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ED VITAGLIANO | AFA Journal News Editor
Most people would immediately recognize the significance of common
abbreviations, like FBI, IRS or CIA. But there is another abbreviation
with which parents might want to become familiar, because more than
likely the organization it represents will be coming soon to a public
school near them.
That abbreviation is GLSEN (pronounced "glisten"). It is the acronym
for Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network. Begun a decade
ago by homosexual activist Kevin Jennings, a former Massachusetts
history teacher, the group has relentlessly pushed the gay agenda
in the public school system.
One of GLSENs major annual campaigns is the "Day of Silence,"
held this year on April 13. On this day, the organizations
Web site said that homosexual and sympathetic, heterosexual students
"take a vow of silence to bring attention to the bias and harassment
experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered (LGBT) students
and their allies." Instead of talking out loud, students merely
hand out cards that explain what they are doing and why.
GLSEN claims that 450,000 students in over 4,000 schools
in all 50 states participated in this years silent
protest.
Many parents might find it amazing that these students, with the
full support of their school administration and faculty, are allowed
each year to refuse to verbally participate in classroom activity
and, essentially, stage a protest.
GLSEN insists, however, that the Day of Silence is necessary to
prevent the harassment and abuse of gay and lesbian students by
their own classmates.
In fact, this is the justification for GLSENs entire existence.
According to the organizations Web site, GLSEN is "an education
organization ensuring safe schools for all lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender students."
Dr. Warren Throckmorton, associate professor of psychology at Grove
City College in Pennsylvania, isnt buying that explanation.
He said, "These events [like Day of Silence] are about persuasion.
They are efforts to change attitudes and beliefs concerning homosexuality
cloaked in rhetoric concerning safety."
Throckmorton notes that the Day of Silence guidebook specifically
highlights the political side of the event. It says: "The Day of
Silence enables participants to show, in a highly visible way, everyone
they encounter, that they support LGBT rights."
"This is political activism, pure and simple," Throckmorton said.
"Agree with gay rights or not, lets understand this clearly:
the purpose of [the Day of Silence] is to advance a civil rights
agenda in the public schools."
Who
must remain silent
In reality, it is an agenda that will
allow no rebuttal to its "gay is OK" message. People who do object
often discover that they are the ones silenced.
At South Windsor High School in Connecticut, for example, the GLSEN-orchestrated
Day of Silence found plenty of willing participants. According to
the Journal Inquirer, a local newspaper, students not only remained
silent, but wore signs in support of current state legislation that
would legalize civil unions for homosexuals.
However, later that same week, four students were sent home from
school for wearing T-shirts that said, "Adam and Eve, Not Adam and
Steve" a reference to the signs worn in support of same-sex
civil unions. Their T-shirts also contained Bible verses about homosexuality.
Steven Vendetta, one of the four, told the Journal Inquirer, "We
felt if they could voice their opinions for it, we could voice our
opinion against it."
He was wrong. Members of the South Windsor Gay-Straight Alliance
(GSA) complained to the principal, who told the four students that
some of their classmates were becoming "emotionally distraught"
over the messages on the T-shirts. Vendetta and his friends were
told they could either change shirts or go home. They chose the
latter.
Ironically, the core message of the Day of Silence safety
was used as a bludgeon against those who opposed homosexuality.
In response to the T-shirt messages worn by her classmates, Diana
Rosen, who helps lead the South Windsor GSA, complained, "I didnt
feel safe at this school today."
According to the Journal Inquirer, another GSA member, Alex Goldberg,
said Vendetta and his three comrades had a right to their opinions
but crossed the line with their T-shirts. "School is supposed
to be a safe zone for everyone. Its crossing a line when you
target other people," he said.
Mandatory
indoctrination
GLSENs activism goes beyond the once-a-year
campaign by silent students. Across the nation, GLSEN promotes and
supports more than 3,000 GSAs in high schools.
Again, these groups are purportedly all about safety because they
claim to teach classmates that homosexuality deserves tolerance
and respect. But Throckmorton said there is no evidence that GSAs
and such efforts as the Day of Silence make anyone safer.
"In fact, GLSEN is aware that there are no data suggesting that
such activism prevents bullying [of homosexual students]," he said.
"I have asked GLSEN for the evidence supporting training programs
including sexual orientation, and they have had the integrity to
admit that there is none."
The lack of such evidence doesnt seem to faze GLSEN one bit,
and schools that refuse to allow GSAs can expect to learn their
lesson as quickly as the four students at South Windsor.
In Kentucky, the Boyd County Board of Education resisted the formation
of a GSA, but were promptly slapped with a lawsuit in 2003 filed
by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) on behalf of students
who wanted to start the club.
In 2004 the school board settled out of court with the ACLU and
the plaintiffs. Under the oversight of U.S. District Judge David
L. Bunning, Boyd County agreed not only to allow the GSA, but also
to require school staffers, middle school students and high school
students to attend tolerance training beginning in the fall of 2004.
Training for students includes a video that states that if one
student speaks out against homosexuality to another student
who happens to be gay that is considered harassment. The
offending student would then be punished.
Parents were informed that they were not allowed to opt their own
children out of the instruction, and the entire policy has led some
of them to file their own lawsuit against the school district, alleging
that their children are being subjected to pro-homosexual indoctrination.
Kevin Theriot, an attorney representing some of the parents of
students in Boyd County, told Baptist Press, "Obviously, were
not advocating that students have the right to bully someone because
theyre homosexual. But they certainly have the right to express
their disagreement with them and say to them that they believe homosexuality
is harmful to people who practice it and harmful to society as a
whole. As Christians, we have an obligation to reach out to people
that we think are hurting themselves."
According to the Education Reporter, hundreds of students
defied the Boyd County tolerance training requirement, either by
not showing up on the day the video was to be shown or by refusing
to watch it.
The article said the ACLU was threatening to seek a court order
to force the students to attend.
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