GSA Clubs Smuggle Gender Ideology into K-12 Education
Radical gender theory has made sudden inroads in America s schools. Many parents have watched in confusion as their children repeat the movement s slogans and adopt synthetic sexual identities such as non-binary, pansexual, and genderqueer. The next question for many families is: Where does this surge in left-wing sexual ideology come from? One answer: from a network of professional activists, who have smuggled university-style gender theory into more than 4,000 schools under the cover of gender and sexuality clubs, or GSAs.
The main national organization behind this campaign, the GSA Network, is a professionally staffed nonprofit with a multimillion-dollar annual budget. GSA Network serves as an umbrella organization for more than 4,000 gender and sexuality alliances across 40 states. Once called the Gay-Straight Alliance Network, the group rebranded in 2016, reflecting a new focus on the limits of a binary gender system. The individual chapters, which operate in elementary, middle, and high schools, often use the language of LGBTQ inclusion and anti-bullying in their public relations, but behind the scenes, the central organization is driven by pure left-wing radicalism that extends far beyond sexuality.
According to the organization s publicly accessible materials and administrative documents, the GSA Network s ideology follows the basic framework of radical gender theory: white European men created an oppressive system based on capitalism, white supremacy, and heteronormativity that is, the promotion of heterosexuality, the male-female binary, and bourgeois family norms. In order to fight back, racial and sexual minorities must unite under the banner of intersectionality and dismantle the interlocking systems of oppression.
Christopher Rufo.
According to one old friend with kids still in school, a popular set of pronouns for 5th grade boys is “dem/nuts.” Also mentioned was the concept of identifying as an “attack helicopter.” Obviously this is unacceptable. The FBI has not yet commented on whether these young persons should be considered domestic terrorists.