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Parents be aware that your kids are in LGBTQ clubs in the public schools, and schools aren't telling the parents.

If you want your kids not to participate tell the school and your kids.
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If the parents don’t know their kid is in one of these, there’s probably a good reason.

There are also Christian clubs. If a kid with atheist parents is in one of these, should the school inform them? Assume the parents will forbid the kid from participating if they know about it.
Carazaa · F
@LeopoldBloom Nope not true!
basilfawlty89 · 31-35, M
@Carazaa can you disprove his claim?

Are you denying that are Christians who are abusive towards their homosexual children?
If so, you might want to read the link I posted.

You also are strangely quiet about religious clubs in school.
@Carazaa What isn't true? If parents have an open, accepting relationship with their child, the kid is going to tell them that they want to use a different name or different pronouns. If they don't have that relationship, it's not the school's job to put the kid in potential danger.

You didn't answer the question. If a kid with liberal, atheist parents joins the Christian club at school, should the school inform the parents? Even if the result will be that the kid won't be allowed to attend club meetings or socialize with his Christian friends. After all, if parents are 100% responsible for their kids, that should include views you personally disagree with, right?
Carazaa · F
@LeopoldBloom Schools have been taken over by Satan and there aren't hardly any christian prayer groups there anymore!
basilfawlty89 · 31-35, M
@Carazaa that's deflection. Why don't you want to answer his question?
@Carazaa There shouldn't be Christian prayer groups in public schools, any more than there should be Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu, Jewish, or any other prayer groups. The US is not a Christian theocracy where Christianity is entitled to special treatment. If a public school allows one religion to use its facilities, it has to allow all of them.

OK, you're not going to answer the question, so I'll rephrase. Let's say a kid with atheist parents starts telling everyone in school that he's a born-again Christian. Are the teachers obligated to tell his parents?
Carazaa · F
@LeopoldBloom There should be prayer in school and Bible reading I think. When prayer and the pledge was in schools depression was rare. When prayer and the pledge went out of schools Satan entered and school shootings , depression, sexual confusion, and suicide went up so LGBDQ groups and therapy was introduced. Schools are at a loss, teachers are quitting, kids don't want to go to school, and grades are dropping. Suicide is increasing like never before!!. So now you know!
@Carazaa But you would need prayer for all religions, not just Christianity. The reason those were taken out of school is because schools aren't homogenous. In the Los Angeles school district alone, students come from families where over 140 different languages are spoken. You can't just pick one Christian denomination at random and impose that on everyone by force. Also, who leads the prayer? If the teacher is a Muslim or a Scientologist, would you want your kids to be forced to say those prayers? You probably wouldn't even want Catholic or Orthodox prayers.

School shootings, "sexual confusion" (which isn't a thing) and suicide weren't caused by prayer being taken out of school. Kids are still allowed to pray privately, what's prohibited is teacher-led prayer. This protects you as well since you don't have to be subjected to non-Christian prayer.

I'm pretty sure many schools still have the Pledge of Allegiance. I do remember how Jehovah's Witness kids wouldn't say it, and how other kids abused them for it.

And I guess you're just not going to answer the question of whether a teacher should report to a kid's atheist parents that their kid is saying he's a Christian at school. Apparently, you only favor reporting when the parents agree with you.
basilfawlty89 · 31-35, M
@Carazaa what does the pledge of allegiance have to do with religion? I'd rather my kid not be exposed to jingoism.
@basilfawlty89 It's now effectively a prayer since they added "under God" in the 1950s.
@Carazaa Guess what, the first amendment forbids prayer in schools, or anything else religious.