Republican Senatorial Committee, Matt Whitlock wrote, “Love that Democrats’ public enemy #1 on Twitter is an account that literally just reposts public content liberals have posted under their own names. That they’re trying to get @libsoftiktok de-platformed shows they know they have a real crazy vs. normal problem.”
After teachers were outed by people like Raichik, parents started paying a lot more attention to what their kids were learning in school. A lot of it is considered “grooming.”
To cover up this type of behavior in public schools, four Democrat Connecticut state representatives proposed a bill that would amend Connecticut’s general statutes to exclude discussions on race, sexuality, and gender identity between a teacher and a student from FOIA requests.
The bill, “The Act Concerning Nondisclosure of Certain Communications Between Teachers and Students” was proposed by state Reps. Sarah Keitt, Dominique Johnson, Cristin McCarthy Vahey, and Jennifer Leeper.
The purpose of the proposed bill, No. 6192, is “To protect public school teachers from FOIA requests pertaining to communications with students regarding sensitive subjects, such as sexual orientation, gender identity and race, that take place during school-sponsored activities.”
In learning about the proposed legislation, Nicole Solas, a senior fellow with the Independent Women’s Forum, took to Twitter.
She wrote, “Connecticut wants to make it illegal to obtain ‘any communication between a teacher and a student regarding sensitive subjects such as sexual orientation, gender identity, and race.’ That’s state-sanctioned grooming.”
Replies to Solas’ tweet included one from a teacher who commented,
“Teacher here. Someone needs to explain to those legislators that their job is to protect students not teachers.”
Another Twitter user pointed out, “Teachers aren’t trained counselors or therapists & this is beyond their scope of practice so why? Why legal confidentiality protection? What code of ethics are teachers bound to for this subject? Ultimately this hurts families & exposes kids to risk. Maybe that’s the point.”
Maybe it is.


