April 2023 Newsletter

Georgia Legislative Session Ended March 29th with Mixed Results
Passed: Georgia Gender Dysphoria Law

S.B. 140 Gender Dysphoria Act prohibits using the following medical procedures on minors:

“Section 2: Sex reassignment surgeries, or any other surgical procedures, that are performed for the purpose of altering primary or secondary sexual characteristics; or
“hormone-replacement therapies.”

Section 3 Lists Exceptions “Deemed Medically Necessary”
“Section 3(b) (1) Treatments for medical conditions other than gender dysphoria or for the purpose of sex reassignment where such treatments are deemed medically necessary;
“(2) Treatments for individuals born with a medically verifiable disorder of sex development, including individuals born with a medically verifiable disorder of sex development, including individuals born with ambiguous genitalia or chromosomal abnormalities resulting in ambiguity regarding the individual’s biological sex;
“(3) Treatment for individuals with partial androgen insensitivity syndrome; and
“4) continued treatment of minors who are, prior to July 1, 2023, being treated with irreversible hormone replacement therapies.”

The Georgia Composite Medical Board will issue rules/regulations to govern the above.

Question: Will doctors and institutions be held liable for damages caused by such treatment?

Question: Will parents of minors be arrested/fined/lose custody for opposing such treatment?

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June 2020 Newsletter

News Flash! Georgia General Assembly Expects to
Reconvene in Mid-June
Six Democrats Cosponsor Global Health Policies for Schools

Q. Why didn’t Senate Republicans stop S.B. 102?
“The health sector needs to seek integration within the education system – not education’s adoption of health priorities. The health sector must find its cultural anchor within education and integrate its processes and outcomes…. In short, health must find its cultural anchor within the education system.”
– Global School Health Symposium, Pattaya, Thailand, 2013

S.B. 102 Unlocking the Promise Community Schools Act by Senator Emanuel Jones passed the Senate 50 – 0 on March 12th and is poised to pass this session. It must be defeated. It requires community organizations, community partners, the Department of Education, public schools/charter schools, and the State Board of Education to implement the global strategy for “a sustainable whole child school plan of wraparound services and supports.”

S.B. 102 would embrace the World Health Organization (WHO) global initiative which calls for total integration of international health projects into school systems. If this passes, Georgia students would be inculcated with global ethics, morals, and values to replace Georgia- specific and America-specific ethics, morals, and values. Over 60 leading education, health, and school health experts from 20 countries, including the United States, concocted this scheme at the 2013 Global School Health Symposium in Pattaya, Thailand.

Seventy (70) U.S. Organizations Signed onto the Scheme. The following exemplify the 70:
American Associations of School Administrators, School Librarians, School Personnel Administrators, School Counselors, and School Health; Montessori Society; UCLA Center for Mental Health in Schools; Character Education Partnership; GLSEN (Gay, Lesbian Straight Education Network); Human Rights Campaign Foundation; and Institute for Global Ethics
National Associations of Black School Educators, Gifted Children, Music Education, Elementary School Principals, School Nurses, School Psychologists, Secondary School Principals, State Boards of Education, NEA, Paideia Center, PTA, School Boards, School Social Work, Society for Public Education, and the School-Based Health Alliance

CDC Supports/Promotes WHO Strategy

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is promoting this scheme through the World Health Organization (WHO) program entitled, “Health in All Policies (HiAP).”
Online, the CDC states: “The National Prevention Strategy external icon provides a HiAP framework to guide our nation in the most effective and achievable means for improving health and well-being.” For more information about the National Prevention Strategy, CDC refers us to the Surgeon General’s website here.

ACTION – Oppose S.B. 102. It is a global scheme to infiltrate education with global health initiatives. Contact House Education Committee Representatives Jasperse, Ch., 404 656-5943; Cheokas, V-Ch., 656-0152; Benton, Sec., 656-5126; Belton, 656-3947; Cantrell, 656-0152; Carter, 656-0220; Dickerson, 656-0314; England, 463-2245; Erwin, 656-0188; Evans, 656-0109; Glanton, 657-183; Hill, 656-0325; Howard, 656-6372; Jones, J., 656-5072; Jones, T. 656-0213; LaRiccia, 651-7737; Lopez, 656-6372; Nix, 656-5146; Nguyen, 656-0314; Paris, 656-0109; Setzler.656-7857; Stovall, 656-0314; Tanner, 656-9210; and Wilson, 656-6372.

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May 2020 Newsletter

Georgia Law Does Not Prohibit Mandatory Microchip Implantation

Are microchips relevant to COVID-19?
Yes. During the 2009 – 2010 legislative session a Georgia Public Health official suggested that microchip implants in humans could be used to identify individuals infected with H1N1 swine flu. Such implanted microchips would track, gather and store uniquely personal data, to be transmitted to a microchip reader far away. Seemingly, that never became a reality.

But consider this: Since the Georgia legislature has failed, repeatedly, to prohibit involuntary microchip implantation on or inside individuals, and since a vaccine is being researched to fight COVID-19, the idea of tracking disease by microchip implants may be suggested again.

Is a microchip small enough to implant in a human body via a vaccine?
Yes. Tiny microchips dubbed “smart dust” or “powder” are small enough to incorporate into thin paper, such as currency, to create so-called “bugged” money.

ACTION – Ask Governor Kemp’s Administrative Floor Leaders to introduce and secure passage of a bill that prohibits mandatory microchip implantation. Senate Administration Floor Leaders are Senators Brian Strickland, 404 656-7454 and Blake Tillery, 656-0089. House Administrative Floor Leaders are Representatives Bert Reeves, Jodi Lott, Terry Rogers and Dominic Lariccia. All four may be reached at 404 651-7737.

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