Florida Lawmakers Pass Bill Designed to Ban Gender Discussion in Schools Home News

Come_Hither1

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Florida lawmakers advanced a bill that would allow parents to sue schools if staff speak to students about gender identity or sexuality



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Florida lawmakers earlier this week passed a bill designed to prevent the discussion of gender identity and sexuality in the classroom.

The Parental Rights in Education bill, voted on largely along party lines by Florida House committee members on Thursday, "is about defending the most awesome responsibility a person can have: being a parent," said Florida state Rep. Joe Harding, who introduced the bill, according to a report from Florida Politics.

The legislation, which advocates call a "Don't Say Gay" bill, says parents can take legal action against a school district if Florida teachers speak about LGBTQ topics like identity and sexuality that do not fall under "age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate" guidelines for students.

The bill says it protects a parent's "fundamental right to make decisions regarding the upbringing and control of their children."

Advocates for the LGBTQ community slammed the bill, saying it would create additional barriers for LGBTQ students.

The Trevor Project, a nonprofit dedicated to preventing suicide among LGBTQ youth, said in a report published in August that schools can play a significant role in supporting LGBT youth. Students who learned about LGBTQ issues or people in the classroom had "23% lower odds" of reporting a suicide attempt in the last year, according to the report.

"This bill will erase young LGBTQ students across Florida, forcing many back into the closet by policing their identity and silencing important discussions about the issues they face," said Sam Ames, director of advocacy and government affairs at the Trevor Project. "LGBTQ students deserve their history and experiences to be reflected in their education, just like their peers."


"This will kill kids," said Chasten Buttigieg, LGBTQ rights advocate and the husband of transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg.

—Chasten Buttigieg (@Chasten) January 20, 2022


"You are purposefully making your state a harder place for LGBTQ kids to survive in," said Buttigieg, calling out Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
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Florida lawmakers advanced a bill that would allow parents to sue schools if staff speak to students about gender identity or sexuality



61ec12e22b43ff00185e287d




Florida lawmakers earlier this week passed a bill designed to prevent the discussion of gender identity and sexuality in the classroom.

The Parental Rights in Education bill, voted on largely along party lines by Florida House committee members on Thursday, "is about defending the most awesome responsibility a person can have: being a parent," said Florida state Rep. Joe Harding, who introduced the bill, according to a report from Florida Politics.

The legislation, which advocates call a "Don't Say Gay" bill, says parents can take legal action against a school district if Florida teachers speak about LGBTQ topics like identity and sexuality that do not fall under "age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate" guidelines for students.

The bill says it protects a parent's "fundamental right to make decisions regarding the upbringing and control of their children."

Advocates for the LGBTQ community slammed the bill, saying it would create additional barriers for LGBTQ students.

The Trevor Project, a nonprofit dedicated to preventing suicide among LGBTQ youth, said in a report published in August that schools can play a significant role in supporting LGBT youth. Students who learned about LGBTQ issues or people in the classroom had "23% lower odds" of reporting a suicide attempt in the last year, according to the report.

"This bill will erase young LGBTQ students across Florida, forcing many back into the closet by policing their identity and silencing important discussions about the issues they face," said Sam Ames, director of advocacy and government affairs at the Trevor Project. "LGBTQ students deserve their history and experiences to be reflected in their education, just like their peers."





"You are purposefully making your state a harder place for LGBTQ kids to survive in," said Buttigieg, calling out Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
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Despicable...:mad:
 
I remember the very first kids I knew in the early years of elementary school who were teased for being "sissies" or "tomboys". Mind you, this was back in the 1950s when there was a zero tolerance policy toward any sort of diversity in gender expression.

Those kids got pestered mercilessly on into middle school and beyond. One day during a very quiet study session in the 9th grade, I witnessed a young gay student suddenly explode with rage, thrashing the papers off his desk, throwing his body around within one of those combination chair/desk things, and finally putting his head on that desk to sob uncontrollably.

The school staff just could not comprehend what would cause someone to break down like that. He never returned to class.

This new Florida law is aimed at trying to keep things that way.
 
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If I read the law correctly, it covers "primary school" which, depending on how FL classifies their schools, could include kids up to age 12 or 13 (though it could only reach 10-11 year olds if they use a 3-tier system), but does not extend to high school age kids or beyond.
 
If I read the law correctly, it covers "primary school" which, depending on how FL classifies their schools, could include kids up to age 12 or 13 (though it could only reach 10-11 year olds if they use a 3-tier system), but does not extend to high school age kids or beyond.
According to medical experts, the expression of gender does not conform to Florida's proposed timeline.
 
It's so that parents have time to brainwash their children into thinking that anyone who is not cis and heterosexual is an abomination in God's eyes and destroyed. Because everyone knows that LGBTQ are not human and you can't murder something that's not human.

(P.S. This is not what I believe, I'm just concerned this is the first step towards reinstituting gay bashing )
According to medical experts, the expression of gender does not conform to Florida's proposed timeline.
 
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