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Showing posts with label book bans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book bans. Show all posts

02 October 2025

Oklahoma Education Chief Who Promoted Bibles in Schools Will Resign 25SEP25

 


AND it seems he brought PORN into the office, though he feels it wasn't porn because it was just a Jackie Chan movie with some nudity in it ( self-righteous clarification ). ryan walters has a history of authoritarianism, fascism, lying, deception, manipulation and hypocrisy, some might even suggest apostasy, that is typical of self-righteous"christian" nationalist. Fortunately for Oklahoma's children he is leaving them to be raised by their parents as they see fit, not indoctrinated in "christian" nationalism as mandated by the state government. From the New York Times.....

Oklahoma Education Chief Who Promoted Bibles in Schools Will Resign


Ryan Walters had drawn criticism from liberals and conservatives alike over his push to place Bibles in classrooms and bring more prayer into public schools.


Ryan Walters, a right-wing educator who drew criticism from across the political spectrum for his efforts to inject religion into public schools, will resign from his post as Oklahoma’s school superintendent.

He will join the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a nonprofit that seeks to limit the influence of teachers’ unions, as its chief executive.

“We’re going to destroy the teachers’ unions,” he said in a Fox News appearance Wednesday. “We have seen the teachers’ unions use money and power to corrupt our schools.”

The resignation is expected to take effect by the end of the month.

Mr. Walters was elected state superintendent in 2022. Throughout his tenure, he staked out conservative positions that often drew national controversy. In June 2024, for example, he issued a directive that all Oklahoma public schools must teach the Bible, including the Ten Commandments.

He recently said that all Oklahoma high schools would have a chapter of Turning Point USA, the right-wing youth group founded by Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated earlier this month. And during his tenure, the state adopted social studies learning standards that echoed President Trump’s claims of voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election.

When President Trump was assembling his current cabinet, Mr. Walters was discussed as a possible nominee for secretary of education. He has also indicated interest in running for governor. He was clearly politically ambitious, but consistently drew criticism from liberals and also some conservatives. They worried that his policies blurred the separation of church and state, and injected ideology into the classroom.

He announced this year that Oklahoma would require teacher job candidates from out of state to pass a test meant to screen for what he called “woke indoctrination.”

Mr. Walters, 40, is the son of an Oklahoma minister. He began his career as a celebrated Advanced Placement history and government teacher in his hometown, McAlester, Okla. At the time, he kept his personal beliefs fairly quiet. He ascended into politics after taking a role leading an education nonprofit focused on issues like expanding access to charter schools and private-school vouchers.

In his political career, he has been a champion of a rising movement of younger Christian conservatives who seek to inject religion into public life. He has spoken about his own churchgoing and his belief in traditional family structures. He has also said that he was shaped by the experience of seeing social studies educators across the country push liberal ideas into the classroom, including critiques of the nation’s founding.

His tenure as state superintendent has been rocky, and his policies have regularly put Oklahoma’s schools at the center of the nation’s culture wars.

Mr. Walters promoted prayer in schools and sought to remove classic works of literature from libraries, deeming them pornographic. He supported a plan for a publicly funded religious charter school in Oklahoma, but the Supreme Court rejected the plan earlier this year.

He has also been accused of running a disorganized state education department, and has had trouble holding onto staff.

Most recently, he has had a tense relationship with members of the state Board of Education, the body he leads. The board met without him several weeks ago, after he was accused of having inappropriate material playing on his office television during an official meeting. After an investigation, the Oklahoma County sheriff called the incident “purely an accident,” and said the images were from a Jackie Chan movie.

The organization Mr. Walters is joining, the Teacher Freedom Alliance, was founded this year by the Freedom Foundation, a conservative group that seeks to limit the influence of public sector unions.

Aaron Withe, chief executive of the Freedom Foundation, said Mr. Walters would help raise up a grass-roots movement of teachers hoping to stop paying union dues, in part because of the unions’ support for liberal politics.

He said the Teacher Freedom Alliance would provide its members with liability coverage and access to alternative professional development opportunities aligned with conservative goals, like maintaining stricter classroom discipline.

He declined to name the group’s financial backers.

Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, the nation’s second-largest teachers’ union, pointed out that education remains the nation’s most heavily unionized profession.

She celebrated Mr. Walters’ resignation as “a good day for Oklahoma’s kids.”

“It’s no surprise that Mr. Walters, after failing on the job, is leaving the state,” she added.

In Oklahoma, many of the battles Mr. Walters waged are not over.

Summer Boismier was teaching high school English in Norman, Okla. in 2022 when a parent complained about her effort to refer students to books that the state had banned, by providing them with a QR code for the Brooklyn Public Library in New York.

Ms. Boismier resigned, and Mr. Walters called for the state Board of Education to revoke her teaching certificate, which the board did last year. Ms. Boismier is suing to have her certification reinstated, and said she hopes to teach again in Oklahoma.

She said Mr. Walters’ leadership had been “symptomatic of a larger coordinated effort to dismantle public education and silence dissent.”

The state law she was accused of violating, HB 1775, limits what educators can teach about race and gender, and is similar to dozens of laws in other states.

Debates over free speech and the school curriculum have become increasingly national in scope. The Trump administration is withholding funding from schools and colleges that have diversity programs that the administration opposes, and it has sought to drive television personalities who are critical of the president off the air.

Dana Goldstein covers education and families for The Times. 

A version of this article appears in print on Sept. 26, 2025, Section A, Page 17 of the New York edition with the headline: Education Chief Who Pushed Bibles in Schools Will ResignOrder Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe



07 May 2025

Voters fire book banners in Texas school board elections! & Texas voters oust book-banning school board members in major suburban shakeup 6MAI25



 THERE is hope for Texas, election results like this prove when provided with the facts and especially when their children are at risk voters will do the right thing and vote out fascist authoritarians and "christian" nationalist. This from Daily KOS and MSN.....

Voters fire book banners in Texas school board elections

Afshi Charania and Angie Wierzbicki won trustee elections to the Fort Bend ISD school board on May 3, 2025.
Afshi Charania and Angie Wierzbicki won trustee positions in the Fort Bend Independent School District on May 3, 2025. Both pledged to work against book banning policies promoted by the trustees. Formerly, the book banners held a 5-2 majority on the board, but the election of Charanis and Wierzbicki means that the board is now tilted 4-3 in favor of pro-student and pro-educator trustees. Unlike some elections which require 50% or more to avoid a runoff, the results shown are final.

Texas suburban voters removed hard-line book banners from a number of suburban Houston school boards. See article. 

In Fort Bend County Independent School District (FBISD), Afshi Charania and Angie Wierzbicki won election as trustees. Charania defeated incumbent Rick Garcia who supported what district librarians described as the “most restrictive” book policy. Wierzbicki defeated Cheryl Buford, who was hand-picked by outgoing board member David Hamilton who championed book banning. (I made a very modest effort to help by distributing Afshi and Angie door hangers to about 120 homes.) 

In Katy ISD, board president and book-banner Victor Perez lost to former principal James Cross. In Clear Creek ISD, Rebecca Lilley defeated incumbent book banner Scott Bowen. In Humble ISD, Brittnai Brown won election over Ken Kirchhofer and Tracy Shannon. Shannon, who declared herself to be in favor of banning 1,000 books, was backed by the Republican Party. Fort Bend, Katy, Clear Creek, and Humble ISD are all in the Houston area. 

Texas voters oust book-banning school board members in major suburban shakeup

Story by Faith Bugenhagen
 • 1d
Voters in suburban Texas, including the Houston area, came out handily over the weekend to vote out school board trustees touting book removals across districts and elect first-time candidates in opposition of such removals—a clear protest against titles flying off school library and classroom shelves.

In one of the most closely watched races, Katy ISD board president Victor Perez lost his seat to longtime educator and former principal James Cross. During his tenure, Perez led a hardline conservative push to remove books deemed sexually explicit or related to gender identity and sexuality, and backed a contracted policy requiring teachers to inform parents if a student asked to use a different name or pronouns. 

In a string of emails, Perez pushed for Sherman Alexie's Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian to be taken off district shelves despite a committee in place to make such decisions. When reminded by Superintendent Ken Gregorski that the book had already been challenged and determined appropriate for instruction by a book review group, Perez wrote in an email that the book "is clearly promoting the idea that white people are racist and oppressors."

In Fort Bend ISD, incumbent Rick Garcia, who supported passing what district librarians described as one of Texas's "most restrictive" book policies, lost to new-comer Afshi Charania. Charania has served on the FBISD Facilities Steering Committee, the Fort Bend Chamber of Commerce and the local Homeowners Association, among other organizations.

Although Trustee David Hamilton announced he would be resigning his seat on the board before the contest, Saturday's election dealt him a devastating blow.

Hamilton, who spearheaded the book policy, which prohibits any title that "advocates or promotes" racial, ethnic, sex-based or religious stereotypes, sexual activity or illegal actions by minors like drug usage, backed Cheryl Buford. Buford received Hamilton's hand-pick to take over his work within the district.

Buford was defeated by FBISD parent Angie Wierzbicki, who spoke out against the book policy at a board meeting last year and rebuked Hamilton for being behind many of the district's book review requests.

Wierzbicki said of Hamilton's action, "If that is not driving an agenda—I don't know what is."

Challenger Brittnai Brown claimed victory against incumbent Ken Kirchhofer and opponent Tracy Shannon—who previously stated she was behind more than 1,000 book removals in the district. Despite Shannon collecting support from the GOP, she could not win against Brown.

New-comer Rebecca Lilley defeated Clear Creek ISD Scott Bowen, a staunch supporter of the crackdown on titles in his local public library. Bowen was endorsed for re-election by notable GOP names, including state reps. Dennis Paul, Terri Leo Wilson and state senator Mayes Middleton.

Trends of victories in 2022 for Christian Nationalist phone company Patriot Mobile-backed candidates halted Saturday night, with most of the candidates propped up by the conservative PAC losing within significantly wide margins.

The pattern started with Keller ISD, a known hyper-conservative board built by Patriot Mobile, where all of the candidates favored by the board’s Patriot Mobile-backed group lost. All three Patriot Mobile-favored Mansfield ISD candidates, Craig Tipping, Keziah Valdes Farrar and Bianca Benavides Anderson, were also defeated.

In Grapevine-Colleyville ISD, Trustee Tammy Nakamura, who led the charge against books and kept a list of "poisoned" educators she wanted to run out of the district, failed to hold onto her seat despite PAC's $50,000 in support.

Another group, CAZ consulting firm, led by Chris Zook Jr., leader of the pro-voucher group Texas For Educational Freedom, lost heavily Saturday night after providing services to several Houston-area candidates. CAZ usually wins big in such elections, having worked to support candidates like Conroe ISD's self-described "mama bears" in past contests.

Other extremist groups, such as the True Texas Project and Moms For Liberty, also threw their hats in the ring by recommending candidates for the suburban school board contests. All but five of the 25 True Texas Project candidates lost, and Moms for Liberty candidates were defeated in Liberty Hill, Humble and Katy.

"Voters across Texas clearly and consistently punished the people who have been restricting students' reading and learning," said Frank Strong, Co-founder of Texas Freedom to Read Project. "They delivered a message: Texans are sick of book bans, sick of attacks on educators and librarians, sick of leaders waging culture war battles at the expense of good governance."

While incumbents and challengers supporting book removals and other hot-button culture war issues lost across the board, candidates who community members say will either maintain the conservative status quo or endorse such issues won in Dripping Springs ISD, Eanes ISD, Northwest ISD, and Spring Branch ISD. 

06 July 2023

Are Moms For Liberty Hitler Stans? Could Be! (THEY DID QUOTE HITLER FAVORABLY!!!!!) 22JUN23

Credit: Twitter

 QUELLE SUPRISE is right!!!! There neo-nazi fascist Fotzen just tipped their hand, like we didn't know they are extreme, bigoted, ignorant fascist Hundinnen before this faux pas? They are also getting in bed with the proud boys and rfk jr, all known American fascist. This from Crooks & Liars.....

Are Moms For Liberty Hitler Stans? Could Be!

Moms For Liberty, an extremist group, isn't very inclusive as Republicans close the tent to their party and welcome the ladies who are against LGBT rights, race, and critical race theory. Anti-woke Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-Meatball) was the keynote speaker at the three-day Moms For Liberty conference in Tampa in 2022.

They aren't fans of President Biden. One chapter chair claimed last month that Biden wants to turn kids gay to hurt conservatives. And just like that, everyone was so gay that rainbows shot of our eyes.

But they do appear to be fans of Adolph Hitler's quotes.

IndyStar reports:

The Hamilton County chapter of Moms for Liberty, a national organization recently listed as an "extremist group" by a civil rights watchdog, introduced its first newsletter Wednesday, The Parent Brigade. Adolf Hitler was quoted on its front cover.

Just below The Parent Brigade's masthead was a quote Hitler used at a Nazi rally in 1935: "He alone, who OWNS the youth, GAINS the future." The pages of the newsletter were posted on the group's Facebook page.

Late Wednesday night, the front page of the newsletter was updated to include what is described as "context" for the Hitler quote.

"The quote from a horrific leader should put parents on alert," the update says. "If the government has control over our children today, they control our country's future. We The People must be vigilant and protect children from an overreaching government."

This is apparently referring to Southern Law Poverty Center designating them as an extremist group.

Below Hitler's words on the original front page appeared a message from Moms for Liberty national co-founders Tiffany Justice and Tina Descovich, with the headline: "Moms for Liberty will not be intimidated by hate groups!"

No takey backsies:

A more likely scenario is that they added "context" after getting caught quoting Hitler to advance their agenda.

They've made themselves comfortable with other extremist groups.

Dear Conservatives, You don't have a good history with this sort of thing. I think it would be best if you never mentioned Hitler again. RFK Jr. has compared COVID-19 Mask Mandates to Nazi Experiments. You can have him. We don't want him. You're welcome!