Call to Action: Relative To Prohibiting Obscene or Harmful Sexual Materials in Schools

by
Steve MacDonald

You live in a strange world when existing laws regarding obscenity and age-appropriate material are ineffectual at preventing adults from exposing children to explicit sexual content. But that’s where we are. If you want to show porn to kids, work in a public school.

That’s a great loophole, given that the majority of pedophiles try to find work in public schools. That’s where the children are, by law, they have to be there, and in some states, they make it as difficult as possible to let them out of that paddock. Homeschools, private schools, and charter schools are constantly under attack from a government more interested in how it has deformed education than anything that amounts to learning.

And ironically, not all porn is allowed in schools, but that is not book banning.

Into this circus atmosphere comes HB 1419, an act “relative to prohibiting obscene or harmful sexual materials in schools.” [Public Hearing: 01/18/2024 09:30 am LOB 205-207] It defines and outlines things that are otherwise common sense definitions reiterated to make the educator-class understand that showing kids cartoons of sex (or descriptions of same) is inappropriate, mentally disturbing, and should be illegal (generalized for brevity).

Call to Action! – Keep reading past the video to see how you can help right now!

Again, why we have to do this is a question that can only be answered by groomers and pedos in the public schools and their political progressive defenders. The latter will be nearly universal in their opposition, which will make for good copy.

Democrats insist on exposing kids to sexually explicit content. Something that, outside the school room, gets you arrested. If you are unclear about the distinction, Allison Dyer of Nashua made time to frame that distinction in a recent video.

 

And fear not, groomers and pedos, and those with Munchhaeus by proxy, you can still order these ‘books,’ just like 50 Shades of Gray, online, allowing you unfettered access in seconds (digitally) or a day or two (for hard copy fans). Just don’t go thinking you can walk up to some kid at random and share it with them. As Allison points out, that might get you arrested.

Now!

Would you like to help advance this bill? You can without leaving the comfort of wherever you feel comfortable using your phone, laptop, or desktop PC. Heck, you can do it if you’re uncomfortable or pleasantly indifferent to your current state.

  • Click this link to go to the NH House calendar.
  • Scroll down and select “Remote Sign In”
  • Fill in the requested information, Name, Address, etc.
  • On the Calendar below those fields select January 18th
  • Scroll down and using the drop-down, choose the education committee.
  • Choose Bill number HB1419.
  • Identify yourself (as a member of the public unless you are one of the other selections).
  • Select ‘I support the Bill” – then scroll to the bottom and click submit.

You don’t have to write or say anything, but we’d appreciate it if you would share this post or the link everywhere. A strong showing of support from NH Residents is essential to help move this legislation forward.

The Dems do this with a passion, so we must too. The Children need us to defend them. I hope you’ll help.

 

 

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, blogger, and a member of the Board of directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor of GraniteGrok.com, a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, and a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

Share to...