Trump donated to group that promotes homosexuality to 5-year-olds, ‘fisting’ in middle school
NEW
YORK CITY, – Donald Trump donated $30,000
to homosexual activists, including a $20,000 grant to an organization that
promoted "fisting" to middle school students, recommended books
excusing homosexual pedophilia, and proclaimed its mission is "promoting
homosexuality" in the public schools to children as early as kindergarten.
According
to a 990 form filed with the IRS, the Donald J. Trump Foundation donated
$20,000 to the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network (GLSEN) in 2012 and
another $10,000 to Gay Men's Health Crisis.
Kevin
Jennings founded GLSEN (originally the Gay and Lesbian School Teachers Network)
in 1990. He and other homosexual teachers formed Gay-Straight Alliances (GSAs)
nationwide and drew up curricula that began shaping children's values in accordance
with the LGBT perspective from the age of five.
Kindergarten should be the “saturation period” for LGBT
views
GLSEN
has been upfront about its goals and desire for mainstream respectability. In
1997, Jennings said, "I can envision a day when straight people say, 'So
what if you’re promoting homosexuality?'”
GLSEN
recommends children face “saturation” in its viewpoint beginning in
kindergarten. GLSEN activist Jaki Williams taught a workshop on “Inclusive
Kindergartens” at a 1997 regional conference. “Children in the kindergarten age
are ‘developing their superego’...That’s when the saturation process needs to
begin,” Williams, a New York teacher, said.
“Five-year-olds
are very interested in the big questions. They’re very interested in sex,
death, and love, and they ask those questions, and they talk about them,” she
said, “and we want to help them find the answers.”
A
kindergarten gym teacher described her preferred method to a 1999 GLSEN
conference in Atlanta. According to an eyewitness, Geraldine Burke asked girls
in her Connecticut class, “Do you ever kiss your sister to show her that you
love her?” She reportedly correlated that with same-sex physical passion,
adding, “Some people will tell you that you shouldn’t love some people [but] …
your hearts tells you who to love.”
GLSEN's
materials guide teachers in undermining the children's (and their parents')
moral objections to homosexuality and leading children into accepting
alternative ideas of families.
A publication written in consultation with UNESCO asks teachers to
“decodify and rename” traditional family structures, a process to “include as
of kindergarten (games and songs).”
In
another “toolkit” entitled "Ready, Set, Respect!" GLSEN advises “elementary school educators” to
“challenge the stereotypes that may impair healthy development." Among
other things, they should "make sure the analogies you use when teaching
don’t rely on hetero-normative or gender-normative images or viewpoints."
(Emphasis in original.) Teachers should, for instance, casually use word
problems including two dads or two moms rather than a mother a father.
A
Massachusetts curriculum instructs teachers, “When discussing this issue, help
students to move past preoccupations with the ‘rightness’ or ‘wrongness’ of
same-sex coupling or homosexuality in general. Place the debate over marriage
within the context of human rights, thereby expanding the dialogue beyond the
realm of morality.”
It
asks teachers to distribute a story to students that says, "Being gay is just one
more kind of love. And love is the best kind of happiness.”
“And
I'm happy too!" the child concludes.
As
the children mature, so does GLSEN's subject matter.
Peddling pedophilia
GLSEN's
list of recommended books for middle school-aged children includesseveral titles
that minimize or embrace pedophilia.
In Queer 13: Lesbian and Gay Writers Recall
Seventh Grade, author Justin Chin describes how, as the titular
13-year-old child, he "really did enjoy" the "near-rapes"
he experienced from gay adult males.
In Passages of Pride, Kurt Chandler
writes about a 15-year-old who is subjected to statutory rape by a
"troll" who was "almost twice Dan's age." Nonetheless,
Chandler wrote, "everything was consensual."
That
dovetails with Jennings' statement that he was “inspired” by Harry Hay, a
socialist who publicly stated that homosexual statutory rape is “precisely what 13-, 14-, and 15-year-old kids need more than anything else in the world. And they would
be welcoming this, and welcoming the opportunity for young gay kids to have the
kind of experience that they would need.”
That
outlook shaped Jennings' interactions with his students. He wrote in his
autobiography that in 1988, a 15-year-old boy named “Robertson” told him of
having repeated sexual intercourse with an older man in a bus stop restroom.
His responsewas only to say, “I hope you knew to
use a condom.”
Surprisingly,
turning a blind eye to pedophilia – or worse – is not the incident that most
sullied GLSEN's reputation.
“Fistgate” –
and teaming with Planned Parenthood
GLSEN
came under the greatest scrutiny in 2000 when an undercover recording exposed
the sexual advice it gives minors. GLSEN's tenth annual conference, held at
Tufts University on March 25, was recorded by then-MassResistance Executive
Director Scott Whiteman.
The
conference featured a "youth-only, age 14-21" panel entitled,
"What They Didn’t Teach You about Queer Sex and Sexuality in Health
Class.” In response to a question from the audience, the presenter described "fisting" - a sexual practiced that originated with homosexuals,
in which one man inserts his entire fist and sometimes his forearm into another
man's rectum.
Margot
Abels, who was an employee of the Massachusetts Department of Education, told
the young people that fisting "often gets a really bad rap." She said
it is merely "an experience of letting somebody into your body that you
want to be that close and intimate with." When asked why anyone would ever
be interested in such a practice, Abels said it may help "put them into an
exploratory mode."
It
isn't usually about inflicting pain to its recipient, "not that we're
putting that down," Abels said.
After
the public backlash, the group promised to reform. But at the 2001 GLSEN
conference, Planned Parenthood distributed "fisting kits."
GLSEN to God: “Screw you, Buddy,” and His followers can
“Drop dead!”
GLSEN
has, predictably, been hostile to the West's traditional aversion to
homosexuality and those who express it publicly. Speakers at its 1999
conference were quoted as saying, “If we do our jobs right, we’re going to
raise a generation of kids who don’t believe the claims of the Religious
Right.”
On
March 20, 2000, Jennings told a church audience his plan was to stifle social
conservatives' voices by convincing society to "ignore" anyone who
views homosexual activity as immoral. "I'm trying not to say, '[Expletive
deleted] 'em,' which is what I want to say, 'cause I don't care what they
think!” he yelled to the church crowd. “Drop dead!”
He
took his grievance one step further up the ladder in his 2006 autobiographyMama's
Boy, Preacher's Son: A Memoir. After
a sexual fantasy, he writes, he “decided [God] was the one who had failed
me...I decided I had done nothing wrong.”
“What
had He done for me, other than make me feel shame and guilt? Squat,” Jennings
wrote. “Screw you, buddy – I don't need you around anymore, I decided."
Trump’s
philanthropic donations
Concerned
parents will find these two grants alarming. However, it bears noting that
Trump has not directed a significant percentage of his tax-exempt philanthropy
to political causes, as other political figures have. The majority of his
grants are to causes such as the American Cancer Society, American Heart
Association, American Red Cross, American Diabetes Association, multiple grants
to Ronald McDonald House of New York, and numerous grants to veterans causes.
Also,
the political donations he made have not shown a clear pattern, even on this
issue. He gave three-times as much money to an organization that fought against
same-sex “marriage” as he did to GLSEN. He has also made numerous grants to
conservative political organizations and Christian ministries. Jerry Falwell
Jr. cited those donations in his laudatory introduction of Trump at Liberty
University shortly before he endorsed the business tycoon.
The
Donald J. Trump Foundation and campaign did not immediately return
LifeSiteNews' request for comment.