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BY
DON WILDMON | AFA Founder/Chairman
Across the country homosexual groups are making great strides getting
their agenda into the public schools. But there may be a new angle
for parents who are tired of having the homosexual lifestyle forced
on their children in the schools.
During the 2004 Christmas season, efforts to strip away some of
the traditions associated with Christmas met determined resistance,
promising that the issue will be a hot spot in the culture war this
year. In one of the most dramatic demonstrations of citizen indignation,
voters in Mustang, Oklahoma, said no to bond measures that asked
citizens to pony up almost $11 million for new education projects.
The reason for the vote results? The superintendent had decided
that a nativity scene did not belong in the elementary schools
Christmas program.
Closing Christmas plays with the nativity and the singing of "Silent
Night" has long been a tradition in Mustang. But Superintendent
Karl Springer, concerned that the nativity might be in violation
of the so-called constitutional separation of church and state,
was told by the school districts attorney to drop the scene.
However, symbols of Hanukkah and Kwanzaa were included in the play,
as were a Christmas tree and a Santa Claus.
Springer took the attorneys advice and paid the price at
the ballot box. The bond issues were defeated, marking the first
time in more than 10 years that the school district was denied the
money it had asked voters to provide.
Tim Pope, a former seven-term member of the Oklahoma Legislature,
led the effort to defeat the bond measures. "You have to send
a signal and tell them youre not going to stand for it,"
he said. "Youve got to tell them youre not going
to sit by and let them take away your rights."
The next step may be a lawsuit against the school district to ensure
that Christianity is treated fairly, said Shelly Marino, one of
the parents who complained about Springers actions. "We
are all educated people. We could work this out and not have it
split the community," she said. "We dont want a
lawsuit, but were not going to go away. The fight has been
started, and were going to see it through to the end."
Maybe these folks have hit upon something here. Local schools depend
on the taxpayers to foot the bill. But if taxpayers, whose concerns
are routinely ignored, join together when a bond issue is floated
or a tax increase is proposed and simply involve the community and
vote these items down, maybe those who approve pushing the homosexual
agenda on school children will get the message.
At least it is an idea worth pursuing. And like the parents
in Mustang, perhaps their voices will begin to be heard.
As the saying goes: "Money talks." Sometimes, in
the case of a school bond issue or tax increase, it screams!
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