Anonymous wrote:I think this is wonderful - wish my daycare did it. But, he goes to a Catholic daycare, so............
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm tell them it is celebrating love. This is not a big deal.
It's a huge deal. Kids will be celebrating something they have no concept of. That's not fair.
the child has to either know exactly what pride is about, or be left out of it until he is old enough to know.
My four-year-old asked me why there were so many rainbow flags around. I told her that the flags meant, "Everyone is welcome here. No matter who they want to marry, or who they love." That made total sense to her. We didn't even have to talk about sex, because little kids don't really connect marriage and sex. I told her that sometimes boys want to marry girls, like her father and me; and sometimes boys want to marry boys, like her Uncle Chris and her Uncle Joe; and sometimes girls want to marry girls, like her friend Caleb's parents. And that people should marry who they love. This really isn't rocket science.
Anonymous wrote:wouldn't be a fan. It's not age-appropriate to discuss sexuality with kids that young.
Anonymous wrote:wouldn't be a fan. It's not age-appropriate to discuss sexuality with kids that young.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would just keep my kids home. I'm not into making being gay a huge big thing.
Give them story books with gay parents or just talk about it the same way you would any other family or situation. Normalize it as part of daily life.
But making it seem like being gay is something so amazing and different and special that you need outlandish costumes and to act in sexually lewd ways to express it and that it needs a party and a parade and you have to make a super big deal out of being gay - not my thing.
....What on earth are you imagining? That the kids and teachers will dress in drag and make out with each other?
Why is it some people can never get past the sex part of being gay?
Anonymous wrote:I would just keep my kids home. I'm not into making being gay a huge big thing.
Give them story books with gay parents or just talk about it the same way you would any other family or situation. Normalize it as part of daily life.
But making it seem like being gay is something so amazing and different and special that you need outlandish costumes and to act in sexually lewd ways to express it and that it needs a party and a parade and you have to make a super big deal out of being gay - not my thing.
Anonymous wrote:I would just keep my kids home. I'm not into making being gay a huge big thing.
Give them story books with gay parents or just talk about it the same way you would any other family or situation. Normalize it as part of daily life.
But making it seem like being gay is something so amazing and different and special that you need outlandish costumes and to act in sexually lewd ways to express it and that it needs a party and a parade and you have to make a super big deal out of being gay - not my thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is most offensive in this situation is that they're pushing their agenda on you and your kid. Schools- of every level- need to stop doing this. I am in 100% support of gay rights, but don't expect me or my kid to dress up in rainbows just to make your school look good.
+1,000,000
I'm same as you - LGBT is fine by me, but all this liberal political hogwash in schools needs to stop.
The suicide rate of LGBT teens is 4 times greater than non-LGBT teens. So yes, LGBT teens need to know that people support them.
So preschoolers wearing rainbows will help gay teens? What about all the other people who commit suicide?