If you’re a parent who still believes you have the right to know what your child is being taught — or what they’re being told behind closed doors at school — buckle up. Because the Left has officially declared open season on your parental rights.
This week, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a case out of Colorado that should’ve sent shockwaves through every kitchen table in America. The case, Jonathan Lee, et al. v. Poudre School District R-1, raised a simple but critical question: Can public schools keep parents in the dark while nudging kids into gender transitions?
The answer, apparently, is “yes — for now.”
Though the Court passed on taking the case, three conservative justices — Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, and Neil Gorsuch — went out of their way to sound a loud and clear alarm about what’s happening in schools across this country. Justice Alito, leading the charge, said the case raises a “particularly contentious constitutional question” about whether school districts are violating the fundamental rights of parents by encouraging kids to change genders without mom and dad even knowing. You’d think that would be a no-brainer, but remember, this is 2025 — where the radical Left thinks the state owns your kids.
Let’s be clear: Nothing about this case is hypothetical. According to the parents’ petition, school officials actively recruited students to attend Gender and Sexuality Alliance (GSA) meetings — including one case where a student was misled just to get her in the room. Once inside, these students were:
– Shown questionable info about transgender identity and suicide
– Offered prizes if they identified as transgender
– Given staff members’ personal contact info for secret chats
– Told it might be “unsafe” to talk to their parents about gender identity
You read that right. School employees — government workers — told children not to trust their parents. If a stranger on the street did this, we’d call the cops. But when a taxpayer-funded school does it? The courts shrug and move along.
Justice Alito, while agreeing not to take the case for technical reasons, made it clear this issue is far from over. “The troubling — and tragic — allegations in this case underscore the ‘great and growing national importance’ of the question that these parent petitioners present,” he wrote. He also noted that nearly 6,000 public schools have similar policies that “purposefully interfere with parents’ access to critical information about their children.”
Let’s pause here. Six. Thousand. Schools. That’s not a bad apple in the bunch — that’s a national rot, and it’s spreading fast.
Now, where are the Democrats on this? Oh, they’re busy pretending none of this is happening. They call it “inclusivity.” They claim it’s about “supporting kids.” But what they’re really doing is driving a wedge between children and parents — and using taxpayer dollars to do it. The same party that spent years howling about “Don’t Say Gay” laws is now perfectly fine with “Don’t Tell Mom and Dad” policies. Convenient, isn’t it?
This isn’t just about gender ideology. It’s about power. Who gets to raise your child — you, or the government? That’s the fight we’re in. And while the Supreme Court sat this round out, don’t think for a second that this battle is over.
Thanks to leaders like Alito, Thomas, and Gorsuch, the warning flares are in the sky. And thanks to groups like America First Legal — founded by Trump ally Stephen Miller — we’ve got warriors in the courtroom who aren’t backing down.
Parents matter. Family values matter. And the Left’s creepy obsession with cutting moms and dads out of the equation is finally being exposed. The radicals may have won this round, but the American people are waking up. If Democrats think they can keep pushing this without consequences, they’ve got another thing coming.
Midterms are around the corner, and it’s time for voters to send a message: Leave our kids alone. Keep your politics out of the classroom. And stop pretending you know better than parents.
Because in the real world, we still believe that children belong to families — not the state.
