|
Sen. Robert Antonioni, the Senate Chairman of the Education Committee, told a radical homosexual group that he would support homosexual programs in the school and STOP the parents' rights bill -- and that the House Chairmen, Rep. Patricia Haddad, would help him. THEY, AND THE REST OF THE COMMITTEE, MUST HEAR FROM YOU.
Right now, this is the most important bill before the Education Committee:
The new parents’ rights opt-in bill. S321 (click for more info).This bill is the homosexual movement's worst nightmare because it gives PARENTS, not homosexual activists, the power over what children are exposed to..
This bill has been sent to a "study", and it's therefore stalled indefinitely.
WE WANT THIS BILL OUT OF THE STUDY AND BROUGHT FORWARD TO THE FULL LEGISLATURE!
What it's all about . . .
Last month, in the David Parker case, a federal judge ruled that the parents have NO RIGHTS to even be informed or have their children opt-out of homosexual programs in our schools, because the current laws are DO NOT protect them! WE NEED the new Parents' Rights bill! But the homosexual lobby and the sex-ed lobby are viciously opposed to it.
What to do:
Antonioni and Haddad, the Senate and House chairmen, effectively make the decisions as to which bills live . . . and which die. Unfortunately, both of them (1) are pretty clearly in the tank with the teachers' unions and the homosexual lobby. And both of them (2) have an extremely condescending attitude toward parents with traditional values.
DON'T LET THAT STOP YOU. Call both of them (see list above) and demand that they pay attention to parents and citizens, not special interests. Bill S321 must be brought OUT of study and passed. Period.
And also call the other members of the committee and tell them the same thing. The other members do have some influence in the decision of whether the bills get to go before the full Legislature or effectively die.
What's it like calling a legislator's office? You may get the legislator himself, but you'll probably get an aide. Be firm. Use your own words. Make sure the person knows exactly what you want.
If the legislator is your own rep or senator, try to make an appointment to talk to the legislator personally. They usually don't want to talk to pesky constituents, but don't let that stop you.
|