Students to know  homosexual history, but not how to sign their name
Liberals are  always featuring education as the key to the future of America. Its an easy  sell. We all want our kids to have a good education. But when a liberal is  promoting education, he is not likely on the same page as the rest of us. The  liberal is not necessarily thinking about reading, writing and arithmetic,  unless it is in the context of how to conduct social engineering through those  subjects. Reading, for example, might be learning how to read or how to analyze  great literary works written by Marxists. Writing might be learning how to  properly extol the virtues of socialism. And math might be like how our  government does it--spending yourself into oblivion so you can be dependent on  the government.
There are  several examples of what is happening in education that have been reported this  week. The California legislature has passed a bill making it mandatory for  public schools to teach homosexual history, specifically the "Fair Education  Act." Elevating the homosexual lifestyle to the minority status of African  Americans, Hispanics and Native Americans, California lawmakers are forcing  schools to teach about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people's  contribution to history and society. One legislator objected saying that the law  promotes the homosexual agenda by teaching kids that the lifestyle is good. This  could spread across America in standard textbooks.
Blaming poor  decisions on budget cuts, Illinois will no longer test students on their writing  skills during standardized exams every spring. According to AP, Oregon and  Missouri also decided to cut out writing exams. Illinois Schools Superintendent  Christopher Koch told the Chicago Tribune that Illinois was trying to minimize  the damage of budget cuts and since the federal government does not pay for the  writing testing, it was sacrificed. Koch is saying, however, that advanced  placement students will be tested in writing, and others will be tested in the  college entrance exams. One teacher summed it up for AP, saying that not having  to focus on writing tests "offers some freedom."
It also offers  taxpayers and parents insight that they need to take greater care in knowing  what goes on at their children's schools. Some 41 states, for example, have  adopted the new Common Core Standards for English which does not require cursive  writing. With all their millions of dollars from property taxes, one would think  that we could get more out of our public schools than kids that know homosexual  history but cannot sign their name. Jesus said in Luke 17:2, "It were better for  him that a millstone were hanged about his neck and he cast into the sea, than  that he should offend (meaning entice to sin or scandalize) one of these little  ones." We need to raise our voices because ultimately we are responsible for our  children.
Have a  Blessed and Powerful Day! 
Bill Wilson
www.dailyjot.com
www.dailyjot.com
 
 
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