Bullying is wrong. Trust me. I was a victim of it.
I have probably related this before, but, when I was young, I was a small, sickly kid with asthma. In fact, when I graduated high school at 17, I was only around 5′ 4″. Between a growth spurt and taking Weight Training as one of my required Physical Education courses, by the time I graduated college, I was 5″ 10″, 210 lbs.
But, I digress…
I was picked on a lot as a kid, so much so, that, during what would be called now my Middle School Years, I would carry a lead-filled Baseball bat around the neighborhood with me, given to me by the local church team.
Back in the 1970s, the Federal Government was not involved in the everyday lives of America’s School children. Washington left the raising of children up to their parents, family, churches, and communities.
There were no “Headstart Programs”, no Michelle Obama School Lunch Menus, and no Federal and State Government “Anti-Bullying Campaigns”. We had to stand up for ourselves.
Thank God.
If you haven’t been paying attention, or haven’t already figured it out, these government-sponsored programs, under the guise of “protecting our children”, are propaganda tools, designed to mainstream LGBT sexual behaviors.
Through programs like World Wresting Entertainment’s “Be A Star” providing celebrity-endorsed camouflage, these programs have grown in in popularity and gained steam at the state level.
For example, from their own .pdf propaganda page…
“Seth’s Law” is a new law that strengthens existing state anti-bullying laws to help protect all California public school students. Seth’s Law requires public schools in California to update their anti-bullying policies and programs, and it focuses on protecting students who are bullied based on their actual or perceived sexual orientation and gender identity/gender expression, as well as race, ethnicity, nationality, gender, disability, and religion.
Why did the California Legislature pass Seth’s Law?
California law says that all public school students should have equal rights and opportunities. Yet many lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning students report that they experience significant bullying in California schools. And teachers, administrators, and other staff often fail to address the bullying when they see it.
Seth’s Law is named after a 13-year-old California student who tragically took his own life in 2010 after years of anti-gay bullying that his school failed to address.
AT A GLANCE: What does state anti-bullying law require school districts to do?
n Adopt a strong anti-bullying policy that specifically spells out prohibited bases for bullying, including sexual orientation and gender identity/gender expression.
n Adopt a specific process for receiving and investigating complaints of bullying, including a requirement that school personnel intervene if they witness bullying.
n Publicize the anti-bullying policy and complaint process, including posting the policy in all schools and offices.
n Post on the district website materials to support victims of bullying.
School Personnel Must Intervene
Seth’s Law specifically contains the following requirement: “If school personnel witness an act of discrimination, harassment, intimidation, or bullying, he or she shall take immediate steps to intervene when safe to do so.”
Also, in California, the state House and Senate have taken it a step further.
California transgender kids can now use any bathroom they like and if a school tries to prevent a student from doing so, it will be a violation of state law. The California state senate has voted 21-9 to pass A.B. 1266, a K-12 transgender rights bill that will change the education code to specify that regardless of the gender listed on a piece of paper in the front office, a student can participate in sex-segregated activities, athletic teams, and yes, use bathroom facilities consistent with his or her gender identity. “We know that these particular students suffer much abuse and bullying and denigration. We can’t change that overnight, but what we can do is make sure that the rules are such that they get a fair shake,” Sen. Mark Leno told the Associated Press.
Governor Moonbeam (Jerry Brown) should be signing this outrage into law any day now.
Would somebody out there, please tell me when a child realizes that he is actually a little girl trapped in a little boy’s body?
Does it happen when they’re in the bathtub with Ernie’s rubber duckie?
Oh, by the way, did you see where the New Yorker Magazine outed the Sesame Street Muppets Bert and Ernie as being gay? Who next? Batman and Robin? I mean, an older and younger guy running around in tights…
What is it with Liberals and sexual deviance? Are they brought up so sexually repressed, that they think about deviancy all the cotton-picking time?
I recently read the story about a wacko couple who decided that their little 6 year old boy was transgendered, and started dressing him and referring to him as a girl. Wishcasting ?
And, that brings us back to California Bill 1266, allowing the “transgendered’ to use whatever restroom and locker room in school that they want to walk into.
Can you imagine the possibilities?
Uhhh…yeah, coach. I have to go shower with our High School Girls’ Track Team. I’m transgendered.
Now, I remember when the macho girl on our Girl’s High School Basketball Team walked into the boy’s locker room on the Cross Country guys, but that was just her being obnoxious.
When I was in my early 20s, back in the early 1980s, I sang with a young adult singing group. We would perform at nursing homes and events. One of the programs we would do, featured songs about the states. We usually would engage in some snappy patter before we sang, in order to introduce the song.
I introduced the song “California, Here I Come”, by saying the following:
…and, folks you know, California is the world’s biggest bowl of granola. What ain’t fruits and nuts…is flakes.
Danged, if I wasn’t a prophet.
Until He Comes,
KJ

It was New Yorker that outed Bert & Ernie: http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2013/06/28/new-yorker-cover-bert-ernie-gay-marriage-580_custom-81c8cb2f30d2e95d402cd7d8c45fb35de627f5d4-s6-c30.jpg
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Fixed. Thank you.
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But still with all of this, certain kinds of bullying are permitted and even portrayed as funny. Example: a junk food commercial with a girl making threats to a locker. She walks away and a smaller than her boy with a 1950’s hair cut and older style clothes jumps out and comically runs away. Other commercials show larger men threatening and pushing around smaller men, particularly ones with white collar and/or cerebral jobs and usually with glasses. Another can be seen in the programs mocking Southerners by finding the most stereotypical and far outside the norm examples and making “reality” shows about them.
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Can.O.Worms
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