Parents furious over school’s plan to teach gender spectrum fluidity:

“One of the nation’s largest public school systems is preparing to include gender identity to its classroom curriculum, including lessons on sexual fluidity and spectrum – the idea that there’s no such thing as 100 percent boys or 100 percent girls.

Fairfax County Public Schools released a report recommending changes to their family life curriculum for grades 7 through 12. The changes, which critics call radical gender ideology, will be formally introduced next week.”

Progressives are so excited to celebrate gender fluidity that they are willing to accept a young child as transgendered based solely on the child's own account and perspective; this same child is not able to legally make any other serious decisions for themselves.

Adolescence is naturally a time of confusion and insecurity. While most adolescents will feel reasonably comfortable within the typical parameters of their biological gender, now the female tomboy or the awkward kid bullied by his masculine peers may consider themselves “gender confused” through suggestion by-way of the Education they receive in their Public School.

While homosexuality has definite markers, namely feeling attracted to fellow members of the same sex, what places an individual on the spectrum of being transgendered is a grey area; how uncomfortable does a person need to be within the confines of their biological gender to qualify as gender confused, and does what motivates such discomfort resonate as valid or invalid when considering if someone is “authentically gender mismatched” or merely confused about their own confusion?

With new education, media promotion, progressives tripping over themselves to give and receive massive high-fives, why wouldn’t a depressed adolescent- possibly bullied, possibly sexually rejected, possibly unathletic, or possibly overly athletic- consider the possibility of a gender mismatch, and in doing so, possibly commit to a lifetime of dissatisfaction and confusion?

Full Blog: Tolerance Versus Promotion: Caitlyn Jenner and Defining Courage