Canada forces children to attend school sodomy clubs

Started by rmstock, April 12, 2017, 06:16:09 PM

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rmstock


Canada forces children to attend school sodomy clubs
by Pravda Report , Published on Apr 12, 2017
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVYAu1FDadc
  "The Canadian Minister of Education has banned schools from saying
   parents that their children are made to visit Gay Straight Alliance
   clubs. David Eggen has sent a letter to all the schools in the province
   of Alberta, where he has forbidden to inform parents that their
   children go to 'Homosexual ideology' clubs. [ ... ] "



Canada forces children to attend school sodomy clubs
12.04.2017
http://www.pravdareport.com/video/12-04-2017/137477-education-0/

  "The Canadian Minister of Education has banned schools from saying
   parents that their children are made to visit Gay Straight Alliance
   clubs. David Eggen has sent a letter to all the schools in the province
   of Alberta, where he has forbidden to inform parents that their
   children go to 'Homosexual ideology' clubs.
   
   The Canadian legislation requires today all the schools, including
   Christian ones, to create clubs 'for popularization of nonstandard
   relations'. However, the Canadian law has not specified yet whether
   parents should be informed about their children's visiting such clubs.
   Thus, a scandal has broken in Canada. The reason is statement of a new
   leader of the local Progressive Conservative Party Jason Kenney who has
   supported right of parents to know about membership of their children
   in school clubs 'on promotion of nonstandard alliances'.
   
   In response, the local Education Minister has called such
   'conservative' stance to be an 'extremist' one. In order to keep a
   tight rein on schools, he has immediately sent a letter to all the
   educational institutions of Alberta which strictly bans parents from
   being notified of their children's visiting school clubs on propaganda
   of nonstandard relations. Private Christian schools are not excused
   from creating alike clubs either.
   
   Pravda.Ru "

``I hope that the fair, and, I may say certain prospects of success will not induce us to relax.''
-- Lieutenant General George Washington, commander-in-chief to
   Major General Israel Putnam,
   Head-Quarters, Valley Forge, 5 May, 1778

rmstock


Kenney: Parents should be told if child joins gay-straight alliance
JAMES WOOD, CALGARY HERALD
More from James Wood, Calgary Herald
Published on: March 28, 2017 | Last Updated: March 29, 2017 9:10 AM MDT
http://calgaryherald.com/news/politics/kenney-parents-should-be-told-if-child-joins-gay-straight-alliance

  "
   Alberta's new Progressive Conservative leader, Jason Kenney, on Tuesday
   March 28, 2017, during an editorial board meeting with Postmedia
   Calgary. AL CHAREST / POSTMEDIA

   
   New Tory Leader Jason Kenney says parents should be notified if their
   children join a gay-straight alliance at school and the NDP government
   should take a less confrontational approach with holdout schools on
   LGBTQ issues.

   
   In an editorial board with Postmedia in Calgary on Tuesday, Kenney —
   who won the Progressive Conservative leadership just over a week ago —
   reiterated that if he becomes premier he will not repeal Bill 10,
   legislation passed in 2015 under the former PC government that mandates
   school boards allow gay-straight alliances where they are requested by
   students.
   
   "I do, however, believe parents have a right to know what's going on
   with their kids in the schools unless the parents are abusive," said
   Kenney, an MP for nearly two decades before entering provincial
   politics.
   
   "I don't think it's right to keep secrets from parents about challenges
   their kids are going through."
   
   The issue of parental notification around GSAs — student-led clubs
   aimed at reducing bullying of LGBTQ students — has been contentious,
   with advocates suggesting it could lead to gay students being outed to
   their parents without their consent.
   
   Gordon Dirks, who was PC education minister when Bill 10 was passed,
   said at the time that the law did not require parental notification if
   a student started or joined a GSA.
   
   The law also requires school boards — but not private schools — to
   create an inclusive environment for students and staff, and adopt a
   code of conduct that forbids discrimination based on sexual orientation
   and gender identity.
   
   After taking office in 2015, the NDP issued guidelines for school
   boards to develop policy around protecting LGBTQ students, with all
   boards required to submit draft plans last year.
   
   NDP Education Minister David Eggen last week issued a ministerial order
   telling two Edmonton-based Baptist Schools to comply with the School
   Act, which states students must be allowed to form a gay-straight
   alliance if they request one.
   
   The schools have said they will neither allow GSAs nor submit a policy,
   but that they are compliant with the law because they have no LGBTQ
   students or requests for GSAs.
   
   An independent report commissioned by Eggen urged the government to
   close the "significant gap" in legislation to end the private school
   exemption around creating an inclusive environment.
   
   RELATED   
   Kenney rules out O'Leary as Conservative leader
   Human rights advocates call for clearer language in policies protecting
   LGBTQ students

   
   Kenney said the NDP government shouldn't be taking an "adversarial or
   aggressive approach" to the dispute with the two schools and should be
   trying to seek a "sensitive compromise that can ensure the safety of
   students and respect parental authority, as well."
   
   He said such issues can be dealt with primarily at the local level.
   
   "I believe that principals, teachers, parents, can come up with
   sensible, practical, safe, compassionate solutions to these issues
   without them all being dictated by politicians in the legislature,"
   said Kenney.
   
   Eggen was not made available for an interview Tuesday but in a
   statement said "the law is the law."
   
   "I will always stand up for students. Standing up for students is the
   responsible, fair and right thing to do," he said.
   
   Eggen also said that when it comes to parental notification around
   GSAs, the government tries to work closely with parents around all
   aspects of education.
   
   "In extraordinary circumstances, some students cannot talk to their
   parents about being in a GSA, so this would be putting students in an
   unsafe environment," he said.
   
   At the March 18 PC leadership convention, Kenney won 75 per cent of
   delegates after running on a platform of unifying the PCs with the
   Wildrose in a new party.
   
   He met with Wildrose Leader Brian Jean last week and the two men agreed
   to set up a joint discussion group to come up with a unity agreement,
   with the group expected to report back by the end of April.
   
   While Jean has said that he wants unification done with Wildrose as the
   legal framework, Kenney said Tuesday that the Wildrose leader never
   raised the idea during their meeting.
   
   "I can't see the members of either party supporting the notion of
   migrating over to the legal platform of the other party," he said.
   
   "Anything that looks like sort of abject surrender in this process is
   not going to be supported."
   
   In a statement, Jean said the meeting with Kenney was focused on "how
   to work collaboratively on the discussion of unity and nothing else."
   
   "Clear communication with members and not negotiating through the media
   should be our top priority and I know Mr. Kenney agrees with that
   sentiment," said Jean, adding that Wildrose members on the discussion
   group will raise important issues, such as "preserving our grassroots
   way of doing things and preserving our principles."
   
   While Kenney has called for the creation of a new party — in part
   because Elections Alberta has said there is no mechanism for parties to
   merge and transferring assets between parties is illegal — a group of
   conservative lawyers last week issued a report opining that the PCs and
   Wildrose could be legally amalgamated as societies or non-profits.
   
   Kenney told the editorial board he wants an official ruling from the
   province's chief electoral officer on the lawyers' memorandum to
   determine whether there is a path forward for a merger.
   
   jwood@postmedia.com "

``I hope that the fair, and, I may say certain prospects of success will not induce us to relax.''
-- Lieutenant General George Washington, commander-in-chief to
   Major General Israel Putnam,
   Head-Quarters, Valley Forge, 5 May, 1778