Activities against the inclusion of LGBTQ propaganda in the compulsory curriculum of primary schools in the Czech Republic are gaining momentum. There will be talks, protests, petitions and demonstrations. Hundreds of hours of work will be put in and the only thing that will be achieved is a postponement for a year or two. Everyone knows that the progressives will win in the end (just as they have won all previous disputes). It’s really just a feel-good “we did everything we could.”

They just didn’t do everything they could! If I do something that I know in advance won’t work, instead of doing what will work, then I haven’t done everything.

And no great relief would be provided by abolishing compulsory attendance at such classes. Don’t their classmates tell them what it was about? Or won’t the propaganda reach them otherwise? Healthy kids will laugh at it. Those who are going through a difficult time, they will be equally or almost equally at risk.

Fortunately, there is a positive way. Giving children the foundations to be able to defend themselves. And this way is also much less politically controversial.

That is, already sometime in 10 years the child should know:

  • What DNA and chromosomes are, how it works. They don’t need to know the complicated words, but they need to understand how those things work in the human body.
  • How the human brain develops, and how it’s shaped in pregnancy and early childhood
  • How male and female brains differ
  • How what happens in the body relates to what happens in the brain, and vice versa.
    … and maybe a few other things.

This is enough to make one resistant to the lies about 76 sexes or that a male soul can reside in a female body. But it’s critically important that kids learn this before they encounter LGBTQ propaganda.

But that’s a terrible job. Figuring out how to explain it to young children. To test it. To try more and more variations. Build programs around it. Create workbooks and other educational materials. Thousands and thousands of hours on the computer. The tedious work of not being reassured that you’re saving the world.

But it would work.

You can buy me a coffee here.

 

 

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