Angry Parents, Parents protesting in Virginia, Virginia Governor's Race

Angry Parents in Virginia

“The Virginia gubernatorial election shows the power of angry and motivated parents,” said Ruth Institute President Dr. Jennifer Roback Morse, Ph.D.

“This election could be the upset of the year. Revelations about indoctrination in public schools and the grotesque arrogance of the Democratic candidate, have motivated parents to make more noise than politicians are used to,” Morse observed.

The Democratic candidate, former Governor Terry McAuliffe, touched off a fire storm when he declared, “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what to teach.” Morse observed, “This is typical elitist arrogance and disdain for families. By contrast, the Republican candidate, Glenn Youngkin, is a strong advocate of parental rights.”

Parents are up in arms over the LGBTQ agenda in Virginia’s schools, including bathrooms open to anyone. “The Loudoun Country school committee removed a furious father in handcuffs from a meeting that was supposed to be open to the public. Why? Because he charged that the school had covered up his daughter’s restroom rape by a boy in a skirt to protect its trans agenda,” Morse said.

Angry parents are now in open revolt over the ideology of the Sexual Revolution being inflicted on school children. And the rebellion is not confined to Virginia.

The Sexual State at Work in FL, KS

In Broward Co., Florida, parents were enraged to find that an elementary school class was taken on a field trip to a local gay bar.

A Kansas school apologized for distributing “Gender Unicorn” worksheets, which asked students, among other intrusive questions, “Do you know your identity, or are you still in identity confusion stage?”

Morse charged, “This reflects LGBTQ dogma that sex is merely ‘assigned at birth’ and hence potentially subject to individual choice.” The school backed off because parents complained.

Wyoming Library Sued for Peddling Porn

Through Wyoming Resistance, Campbell Co. parents filed a criminal complaint against the local library board for offering books like, Sex is a Funny Word, which urges children 8-11 years old to get comfortable being naked and having their bodies touched.

“Can you say, ‘sexual grooming’?” Morse asked. “Without the efforts of concerned parents and other citizens, you can be sure these books would never have come to the prosecutor’s attention. Books like, Doing It: Let’s Talk about Sex, would still be on the library shelf, available to teens and younger.”

“This Virginia election could be the opening shot in the Sexual Counter-Revolution, a revolution for parental rights and children’s innocence,” Morse said.

“At last, at great personal risk, including threats of investigation by the U.S. Attorney General, parents are fighting back against the sexual indoctrination of their children. May God bless them and strengthen their resolve.”

About the Ruth Institute

The Ruth Institute is a global non-profit organization, leading an international interfaith coalition to defend the family and build a civilization of love.

Jennifer Roback Morse is the author of The Sexual State: How Elite Ideologies Are Destroying Lives and Love and Economics: It Takes a Family to Raise a Village.

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