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Saturday, November 2, 2024

‘The part that is the most shocking is the sex education portion’: Producer of Whose Children Are They


The documentary film Whose Children Are They, covering controversial education curriculum in schools, premiers in more than 760 theaters on March 14.

“If we want to protect small children as young as preschool from being sexualized they say that somehow we are against the LGBT agenda, which we're not,” producer and Writer Deborah Floran said in an interview with AM 560’s the Morning Answer. “There's a big difference between an adult making the lifestyle choices they want and parents being indoctrinated in particular without their parents knowledge or consent, which is what's happening across America.”

The film focuses on the incursion of sexually themed and racially-themed material in schools.

“The part that is the most shocking is the sex education portion. This is comprehensive; it's about sex education gender fluidity anti-discipline etc. but even the sex education we have to put a disclaimer in front of it saying this is for mature audiences only. But they're showing it to children across the country,” Floran, who is also the founder of Parents United America who flipped a school board in Douglas County, Colo., said

Floran said the film also tracks parents speaking up.

“What we're seeing is an uprising across the country of parents from every walk of life who are stating that –– reestablishing their rightful place to be the ultimate authority in their children's lives. We believe in partnering with teachers and the golden triangle of education are teachers and parents standing together for the good of children but teachers unions and their ideological partners have inserted themselves in that and have tried to take away the very rights of parents to even know what their children are teaching,” she said.

The documentary includes parents, students and frontline experts who are speaking out against sexualizing the school environment.

Visit the film’s website here to find one playing the film near you.

Parents locally have protested the inclusion of pornographic books in school libraries.  

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