Y'know, I've never heard a LGBTQRSTUVWXYZ person throw a conniption fit over how schools were "grooming" kids to be cishetero by exposing them to, say, Shakespeare.
Y'know, I've never heard a LGBTQRSTUVWXYZ person throw a conniption fit over how schools were "grooming" kids to be cishetero by exposing them to, say, Shakespeare.
Good to know. I’ve told my story previously probably in this thread or others….& they all run together so I don’t remember which one & where.You're assuming a school is.
They're not.
In this case the school knew full well what was going on, for years, & the intimidation techniques involved by this child that was two years older than my Nephew & three years older than my Son, years older and inches taller and pounds heavier than all the victims.Maybe, or maybe such things already exist, where a school acts without a parent's say so immediately, in the best interest of the kid.
Fuck up like beating them up? Beat my Nephew with a boot in the boot room, etc…& the rest got punished with beat downs and shake downs? Like that kind of lucky?Again, happens a lot in real life. Happens to kids in school too. You never had one kid fuck up in your class and all of you get punished somehow for it? If not, you were lucky.
Good to know. I’ve told my story previously probably in this thread or others….& they all run together so I don’t remember which one & where.
My Son was being Bullied, this was 25yrs ago (& two years into this bullying, of both he and his cousin…my nephew…& many many other children). It was bad, & kids have their own institutionalized code of “Don’t be a rat & snitches get stitches, etc…” just like inmates do.
In this case the school knew full well what was going on, for years, & the intimidation techniques involved by this child that was two years older than my Nephew & three years older than my Son, years older and inches taller and pounds heavier than all the victims.
The School did what was in the best interests of the School, not the students, to make the least waves from the outside.
Fuck up like beating them up? Beat my Nephew with a boot in the boot room, etc…& the rest got punished with beat downs and shake downs? Like that kind of lucky?
One day my Son had had enough of being bullied….for years. And mid bully session he took down his bully and whaled on him, and had to be pulled off by a teacher and “Playground Supervisor”….& it was after that…that the school finally contacted me, to say that this had transpired and perhaps my Son needed Anger Management Counselling?
Two Freak’n YEARS of this before he took down and took out his bully that was three years older than him in Elementary School. The Teachers & other School Staff knew, & decided what was in THEIR bests interests as to what the parents like me should know. That was some kind of lucky.
I asked for a meeting with the school principal & this other child’s parents. What I got was a “supervised” meeting with the Principal & one police officer who wouldn’t talk, or sit, and made a point, indoors, to stand behind me the whole time, arms crossed, wearing those loser blacked out wrap-around sunglasses that some tiny penised fucktards thought where cool about 25 years ago. The ones that looked like the black letter “U”….remember them?
I was told that the parents of the bully didn’t think there was an issue and chose not to attend, and the police officer was for the school & principal’s benefit. That kind of lucky? Does my questioning the logic of keeping parents in the dark make more sense now?
I found this bully’s name and address, and had an off the record chat with this child’s father at their home and we came to an understanding. A real heart to heart. That’s the day the bullying stopped. The child needed to see that the father was now in the position to receive back everything that child would dish out to other children.
Within the year my Son grew into the largest Human in that School, including the staff, and the bully didn’t graduate until the end of that year and would’ve gone into Grade 9 as being in the youngest grade in his new school.
Forgive me for doubting a school’s intentions that they have a student or a parents best interests at heart, let alone having a policy to hide behind to justify keeping a parent in the dark. That’s where I’m coming from questioning the school system having an institutionalized policy to keep parents in the dark about their children.
It’s shitty, but that passed with a bit of “parental intervention” outside of the school system as the school wasn’t interested in resolving its own issue “in house” as it was, and that our boy hitting male puberty…not that that physically gives anyone a physical advantage in a combat sport like life, but….First off, I'm sorry your Son went through that. And it should never have gotten TO that point.
I know what it's like to be bullied too. I also know what it's like to NOT want your parents to know.
That HAS been the issue for me in this tangent of the debate on this topic. I’ve been pretty consistent from the beginning, but I approached it from the parental standpoint instead of the LGBTQ++etc…point.I'm not questioning your logic of keeping parents in the know. That ISN'T the issue, because there are parents like you out there who do give a shit, and do want to know what's going on with their kids, so they CAN help their kids with the situation.
Has been for me. Probably for the other 80%-ish of Canadians is a survey from about a week or two back also. Sometimes two issues cross, like this situation, where you’re advocating for LGBTQ…etc…children’s rights, and I’m advocating for parents rights over school board policies, and though they intersect, they’re potentially two different things. We might have closer positions than you realize, but how to separate the two different crossing issues here?That's not the point.
Your position has been to protect all kids (in the camp that you defend) from their parents ‘cuz some of those parents might be shit parents….I get that. Even tried to point that out earlier on in an attempt to find a middle ground. I understand your position, but there’s two different things at play here.The point is to protect kids from PARENTS who - sure, on any other day might be pretty cool parents - but the second they find out that their kid is GLBTQIA+, they flip their shit and that kid now is at risk.
Then that’s where a Social Safety Net comes into play. Police intervention (if they’re interested), social services, foster care where parents that give a shit can become the 2.0 parents for that child, etc… as opposed to preemptively deciding that some parents are bad, so ALL must be kept in the dark by policy, because that’s not the answer either.So what would YOU suggest, Ron? Teachers ignore the wishes of these kids, they tell the parents "Oh by the way, Jane is Jim now" and when that kid goes home and gets the shit kicked out of them? When they go home and get verbally abused? Kicked out of the house?
I hear this a lot. I’m not belittling it, but it’s becoming like a “kid that cried wolf” position from the outside looking in Serryah.Pushed to believe suicide is the best solution to the issue?
No, not “Screw the GLBTQIA+ (did you screw up the order here or did it change when I wasn’t paying attention?) kids” but involve the parents…& if “some” of those parents are fuck ups, then deal with those parents being fuck ups… as opposed to the blanket policy of assuming that all parents don’t give a shit, and all parents must be kept in the dark because some parents must be like Joe Dirt’s parents.Is THAT the answer? Screw the GLBTQIA+ kids cause who gives a fuck about them? They're wrong anyway? Because THAT is what this all comes across as to those kids at risk. That their feelings, their concerns, their fears, do NOT matter in this at all, because "parents know best", even when they don't.
I wasn’t the “cool” parent, but I was the parent who knew when to be a parent & not my Sons buddy when the situation required it.The point is to protect kids from PARENTS who - sure, on any other day might be pretty cool parents -
OK. First off, I'm glad your son came out of it OK. Better than OK, he solved the problem on his own. Sounds like his school gave him one of the most important lessons of his life.Good to know. I’ve told my story previously probably in this thread or others….& they all run together so I don’t remember which one & where.
My Son was being Bullied, this was 25yrs ago (& two years into this bullying, of both he and his cousin…my nephew…& many many other children). It was bad, & kids have their own institutionalized code of “Don’t be a rat & snitches get stitches, etc…” just like inmates do.
In this case the school knew full well what was going on, for years, & the intimidation techniques involved by this child that was two years older than my Nephew & three years older than my Son, years older and inches taller and pounds heavier than all the victims.
The School did what was in the best interests of the School, not the students, to make the least waves from the outside.
Fuck up like beating them up? Beat my Nephew with a boot in the boot room, etc…& the rest got punished with beat downs and shake downs? Like that kind of lucky?
One day my Son had had enough of being bullied….for years. And mid bully session he took down his bully and whaled on him, and had to be pulled off by a teacher and “Playground Supervisor”….& it was after that…that the school finally contacted me, to say that this had transpired and perhaps my Son needed Anger Management Counselling?
Two Freak’n YEARS of this before he took down and took out his bully that was three years older than him in Elementary School. The Teachers & other School Staff knew, & decided what was in THEIR bests interests as to what the parents like me should know. That was some kind of lucky.
I asked for a meeting with the school principal & this other child’s parents. What I got was a “supervised” meeting with the Principal & one police officer who wouldn’t talk, or sit, and made a point, indoors, to stand behind me the whole time, arms crossed, wearing those loser blacked out wrap-around sunglasses that some tiny penised fucktards thought where cool about 25 years ago. The ones that looked like the black letter “U”….remember them?
I was told that the parents of the bully didn’t think there was an issue and chose not to attend, and the police officer was for the school & principal’s benefit. That kind of lucky? Does my questioning the logic of keeping parents in the dark make more sense now?
I found this bully’s name and address, and had an off the record chat with this child’s father at their home and we came to an understanding. A real heart to heart. That’s the day the bullying stopped. The child needed to see that the father was now in the position to receive back everything that child would dish out to other children.
Within the year my Son grew into the largest Human in that School, including the staff, and the bully didn’t graduate until the end of that year and would’ve gone into Grade 9 as being in the youngest grade in his new school.
Forgive me for doubting a school’s intentions that they have a student or a parents best interests at heart, let alone having a policy to hide behind to justify keeping a parent in the dark. That’s where I’m coming from questioning the school system having an institutionalized policy to keep parents in the dark about their children.
That HAS been the issue for me in this tangent of the debate on this topic. I’ve been pretty consistent from the beginning, but I approached it from the parental standpoint instead of the LGBTQ++etc…point.
Has been for me. Probably for the other 80%-ish of Canadians is a survey from about a week or two back also. Sometimes two issues cross, like this situation, where you’re advocating for LGBTQ…etc…children’s rights, and I’m advocating for parents rights over school board policies, and though they intersect, they’re potentially two different things. We might have closer positions than you realize, but how to separate the two different crossing issues here?
Your position has been to protect all kids (in the camp that you defend) from their parents ‘cuz some of those parents might be shit parents….I get that.
Even tried to point that out earlier on in an attempt to find a middle ground. I understand your position, but there’s two different things at play here.
I’ve had a different position, from a first hand experience, with school boards deciding what a parent does or doesn’t need to know about their own child, so I’ve come at this debate from that position…
Then that’s where a Social Safety Net comes into play. Police intervention (if they’re interested), social services, foster care where parents that give a shit can become the 2.0 parents for that child, etc… as opposed to preemptively deciding that some parents are bad, so ALL must be kept in the dark by policy, because that’s not the answer either.
I hear this a lot. I’m not belittling it, but it’s becoming like a “kid that cried wolf” position from the outside looking in Serryah.
If there’s a realistic possibility that a child is going to commit suicide because they don’t get their way for the 1/3 of their day that they are at school,
Studies vary widely on the percentage of people with autism who are gay, lesbian, or bisexual. One analysis suggested the rate is 15 to 35 percent among autistic people who do not have intellectual disability. 2
“Most of the data that we’re seeing is that [the LGB rate] is two to three times higher,” says clinical psychologist Eileen T. Crehan, Ph.D., an assistant professor at Tufts University. But larger studies need to be done before the true rate is known, she says.
Several studies also suggest that autistic men are more likely than autistic women to be heterosexual.3, 5 In a Dutch study, for example, only 57 percent of autistic women reported being straight compared to 82 percent of autistic men. The women were more likely to be attracted to both sexes, and also to neither sex.5
Research suggests that people who have an autism diagnosis or autism traits are more likely to be transgender than the general population. One study found the rate to be two to three times higher in people who have autism. Also, a larger percentage of autistic people reported their gender as being something other than strictly male or female, compared to other people. Examples of gender identities included in that study were bigender, genderqueer, and “other.” 3
This will be the end of schools if the attacks on parental rights continue.This (below) has NOTHING to do with LGBTQAnything, & everything to do with keeping parents in the dark about their children…& that’s without a policy in place to keep parents in the dark that can be co-opted for other purposes…
Police were told in November 2019 that a student had been sexually assaulted by an education assistant, who was quickly removed from the school without any attempt made to identify other potential victims.Only media report spurred Yukon to tell parents of sexual abuse in a school, report shows
Yukon’s ombudsman says school kept parents in the dark for 19 months following sexual assault of childwww.theglobeandmail.com
The ombudsman’s report says it was the CBC story 19 months later that prompted the notification from the Education Department.
“The Department did an about-face and began sharing information about the sexualized abuse of a school student because the ... matter went public in the media and the department found itself unexpectedly having to react to the result,” the report says.
“If it were not for the media story, we are of the view that the department would likely have maintained its silence about the ... matter, thus perpetuating the unfairness of depriving the parents from taking any timely action concerning their children and also withholding information that, once released, directly led to two more disclosures of criminal behaviour.”
“We acknowledge that more (like inform the parents?) should have been done to inform parents and to support students and their families following the incident,” she says. “We are learning from our mistakes. We are implementing real changes to minimize the likelihood that incidents like these take place in the future.”
It's a fad. There a word for it when teens fall into a group mindset that is false.An effort towards middle ground?Adam Zivo: Schools should take a 'don’t help, don’t tell' approach to pronouns — National Post
Adopting a middle-ground approach to trans-identifying students may leave many dissatisfied, but that's the nature of compromiseapple.news
An effort towards middle ground?Adam Zivo: Schools should take a 'don’t help, don’t tell' approach to pronouns — National Post
Adopting a middle-ground approach to trans-identifying students may leave many dissatisfied, but that's the nature of compromiseapple.news
You can’t hide Strap on EBay Z-Cups…The Kayla Lemieux show cancelled; no longer at Oakville school
Author of the article:Joe Warmington
Published Mar 01, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read
It was, ironically, a picture of an Oakville teacher reportedly dressed as a man — not ones of the shop instructor clothed as a busty woman — that led to that person‘s departure from the classroom.
But it is now official that teacher Kayla Lemieux, known previously as Kerry Lemieux, is no longer teaching at Oakville Trafalgar High School.
“While not currently on an active assignment, the teacher remains employed with the HDSB (Halton District School Board),” said board spokesperson Heather Francey.
It was still a rare comment on a personnel matter from the board, which has said little these past seven months since Lemieux showed up in industrial arts class wearing a wig, lipstick, shorts and displaying Z-cup breasts with protruding nipples under a tight-fitting sweater.
It has been a circus ever since.
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Bomb threats, protests, raucous school board meetings, photos of a skydiving adventure, photographs of unsafe practices near cutting machines, sitting next to a student who was vaping, and even a broken foot fitted into a plastic boot-cast fed the soap opera on this mysterious teacher.
The board has supported Lemieux throughout.
But the New York Post newspaper hired a Toronto photographer to work with their reporters to learn more about Kayla Lemieux, and spent a month doing research. While the Post’s team took pictures and video of Lemieux dressed as a woman, it also captured an image which the paper claimed showed Lemieux without breasts and dressed in men’s attire. That changed the game and resulted in Lemieux never being in class again.
While the teacher told The Toronto Sun the picture was “not me,” the Post stuck by it, insisting they knew the teacher’s routine, car, licence plate, apartment building, and neighbours.
Despite people in the building telling media the picture is a ringer of the male version of Lemieux, the teacher remained defiant.
“I can’t tell you who that is because I don’t want to bring anyone else into this,” Lemieux told the Post. “I don’t want that person being thrown all over the media, but it wasn’t me … this is who I am. This is how I look. You’ve been talking to people in my building, but what they’re telling you is harsh and untrue. I am always going out looking the way I am.”
Yep, that’s a pickle alright.When asked if her appearance ever differed from the way she looked at the time, Lemieux told the Post, “I guess if I took my wig off or took my makeup off” but “I would still have breasts. You can’t hide them.”
Except….maybe not.The teacher claimed a “rare” condition called “gigantomastia” and that “XX chromosomes” and “hormone sensitivity to estrogen” played a role in this “intersex”-born person growing extra-large breasts.
A she-said, they-said, he’s saying, etc…The controversy generated by the Post story sent shockwaves through the school, the board and the offices of high-ranking officials in the Ontario Ministry of Education.
When challenged to provide a diagnosis to support the natural-grown breasts assertion, Lemieux said “the diagnosis is based on verbal discussions I have had with my doctor,” and “I never requested a note or letter of these findings.”
Unless any of Lemieux’s claims could be medically verified, sources said, there was no path for this teacher to return to the classroom.
While education officials, fellow staffers and law enforcement were doubtful on the authenticity claims, Lemieux was stubborn, telling me “I don’t think women, in general, have a formal diagnosis of their breast size,” and “now I am being asked to provide proof. I really don’t know how to help you with that.”
So….that was somewhat interesting. My biggest issue was shop safety. Dangling lanyards. Loose hair around power tools.It was a standoff. A she-said, they-said scenario.
This teacher was put on paid leave Tuesday when Education Minister Stephen Lecce, as well as Halton Region MPPs Natalie Pierre, Stephen Crawford, and Effie Triantafilopoulos all blasted the board for having “abdicated its responsibility by failing to put the interests and safety of students first.”
The board responded and while Lemieux is out of the school, “we continue to support the teacher in partnership with OSSTF (Ontario Secondary School Teacher’s Federation.)”
A big story for months, interest in the Lemieux affair is now flattening. This has quickly changed from a public safety issue to one of personal support for a teacher, who is now said to be receiving some.
Several parents who complained are now saying as long as the bomb threats stop, they are ready to move on.
WARMINGTON: The Kayla Lemieux show cancelled; no longer at Oakville school
It was, ironically, a picture of an Oakville teacher reportedly dressed as a man — not ones of the shop instructor clothed as a busty woman — that led to that persontorontosun.com