June 28 , 2013 Radio Commentary

June’s 30-Day Focus

Radio Commentary, 90.7, 91.7 New Life FM, June 28, 2013 – By Sue Ella Deadwyler

Good morning, Jim. June has been the traditional month for brides, but for years, it has been used to promote alternate lifestyles instead of traditional family life. Several recent presidential executive orders have declared June to be LGBT month and the executive branch, also, declared that foreign aid would go ONLY to countries that openly promote alternate lifestyles. In a stunningly inappropriate speech a year before she resigned, the last secretary of state announced, “It’s okay to be gay!”

Highly influential non-government organizations, including the National Education Association (NEA), have strategized for decades to change U.S. sexual culture from Christian values to humanistic situation ethics. That strategy is meant to pull captive-audience students AWAY from their up-bringing and INTO the acceptance and affirmation of LGBT lifestyles.

Indoctrination programs include the annual day of silence that promotes and affirms alternate lifestyles in schools. The day of silence started 17 years ago in the University of Virginia, but educators soon began pushing it K – 12. As early as 2008, the Gay, Lesbian Straight Education Network claimed 7,500 students observed a day of silence in April. In contrast, Georgia law authorizes only one minute for silent meditation per school day.In 2009, the University of Georgia Vice President’s Office funded a Georgia Safe Schools Coalition online course for school counselors to “foster safe and affirming school environments for LGBTQQ youth and families.” LGBTQQ means “lesbian, gay, bisexual, transsexual, questioning and queer” – their words, not mine – and there’s hidden danger in that particular indoctrination. A safe and affirming environment has been defined to mean other students and educators CANNOT act negatively or make unacceptable comments about alternate lifestyles. That’s a big problem, since negative actions and unacceptable comments are subject to interpretation. Meaning, students lose their constitutional right to free speech and could be punished for openly disagreeing with alternate lifestyles.

On October 22, 2011 gay-straight alliance clubs distributed t-shirts for students to wear on national coming out day. The writing on the shirts said, “Change attitudes, change behaviors, change directions, change lives, change policies, be an ally, be the change!” In case you don’t know, “coming out” means openly claiming to be homosexual, bi-sexual, or transgender.

June became LGBT month through presidential proclamation and indoctrination of our youth. For more about that, listen next week. For Georgia Insight, I’m Sue Ella Deadwyler, your Capitol correspondent.