Fox News reports that a Florida mother has made national news after advocating for a “mass exodus” from the public school system, according to the article.
In response to her passionate comments, Quisha King, a Moms for Liberty activist, got a standing ovation during a panel discussion at the Family Research Council’s annual Pray Vote Stand Summit, which took place on Thursday in Washington, D.C.
“Fighting Indoctrination on a National Scale,” the panel’s title suggested.
After the 2016 presidential election, King says, “I began to pay more attention to politics, and God spoke to my heart, telling me that my skin color had become an idol in my life.” “And it was life-changing for me because it was so profoundly accurate. I viewed everything through the lens of being black, which was an affront to God, and I was forced to evaluate everything I was doing as a result.”
In addition, King shared the story of her daughter’s unpleasant wake-up call when she returned home from her first week of eighth grade and reported that she had been asked “what pronoun she wanted to be identified by.”
“I’m like, ‘ What is going on? This is crazy!’ And so I was like, OK, just pay attention,” she continued. “I emailed the teacher; she never emailed me back. I was like, well, you know, just pay attention to what’s going on.”
King said that she had stored the event away for future reference, but the situation at the school quickly deteriorated after the strange start to the new year, according to King.
“They were supposed to be discussing books, and the books apparently had some racial themes in them well,” King continued. “[The teacher] never got to the literature of the books or the academic portion. She just started sectioning the kids in the way that she talked to them by their physical characteristics. … ‘Oh, I’m sorry, as an African-American child, how do you feel about this? So as an Asian child, how do you feel about that?’ And so on. And we had a board of education meeting in Florida to ban critical race theory, and I spoke up against it because I knew it was happening, and they were trying to tell us that this was not in schools. And I’m like, no, it is!”
King went on to say that CRT is fundamentally racist because it promotes the idea that “America is intrinsically racist.”
In her view, “Everything about it is anti-biblical, it is anti-American, and it’s just a flat-out lie,” she insisted. “It’s just not true. You cannot have a country that has been moving towards racial reconciliation literally from its beginnings, if you really really dig into the history, and say that America is intrinsically racist. Those two things just don’t go together.”
A second warning came from King, who said that CRT and its toxic tentacles had been slowly infiltrating many areas of life while staying virtually unnoticed.
“I don’t think parents realize just how pervasive it is. I know in Duval County, I found critical race theory workshops and events as far back as 2011,” she said. “So I think understanding that they are not kidding, this is not going away, the enemy has no chill and is advancing forward as fast — we can see.”
After that, she spoke about the recent order issued by Attorney General Merrick Garland allowing federal authorities to cooperate on the local level in order to monitor the “disturbing spike” of what is considered to be trouble-making parents during heated school board meetings.
“I mean, you’re at home trying to make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for your kids, and the FBI could be knocking at your door because you might have said the wrong thing at a school board meeting,” she said. “These people — they’re serious. They want to silence us and shut us down. I really think at this point, the only thing to do is have a mass exodus from the public school system. That’s it.”
After a long round of applause, the audience rose to their feet and gave a standing ovation to the speaker.
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