CALIFORNIA SCHEMIN'

Schools put on notice: Mass boycott of Harvey Milk Day

'Keep your kids from being sexually brainwashed'

Posted: October 17, 2009
12:45 am Eastern
By Chelsea Schilling
© 2009 WorldNetDaily


Homosexual former San Francisco leader Harvey Milk

SACRAMENTO – A pro-family group is calling on California parents to pull their kids out of school after the state instituted a mandatory "gay" day in public schools
in honor of Harvey Milk – a homosexual activist and reported sexual predator, as well as an advocate for Jim Jones, leader of the massacred hundreds in Jonestown, Guyana.

SaveCalifornia.com led a statewide battle against "Harvey Milk Day" before California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed the S.B. 572 on Oct. 12.

The bill designates May 22 – Milk's birthday – a date of "special significance" and encourages all California public schools to "conduct suitable commemorative exercises … remembering the life of Harvey Milk and recognizing his accomplishments as well as the contributions he made to this state."

It requires no parental consent for student participation.

SaveCalifornia President Randy Thomasson is warning parents to keep their sons and daughters home. His group has launched a boycott, urging parents to pull their children out of school for a day, a week or even all year if they can.

"Fathers and mothers are angry about Harvey Milk Day pushing this extreme, perverse role model upon their kids," Thomasson said. "Children belong to parents, not to the state! Since SB 572 has no opt-out, boycotting Harvey Milk Day and pulling their children out of the imploding government school system is the only way for parents to protect their girls and boys."

The group believes the boycott will also send a strong message to school districts that they should not use class time to celebrate Harvey Milk Day or they will risk losing daily attendance funds.

SaveCalifornia noted that even school districts in traditionally conservative areas are allowing teachers to promote Harvey Milk.

According to the Santa Clarita Signal, William S. Hart Union High School District Spokeswoman said teachers may include discussion of Milk in their curriculums.

"If it happens to be in a literature class or a social studies class, it can be included as long as it's related to the topic," she said.

According to the report, "Teachers will be encouraged to conduct exercises recalling Milk's life and contributions to the state."

SaveCalifornia reports that Equality California, a California homosexual political activism group, is planning to develop a curriculum to promote Harvey Milk's values in public schools.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, "The measure was backed by Equality California, the largest gay-rights organization in the state. Geoff Kors, executive director of the group, said it would develop curriculum for schools and teachers to use on Milk's birthday."

S.B. 572 states, "Perhaps more than any other modern figure, Harvey Milk's life and political career embody the rise of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) civil rights movement in California, across the nation, and throughout the world."

Milk's ties to Jim Jones


This photo appeared in a Temple-produced brochure publicizing the accomplishments of Jonestown (photo: The Jonestown Institute)

But lawmakers have overlooked Milk's ties to Jim Jones, leader of the massacred hundreds in Jonestown, Guyana.

Jones led a cult to the "Peoples Temple Agricultural Project" in the 1970s in Guyana after a career leading the religious organization in San Francisco.

The cult became notorious when on Nov. 18, 1978, 918 people died – mostly from cyanide poisoning – in the settlement
. The deaths were described as a "revolutionary suicide" by Jones and other members on an audio tape of the event.

The poisonings of more than 900 people, including those of 276 children, followed by hours the murders of five people by Peoples Temple members at a nearby airport. One of the victims was Rep. Leo Ryan, the only member of Congress ever to die in the line of duty. He was investigating complaints from members who had left the cult about brutal beatings, murders and a mass suicide plan.

Milk had spoken at several political rallies at the Jones' Peoples Temple.

According to "'My Lord, What a Mourning:' Twenty Years Since Jonestown," following one earlier visit to Jones' temple, Milk reportedly wrote, "Rev. Jim, It may take me many a day to come back down from the high that I reach today. I found something dear today. I found a sense of being that makes up for all the hours and energy placed in a fight. I found what you wanted me to find. I shall be back. For I can never leave."

Only nine months prior to the mass killing, amid pressure to investigate Jones' cult, Milk wrote a Feb. 19, 1978, letter of support for the Peoples Temple to then-President Jimmy Carter:



Harvey Milk's letter to President Carter in support of Jones (photo: brasscheck.com)

Milk wrote that Jim Jones was known "as a man of the highest character, who has undertaken constructive remedies
for social problems which have been amazing in their scope and effectiveness."

Prior to the mass killing, he also accused Timothy Stoen, former Peoples Temple member and leader of the group that went to rescue relatives from Jonestown, of "attempting to damage Rev. Jones reputation" with "apparent bold-faced lies."

WND White House correspondent Les Kinsolving, a journalist for the San Francisco Examiner during Jones' ascent to power and influence there, shortly before he moved his cult to Guyana, recalled in a column the relationship between Jones and Milk.

His writing concerned the Sean Penn movie, "Milk." Kinsolving cited columnist Dan Flynn's concerns about "how Gus Van Sant could have made a film about Harvey Milk without casting a 'Jim Jones' role."

The Flynn column accused Harvey Milk and "the San Francisco left" of allowing Jones to conduct his "criminal enterprise in San Francisco with impunity."

"When veteran journalist Les Kinsolving penned an eight-part investigative report on Peoples Temple for the San Francisco Examiner in 1972, his editors buckled under pressure from Jones and killed the report halfway through," wrote Flynn. "Kinsolving quipped that the Peoples Temple was 'the best-armed house of God in the land,' detailed the kidnapping and possible murder of disgruntled members, exposed Jones' phony faith healing, highlighted Jones' vile school-sanctioned sex talk with children and directed attention toward the Peoples Temple's massive welfare fraud that funded its operations.

"Unfortunately four of the series of eight articles were jettisoned after Jones unleashed hundreds of protesters to the San Francisco Examiner, a programmed letter-writing campaign and a threatened lawsuit against the paper. The Examiner promptly issued a laudatory article on Jones. … " wrote Flynn.

Kinsolving's column revealed reports that after Milk was killed, all mention of connections between Milk and Jones "were intentionally obscured."

Sexual relationships with young men



As WND reported, Randy Shilts, a homosexual San Francisco Chronicle reporter, wrote a favorable and telling biography of Milk called "The Mayor of Castro Street."

Thomasson delivered copies of pages in the 1982 book to members of the California Assembly in August. The book describes Milk's sexual relationships with a 16-year-old, a 19-year-old and other young men. The following are some passages in the book:

* "...sixteen-year-old McKinley was looking for some kind of father figure. ... At thirty-three, Milk was launching a new life, though he could hardly have imagined the unlikely direction toward which his new lover would pull him." (Pages 30-31)

* "It would be to such boyish-looking men in their late teens and early twenties that Milk would be attracted for the rest of his life." (Page 24)

* "Harvey always had a penchant for young waifs with substance abuse problems." (Page 180)

* "Harvey confided one night that at twenty-four, Doug was the oldest man Harvey had ever started an affair with." (Page 237)

Shilts chronicles Milk's affairs with teenagers and young men. According to one passage cited by SaveCalifornia, Milk explained to his lover why he should be allowed to have multiple relationships simultaneously:

As homosexuals, we can't depend on the heterosexual model. ... We grew up with the heterosexual model, but we don't have to follow it. We should be developing our own life-style. There's no reason why you can't love more than one person at a time. You don't have to love them all the same. You love some less, love some more – and always be honest with everybody about where you're at. They in turn can do the same thing and it can open up a bigger sphere. (Pages 237-23

Thomasson said the book also reveals that Milk publicly lied for years about the end of his Navy career and had not been kicked out for being homosexual. Milk served as a diving officer aboard the submarine rescue ship, the USS Kittiwake, during the Korean War. He was discharged in 1955 for undisclosed reasons:

He had not suffered this disgrace, he told a later campaign manager, but he knew the story would make good copy. If anyone said something to Harvey about his fondness for such stunts, he would gesture wildly as he launched into a lecture. "Symbols, symbols, symbols," he insisted. Sure he had not been kicked out of the military, but he had a dozen friends who had their lives muddled by anti-gay purges in the services. The point of the story was to let people know that service people routinely do get kicked out. Besides, he once confided, "Maybe people will read it, feel sorry for me, and then vote for me." (Pages 78-79)



A SurveyUSA poll found that 69 percent of Californians objected to making Milk's birthday a statewide "day of significance" while 11 percent remained unsure. Only 19 percent agreed with the plan.

Nonetheless, Schwarzenegger signed the bill just months after President Obama honored Milk with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in August.

The text of the bill states, "It is the intent of the Legislature that the exercises … be integrated into the regular school program, and be conducted by the school or institution within the amount otherwise budgeted for educational programs."

"No child is safe from the sky-is-the-limit sexual indoctrination if they are left in the government school system," Thomasson said today. "They'll be hit with Harvey Milk Day in May, endure the pro-'LGBT' 'Day of Silence' in April, and, due to pre-existing sexual indoctrination laws, be pressured to support anything-goes heterosexual-homosexual-bisexual-transsexual behavior in health, literature, and social studies."

He added, "This is a red alert for parents. Your child will be sexually indoctrinated if left in the government-school system. Parents are waking up to the fact that to protect their kids from being sexually brainwashed, they must not only keep them home on Harvey Milk Day, but they must rescue their children by placing them in homeschooling or a solid church school."

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