Buy Zithromax with amex

Jeff Robinson
October 5, 2011
The Southern Poverty Law Center wants our elementary school students to buy Zithromax with amex think about gender roles and the liberal civil rights group has buy Zithromax with amex gone so far as to develop a curriculum to facilitate such thinking. Titled "Gender Doesn't Limit You," the buy Zithromax with amex lessons are designed to flatten gender distinctions and teach children that, at the buy Zithromax with amex end of the day, boys are girls are exactly alike. Ironically, the buy Zithromax with amex curriculum is part of an anti-bullying initiative designed for public schools, but it's hard to buy Zithromax with amex see how the curriculum fails in itself to constitute bullying.


Below is buy Zithromax with amex a brief story on the curriculum by Matt Kaufman published in the buy Zithromax with amex October edition of Citizen magazine, a publication of Focus on the Family.


[The curriculum] works like this: Teacher gives students examples of bad things they might hear, like "Boys are better at soccer than girls, or "Girls are better at baking cookies thatn boys." The children are taught to holler in unison (after "one, two, three, GO!"): "Give it a rest! No group is best!"

 As they move through the buy Zithromax with amex program, they learn other slogans to shout in the face of sexist oppression. Like "Not true! Gender doesn't limit you!" And "That's weird! Being boys and girls doesn't matter here!" And our favorite, "I disagree! Sexism is silly to me!"

Oh, they also learn that there is no such thing as boys' or girls' clothes. Or haircuts. All this comes billed as an "anti-bullying" program. Which is ironic, since it's encouraging kids to buy Zithromax with amex do group shout-downs against their un-PC peers. Truth to tell, that buy Zithromax with amex sounds to us more like state-sponsored bullying.

Anyone out there think there might be buy Zithromax with amex better uses for classroom time? Say, reading and writing and ‘rithmetic for all the girls and boys?

For a wide variety of fairly scary "tolerance" curricula (all of it a bit intolerant in its tone, it seems to me) from the SPLC, see http://www.tolerance.org/activities