Supreme Court to hear case on opting out of lessons with LGBTQ+ books

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents in Montgomery Count, Maryland, want to be able to opt out of instruction on gender and sexuality that they say goes against their religious convictions.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/01/17/lgbtq-books-supreme-court-montgomery-maryland-schools-religion/


Why can't these a$$holes just go to parochial school? You cannot dictate public education according to religion. Nor should you.


But that is exactly what MCPS is doing. It is just a different religion; one they believe in and evangelize.


The religion of people exist?


Trans ideology functions like a religion because it’s built on unverifiable beliefs, demands moral obedience, and punishes dissent. The core claim—that gender identity is an inner truth disconnected from biology—can’t be proven, only accepted on faith. Misgendering is treated as a moral sin, questioning the doctrine is labeled as hate, and dissenters face social and professional excommunication.

Like religion, it has sacred rituals (name changes, pronoun declarations), symbols (flags), and even holy days (Trans Day of Remembrance). It enforces ideological conformity in schools, media, and law. This isn’t just a personal identity movement—it’s a belief system demanding cultural and institutional submission.


Sounds like sports… has rituals, symbols, and important days like opening day and Super Bowl. People even low-key fight over their team teams.

Maybe we should remove sports from schools.

Both sports and trans people exist so I say we continue to books about them.


Sports typically doesn’t involve fundamentalist tenets of faith.


Really because football started with pigskins material. That’s in someone’s faith. Games are played all days of the week. That’s against someone’s faith. Attire doesn’t always lend to modesty especially for girls. That’s in someone’s faith. Some sports someone might say enact barbarism. I’m certain that’s against someone’s faith. Shall we keep going?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:NP. What the people who brought this suit don’t understand is that mandating this education was helping their cause, not hurting it. Having the weirdest, most cringe middle school teacher heavy-handedly preaching to kids about how they are mandated to think essentially just has the effect of turning kids in the exact opposite direction.

The younger half of Gen Z — the ones who got these lessons — are sharply more conservative (particularly socially) than their older peers. That is not a coincidence.

Bar the lessons, and you make them cool again. Not that these plaintiffs understand kids, of course.


I think what you’re saying is that you have to pick your battles. Yes, but that is a two way street. Require the lesson and you’ll accelerate parents moving on to private and sectarian schools as well as home schooling—reducing funding to public schools and further eroding support for public schools.


Correct. Another unintended consequence will likely be an expansion of voucher programs fueling growth of private education.


Either offer the opt-out again, or offer school choice. Choose wisely.

MD is not offering school choice.


School choice already exist: public school, private school, home school
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Nah just sex toys and fellatio just run of the mill elementary school topics


Point us to the page where any of that is discussed in Pride Puppy.
Anonymous
I just clicked the link above and scrolled to see some kid suckin on another boys hog
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents in Montgomery Count, Maryland, want to be able to opt out of instruction on gender and sexuality that they say goes against their religious convictions.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/01/17/lgbtq-books-supreme-court-montgomery-maryland-schools-religion/


Why can't these a$$holes just go to parochial school? You cannot dictate public education according to religion. Nor should you.

It's you who should form your own private schools where you can peddle your fetish-driven religion to the children of fellow groomers like yourself. The normal people in society shouldn't be driven out of schools so you can run amok with your incessant sex talks.


+1000
It will never cease to astound me how much these people actually WANT to expose children to sexual topics. Why? I can't fathom the mind of someone who would promote this stuff to children.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:NP. What the people who brought this suit don’t understand is that mandating this education was helping their cause, not hurting it. Having the weirdest, most cringe middle school teacher heavy-handedly preaching to kids about how they are mandated to think essentially just has the effect of turning kids in the exact opposite direction.

The younger half of Gen Z — the ones who got these lessons — are sharply more conservative (particularly socially) than their older peers. That is not a coincidence.

Bar the lessons, and you make them cool again. Not that these plaintiffs understand kids, of course.


I think what you’re saying is that you have to pick your battles. Yes, but that is a two way street. Require the lesson and you’ll accelerate parents moving on to private and sectarian schools as well as home schooling—reducing funding to public schools and further eroding support for public schools.


So we should continue to make LGBTQ kids and family hide and pretend they don’t exist? Just so some small population can potentially not do what has been done throughout history, segregate itself until such time as they come to realize, oh these lessons really don’t do anything more than make individuals reflective and tolerant.


Just like religion, don't discuss it in schools. No need. Just stick to academics.


I’m liberal and far from a religious extremist. I am all for including books where it mentions in passing that sally has two moms, just like many kids books mention in passing that Johnny has a mom and a dad or that Lisa’s parents are divorced. I am not ok with introducing concepts of actual sexual acts in elementary school. Any kind of sex - hetero included. I don’t really need my kids reading about drag queens either although I wouldn’t opt them out, because it’s harmless, but it makes me wonder what great classics foe that age group were sacrificed to make room.

And yes I have two current elementary and schoolers in MoCo. The curriculum for my now 5th grader has been pretty bad for years. The books they chose weren’t controversial but they were of lousy quality. My current second grader is using the newer curriculum and it’s so much better. The books she gets are already on par with what he got in fourth grade.


I view positive kids books about drag queens as akin to positive kids books about blackface performers. I do not want my kids taught that drag queens are “harmless.” Womanface minstrelry is not “harmless.” I’m an atheist, by the way. This is not a religious objection.

In 100 years, drag will be looked at with the same revulsion that blackface minstrels are now. It is already aging out; Gen Z (the generation that grew up with drag queen story hour) largely doesn’t attend drag. It is the “entertainment” of old men now. Books like Pride Puppy are merely attempting to revive what is already headed to the trash bin of history.

Gorsuch was right to challenge the MoCo attorney on Pride Puppy. And it is embarrassing for MoCo that the attorney clearly hadn’t expected Gorsuch to have actually read the book.


Well said.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP have you read this lawsuit in its entirety?

I have they will lose .

It is the worst written lawsuit. The lawyers on the side of the religious zealots should lose their license because of how bad they wrote their side.

It is religious garbage. Worse than that they want add religious indoctrination into public schools.


Well of course it is! It's written by religious ignoramuses MAGA dorks. Not intellectuals.


Michel Foucault was an intellectual. Guess what he did to little boys in Morocco…

Justifying that is what the “intellectuals” are going to do next.


Of course. Who is pushing teaching 5 year olds to read stories about gay men in leather fetish gear.


Are you referring to the D.C. and Montgomery County Drag Queen children’s story hour?


DP. No. We're referring to the book at issue in this thread. Have you read it?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:All of you arguing that this is about religious freedom and not homophobia are strange. If a school taught a book where the main character eats pork, it would not be offensive to muslim or kosher students because they themselves aren't eating pork. Religious freedom is about what you do, not what the people around you do.


Wrong. The equivalent would be a school deliberately choosing to have teachers read a series of books about eating pork, and then launching a teacher-led classroom discussion about why it’s ok to eat pork, then saying parents can opt out from those lessons, and then rescinding that option under political pressure.

Get it now?


No it’s like reading a book where people are eating bacon for breakfast and asking to opt out because it’s pork.


Nope.

National review: “Teachers are instructed to lead classroom discussions about the books, which cite terms such as, “intersex,” “drag queen,” and “non-binary.” One book claims that doctors only “guess” when determining a newborn’s sex.” NTD: “The board instructed employees responsible for selecting the books to use an “LGBTQ+ Lens” and to question whether “cisnormativity,” “stereotypes,” and “power hierarchies” are “reinforced or disrupted,” the petition said.“



Trying to follow this issue, and I keep encountering one book in particular, the LGTBQIA+ positive graphic novel, Gender Queer. It appears some find it controversial.

Can someone post what seems to be so controversial about this novel?


We can’t, because the images are so graphic that they aren’t allowed to be posted on this site.


+1
Which the PP knows perfectly well. They are playing dumb in order to stir things up again, pretending they don't know what the book is about or how to use Google.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Yikes, this takedown of the MoCo attorney by Gorsuch was brutal.



Unreal that *anyone* would think that book is appropriate for the classroom.


Have you read the book? It’s literally an A to Z book that points out zero controversial things. The appendix of the books let you look for other things in the pictures and again, nothing controversial. There is no bondage is the book.


Yes, I've read the book. Please stop gaslighting. Telling readers to look for "leather, lip ring, and underwear" (among other "vocabulary" words) is insanity.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Yikes, this takedown of the MoCo attorney by Gorsuch was brutal.



Unreal that *anyone* would think that book is appropriate for the classroom.


Have you read the book? It’s literally an A to Z book that points out zero controversial things. The appendix of the books let you look for other things in the pictures and again, nothing controversial. There is no bondage is the book.


Yes, I've read the book. Please stop gaslighting. Telling readers to look for "leather, lip ring, and underwear" (among other "vocabulary" words) is insanity.


Also “intersex flag,” “drag king,” and “drag queen.”

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:NP. What the people who brought this suit don’t understand is that mandating this education was helping their cause, not hurting it. Having the weirdest, most cringe middle school teacher heavy-handedly preaching to kids about how they are mandated to think essentially just has the effect of turning kids in the exact opposite direction.

The younger half of Gen Z — the ones who got these lessons — are sharply more conservative (particularly socially) than their older peers. That is not a coincidence.

Bar the lessons, and you make them cool again. Not that these plaintiffs understand kids, of course.


I think what you’re saying is that you have to pick your battles. Yes, but that is a two way street. Require the lesson and you’ll accelerate parents moving on to private and sectarian schools as well as home schooling—reducing funding to public schools and further eroding support for public schools.


Correct. Another unintended consequence will likely be an expansion of voucher programs fueling growth of private education.


Either offer the opt-out again, or offer school choice. Choose wisely.

MD is not offering school choice.


School choice already exist: public school, private school, home school


Private school or home schooling isn't an option for many parents. As long as they are paying taxes, they should be able to send their kids to public schools without having to have them exposed to this crap.

To make school choice a REAL possibility, the money has to follow the child.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents in Montgomery Count, Maryland, want to be able to opt out of instruction on gender and sexuality that they say goes against their religious convictions.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/01/17/lgbtq-books-supreme-court-montgomery-maryland-schools-religion/


Why can't these a$$holes just go to parochial school? You cannot dictate public education according to religion. Nor should you.

It's you who should form your own private schools where you can peddle your fetish-driven religion to the children of fellow groomers like yourself. The normal people in society shouldn't be driven out of schools so you can run amok with your incessant sex talks.


+1000
It will never cease to astound me how much these people actually WANT to expose children to sexual topics. Why? I can't fathom the mind of someone who would promote this stuff to children.


What is with all your pearl clutching. People are sexual entities. They grow into that sexuality as the mature. No one is promoting anything sexual or religious wise to kids in school. They are just not shying away from letting kids make informed decisions. Sex exist. It exist in many forms besides the missionary position. Sexual health and responsibility exist. Folks should understand it just like they get taught about other health. LGBTQ people exist. Folks should be taught to respect their choices just like you expect people to respect yours.

How is any of this difficult to comprehend? Why is any of it controversial? Half the people claiming to reject it on religious reasons have many more other things in their lives which are counter to religion observance and behavior.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Yikes, this takedown of the MoCo attorney by Gorsuch was brutal.



Unreal that *anyone* would think that book is appropriate for the classroom.


Have you read the book? It’s literally an A to Z book that points out zero controversial things. The appendix of the books let you look for other things in the pictures and again, nothing controversial. There is no bondage is the book.


Yes, I've read the book. Please stop gaslighting. Telling readers to look for "leather, lip ring, and underwear" (among other "vocabulary" words) is insanity.


Also “intersex flag,” “drag king,” and “drag queen.”



Again, point to the page where this is required. A teacher could read the book and never ask this. Also is leather inherently a problem? Women walk around with leather purses all the time. Folks wear leather pants. Why is lip ring any worse than earring or bracelet?
Why is drag king or queen any worse than find the clown?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:NP. What the people who brought this suit don’t understand is that mandating this education was helping their cause, not hurting it. Having the weirdest, most cringe middle school teacher heavy-handedly preaching to kids about how they are mandated to think essentially just has the effect of turning kids in the exact opposite direction.

The younger half of Gen Z — the ones who got these lessons — are sharply more conservative (particularly socially) than their older peers. That is not a coincidence.

Bar the lessons, and you make them cool again. Not that these plaintiffs understand kids, of course.


I think what you’re saying is that you have to pick your battles. Yes, but that is a two way street. Require the lesson and you’ll accelerate parents moving on to private and sectarian schools as well as home schooling—reducing funding to public schools and further eroding support for public schools.


Correct. Another unintended consequence will likely be an expansion of voucher programs fueling growth of private education.


Either offer the opt-out again, or offer school choice. Choose wisely.

MD is not offering school choice.


School choice already exist: public school, private school, home school


Private school or home schooling isn't an option for many parents. As long as they are paying taxes, they should be able to send their kids to public schools without having to have them exposed to this crap.

To make school choice a REAL possibility, the money has to follow the child.


Look you get choices. No one said you would like all the choices or they would be the most convenient for you. If you don’t like public school you can choose private or home school. No problems and no judgements. Just because you have a problem with realistic information being available doesn’t mean you get to limit it from the rest of us who aren’t afraid of growth and critical thinking. No one is indoctrinated kids in public school beyond telling them this is the world at large, this is what things mean, and go forth with kindness and respect.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:NP. What the people who brought this suit don’t understand is that mandating this education was helping their cause, not hurting it. Having the weirdest, most cringe middle school teacher heavy-handedly preaching to kids about how they are mandated to think essentially just has the effect of turning kids in the exact opposite direction.

The younger half of Gen Z — the ones who got these lessons — are sharply more conservative (particularly socially) than their older peers. That is not a coincidence.

Bar the lessons, and you make them cool again. Not that these plaintiffs understand kids, of course.


I think what you’re saying is that you have to pick your battles. Yes, but that is a two way street. Require the lesson and you’ll accelerate parents moving on to private and sectarian schools as well as home schooling—reducing funding to public schools and further eroding support for public schools.


Correct. Another unintended consequence will likely be an expansion of voucher programs fueling growth of private education.


Either offer the opt-out again, or offer school choice. Choose wisely.

MD is not offering school choice.


School choice already exist: public school, private school, home school


Private school or home schooling isn't an option for many parents. As long as they are paying taxes, they should be able to send their kids to public schools without having to have them exposed to this crap.

To make school choice a REAL possibility, the money has to follow the child.


Look you get choices. No one said you would like all the choices or they would be the most convenient for you. If you don’t like public school you can choose private or home school. No problems and no judgements. Just because you have a problem with realistic information being available doesn’t mean you get to limit it from the rest of us who aren’t afraid of growth and critical thinking. No one is indoctrinated kids in public school beyond telling them this is the world at large, this is what things mean, and go forth with kindness and respect.


Well said.
post reply Forum Index » Political Discussion
Message Quick Reply
Go to: