Saturday, 12 August 2023

New Mills school asks children to choose from 42 different gender pronouns.

 

New Mills School

Is it any wonder that young people in Britain are growing up confused?

Politically correct dipsticks at a school in New Mills, Derbyshire, have asked 11- year old pupils to choose from 42 different gender pronouns. Parents were sent an admissions form from the school and were asked to select the such terms as, zie, zim, zir, zis, zieself, as well as, verself, ve, ver, vis and vers. One father told the Sun newspaper,

 "It is just so bizarre. I don't even know what these mean - I'm not convinced anyone does. Children don't need this kind of thing...When you see something like this, it just makes you not want to take them seriously as an educational establishment."

Although other parents have said they are equally baffled by the admissions form, the school said the form is standard and is used by "thousands of schools." This is not the first time the New Mills school has hit the headlines. The schools "Drag 'n' Rainbows" non-uniform day, was cancelled after it was reported in the press.

In recent years, gender identity zealots, have been constantly targeting young children with propaganda related to sexuality and gender. They say they want to inculcate in children an "inclusive" and "genderfluid" outlook.  Stonewall, the LGBT advocacy group, insists that the evidence shows that children as young as two years of age can recognise their "trans identity."

But many parents think that their children are being indoctrinated by proselytizers of queer politics and there have been protests against it. They have questioned why it needs a drag queen to read a story to children and don't want their infant children being used as pygmies, in a social engineering project, to promote LGBT ideology.

The Drag Queen Story Hour movement which began in America in 2015, aims to promote "queer role models" and the "gender fluidity of childhood." Supporters of the movement say that this is no different to a pantomime, where men dress up as a woman. But this is disingenuous and misleading. The aim of the pantomime Dame, is to entertain, and it doesn't seek to promote an ideology. Nobody ever thought that Les Dawson or Roy Barraclough were two women or that the male impersonators, Hetty King or Vesta Tilley, were two men. 

Not so long ago, this sort of nonsense would have been the subject of mockery and derision, but many people now running English schools, have bought into it and so have many of the politicians

1 comment:

Andy said...

Sack the headmaster and all the school governors in favour of this child abuse.... NOW!