Here's how you re-educate schools and protect your kids



Between the LGBTQ+ and race-obsessed agendas, public academic environments are no longer safe for children.

Parents have to take matters into their own hands in order to protect their kids because the school system clearly isn’t going to.

“These government schools, they don’t care,” Sara Gonzales says. “So, what is it going to take? Is it parents showing up en masse because, I mean, if it’s me and it’s my child who has to deal with a dude in a dress, I’m like my husband is showing up and dealing with that.”

Host of “The Bottom Line” Jaco Booyens is in full agreement.

“If you don’t love your kids, keep doing what you’re doing,” Booyens says, noting that the reason we’re in this situation is because “the people are complicit.”

“Why do I have to convince a parent to make time to defend their kids?” he asks.

BlazeTV contributor Eric July doesn’t have kids yet, but when he does, he doesn’t plan to stand back.

“I’m going to be way more aggressive on this issue, trust me, when I start to have children. But here’s the thing, if not for your children, then who the hell else would you do it for? Man, it’s sickening,” he says.

“We should have parents banging down these doors saying ‘Get this man the hell away from my kids,’” Gonzales adds in agreement.

To see more, watch the clip below.


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Squires: Toxic mothers are as bad for children as absent fathers



The impact absent fathers have on the social and emotional development of children has been a topic of discussion for decades. Dads who abandon their responsibilities to protect and provide for their children are rightly criticized by those who care about the well-being of kids.

There is another side of the coin regarding the health and wellness of our children that gets a lot less attention. There is a growing body of evidence that in certain circumstances, mother presence can be just as damaging to a child as father absence.

Two videos that went viral last week serve as useful examples. One was a TikTok video of a woman giving her smiling toddler a meal that included the phrase “U PISS ME OFF” spelled out with alphabet-shaped french fries. Several people in the replies noted that the child was too young to understand the message. Others felt that children can pick up on the energy and attitude adults have toward them.

The second video showed a young boy swinging around a pole in his home with his legs spread open in the air. Many of the people replying on Twitter thought the child’s moves looked like those of a stripper. Others thought it was just innocent fun and no different from what kids do on the playground.

Both videos are a microcosm of toxic mommy syndrome (TMS), a condition in which mothers across ethnic and class lines replace the natural urge to protect and nurture their children with contempt, selfishness, and apathy.

I have no doubt that many women are stressed out and overworked at home, especially as some have had to balance child care and working from home during the pandemic. Unfortunately, TMS is far from a new phenomenon.

Feminists have been selling women the lie that marriage is oppressive, children are a barrier to self-fulfillment, and the home is a prison for decades. Women make up about 60% of college students and the majority of workers in many industries, but they also continue to be the primary caregivers for their children.

The tension created by the belief that women should have everything they want in their careers and family lives and the reality that they don’t is why the Maternal Grievance Industry is doing such big business. This is how essays about divorce as an act of “radical self-love” that makes women better mothers get printed in the Atlantic and the New York Times. It is also what fuels mommy wine clubs and other online communities that make children sound like chronic diseases that require medicinal coping strategies.

If traditional media has provided a platform for mothers to cast their children as objects of contempt, social media has made it possible for women to use their kids as sources of content. This is why videos of children twerking, cursing, and being humiliated in the name of discipline are so common on the internet.

Children are defenseless and have no say in how their image is used online. Everyone loves to see pictures and videos of kids playing and enjoying the joys of childhood. The problem arises when their misbehavior, innocence, or embarrassment is used by narcissistic adults to generate web traffic and build a brand.

Motherhood is one of the most important vocations in the world because at its core is the development and nurturing of life, both inside and outside the womb. That responsibility comes with the potential to produce both good and bad fruit. Everyone knows people who praise their mothers for being sources of love, kindness, and inspiration. Less known, or less discussed, are the people who must navigate relationships with anxious, neurotic, angry, spiteful, and indifferent mothers. Both groups leave an indelible mark on their kids.

Children’s breath always smells of their mother’s milk.

This reality has a multi-generational impact. Mothers who resent their children are unlikely to build healthy bonds with them. For girls, that means not receiving the wisdom and guidance needed during the transition from adolescence to adulthood. The Bible instructs older Christian women not to be addicted to wine and to teach younger women to love their husbands and children, be self-controlled, and be good managers of their homes. The ruling class reads those words and hears "domestic slavery," but people should rethink taking advice from anyone who uses the term “reproductive justice” as a euphemism for abortion or thinks marriage is a function of white supremacy.

For boys, a bad relationship with mom can portend difficulties with other women in the future. I have seen this play out with single mothers who felt they had to compensate for the father who wasn’t there. Sometimes it comes out in overbearing, belittling behaviors. Some mothers curse their sons and tell them all the things they won’t do in life. They unwittingly punish the son for the sins of the father. This behavior can plant a seed of confusion for boys who develop into men who hate women but are sexually attracted to them. That dynamic leads to its own cycle of chaos and dysfunction.

Parenting is hard. Having people who understand the struggles of raising children is a good thing, but the place for that is neither the homepage of World Star Hip Hop nor a cover story for Vogue magazine. Devaluing children for the sake of self-fulfillment has serious consequences for any society. That is why adults need to do what we can to make sure our kids feel loved, nurtured, and protected so that they can be whole.

Squires: Nick Cannon, COVID, and CRT prove a biblical approach to family produces superior results than the whims of culture



Entertainer Nick Cannon shares something in common with a global pandemic and the race obsession enveloping our schools.

Cannon, coronavirus, and critical race theory combine to demonstrate why a husband and wife committed to one another and their children provide the most solid foundation for future generations as well as the most flexibility in times of uncertainty.

During an interview on a popular radio show, Cannon sounded exactly like the pseudo-intellectual, anti-monogamy rock star that he is. He claimed that marriage is a "Eurocentric" practice that is rooted in property ownership. He stated that women lead in the relationship and are in control of the baby-making process. Cannon has seven children with four women. Three of his children were born less than two weeks apart. When asked how he could spend time with all his children since they are in different households, he responded that time is a "man-made construct."

Celebrity status aside, Cannon's attitudes reflect significant changes in American family life since the 1960s. Changing attitudes about marriage and its necessity before having children have had such a drastic impact on nonmarital birth rates that 40% of all children in America are now born to unwed parents. Fathers who don't live with any of their children or support multiple households can still be good dads. They just can't be there for a child who cries out in the middle of the night because of a bad dream or a high fever. They must also manage multiple relationships with their children's mothers. That means that energy, resources, and attention that could be concentrated on one household must now be shared across multiple homes.

Our society has been saturated in feminist thought for more than 60 years. A byproduct of this saturation is the notion that a woman whose primary focus is her home and children is somehow selling herself short. Vice President Kamala Harris expressed that view when she claimed that women were being "burdened" with child care responsibilities while children were learning from home due to COVID. She also stated, "Women should not have to be presented with false choices that say, 'You either have a career or you raise your children.'" She believes women should be able to do both. The view that children get in the way of a woman's career aspirations is an article of faith in our culture and an unacknowledged cornerstone of our approach to social policy.

Our culture celebrates women who run large complex enterprises, unless those enterprises are their homes. It idolizes women who dedicate their lives to educating children, unless they homeschool. It rejects the thought of women laboring under the authority of a man, unless it's her boss. It opposes any notion that a woman should have to submit to anyone, unless it's the government bureaucrat who tells her what she must do to continue receiving her benefits.

The pandemic also gave many parents a window into what their children were learning, and their response has been resounding. They are showing up at school board meetings to protest how critical race theory has been applied in the classroom. They are tired of their children being fed oppressed-oppressor narratives, and they don't want to see high standards eliminated. The education sector has been overstepping its boundaries for years, often acting as if it owns our children. "Educators" forgot that in loco parentis is Latin for "in place of a parent," not Spanish for "these crazy parents!"

This is why a stable and solid family structure is so important. Growing in our Christian faith inspired my wife and me to change our approach to family in hopes of fortifying our own foundation. My wife left her job last year after the birth of our third child, and we also decided to homeschool our children. That shift was motivated by the practical reality of child care costs. More important, however, were the spiritual realities that marriage is a lifelong covenant between two imperfect people, my duty as a husband is to provide for my household, the home is where both body and soul come for nourishment, and education is equal parts scholarship and discipleship.

Politicians may think my wife leaving her job is a setback for her as a woman. She sees it as an opportunity to pour herself into our children and shape them according to our value system, not the shifting norms of culture. Economists may think our household is going to miss out on the extra income. I believe the peace and unity of my family is far more valuable than another paycheck. Teachers' unions may claim that my kids are missing out on important socialization. I'm thankful my three-year-old won't have to explain why a classmate used the "F-word."

I'm not advocating a single approach to family life. There is more than one way to replicate the picture the Bible paints of the Christian household, where husbands provide for the home and promote the spiritual development of everyone in it, wives submit to their husbands and prioritize their homes and children, and children obey their parents and learn to get along with one another. A household like that will produce the type of love, peace, strength and order that I would want to see passed on as an inheritance to future generations.

What the culture offers is men and women motivated by selfish desires, even in marriage. The past 60 years have shown us what happens when public policy and popular culture undermine families by encouraging women to marry the government and allowing men to abandon their responsibilities to their children. These changes have been a recipe for strife, anger, bitterness, confusion, and division. Children need more than resources to become well-adjusted adults. The rates of anxiety, depression, drug use, and suicide are direct reflections on American family life. Psalm 127 begins, "Unless the Lord builds the house, the builders labor in vain." I prefer the Master's blueprint to anything the culture is trying to create.

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