Best of the Program | Guests: Ryan Walters & Stephanie Elad | 4/21/22
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Charlie Sheen is an icon of decadence.
I lit the fuse and my life turns into everything it wasn't supposed to be.
He's going the distance.
He was the highest paid TV star of all time.
When it started to change, it was quick.
He kept saying, No, no, no, I'm in the hospital now, but next week I'll be ready for the show.
Now, Charlie's sober.
He's gonna tell you the truth.
How do I present this with any class?
I think we're past that, Charlie.
We're past that, yeah.
Somebody call action.
Yeah, aka Charlie Sheen, only on Netflix, September 10th.
Oh, Stu.
What an exciting show today.
Filled with exciting things for our children.
Yes, absolutely.
Pray attention to the show at all.
No, I'm trying to see what part of today's presentation could actually be spoken in a popular page.
Yeah, okay, so the first hour,
a lot of it, you needed a decoder ring because I couldn't use any of the language that's being used in our schools.
You can use them to eight-year-olds.
You cannot use them them on radio to adults.
Yeah, that's how bad it is.
But also, we had Glenn Greenwald on today, who I thought was fascinating about are we winning or losing here?
What's really happening with the media and Elon Musk?
Are people waking up or not?
Yeah.
We have a mom who decided to go to a school board meeting, got attacked basically
by the school board.
Excuse me, ma'am.
This is our meeting, not yours.
And now she's running.
So it will be her meeting even more so in the future if she wins.
And a hero, a guy who wrote a letter.
He runs the state board of education in Oklahoma.
He wrote one of the most scathing letters to an independent school district.
Oh, I want it framed for my office.
It's that good.
It is really, really good.
You can, by the way, subscribe and you can see the material and all the background stuff in case you don't believe some of the stuff we'll talk about on radio today.
You did a show, a special last night on on Blaze TV, blazetv.com/slash Glenn.
The promo code is Glenn to save 10 bucks.
You can watch it there and see all the stuff.
It's appropriately blurred, but you'll get the sense.
And it's jaw-dropping.
It is, and so important.
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You're listening to the best of the blend back program.
Parents,
listen up.
We're in a new world.
and you're gonna listen to this.
You're like, somebody's got to do something,
and you'll listen to this, and you won't think it affects your children, but it does.
We have been pushing back on critical race theory for a couple of years now.
And I want to give a shout-out to people like
Chris Ruffo or Ozra Nomani, she has been on the show.
Also,
different people that I think are quite remarkable as well.
Kelly Skye is one that
really has been doing a lot of work on this and I appreciate all the work.
It is people like this
that help the rest of us understand.
We are now pushing back on something called comprehensive sexuality education, but I don't think parents really understand
how deep this is.
I did a show on CSE about a year ago and had no idea how deep this well went until we really started doing research on it.
Governor Ron DeSentis brought this to the forefront by signing the Parental Rights and Education Bill.
This banned sexual orientation and gender identity curriculum in kindergarten through the third grade.
This freaked the left out.
They're still freaked out.
Jen Saki was crying about it the other day, saying what a horrible, horrible thing this really is.
We'll get to that audio here.
Disney repeated the lie that it's the don't say gay bill.
It has nothing to do with that.
I'm going to show you what it does have to do with.
Last night, I showed the textbook and I
read things verbatim that made me so uncomfortable.
I had to blur the screen.
Legally, our attorneys advised us: if you show these things on the screen, you could be in trouble for
exposing childborn.
But these are textbooks, I said.
Yes, but the law is clear.
So I couldn't do it.
I couldn't show it.
But the teachers can show it
in second grade.
The pictures that we blurred out, first one was a naked boy looking into a mirror, and his genitals are exposed.
We blurred the image and you know what?
If it was, if this is what Christians and common sense people were saying, this is outrageous.
Okay, I didn't like the image.
I mean, we used to be very, you know, scientific about it, very sterile when we would teach these things.
I think that's a better way.
The young girl is bent over, looking at herself.
Again, it was blurred last night, but fully visible to children in schools.
Okay, if that were it,
I would be, okay, I can see both sides here.
But that's not.
That's not.
This is K through 12.
Merely showing kids with their genitals exposed
is not the point and certainly not enough.
They also have to show
actual sexual acts that would make porn stars blush.
Last night I showed a blurred image and a quote from one of these textbooks.
I'm not going to use all of the language.
In fact, let me ask my radio executive producer Stu, can I use this word on radio?
I mean.
Let's skip it where there's no reason to.
You can't really understand it.
I got a new blank harness today, actually blank, blank harness today.
I can't wait to put it on you.
It will fit my favorite blank perfectly.
You're going to look so hot.
If you watched the special last night, you know what all of that is.
And it is disgusting.
It goes on.
There is a
two boys talking to each other and one says to the other, I can't wait to have your in my mouth, not the technical term.
I am going to give you the
of your life and then
I want you inside me.
K
through 12.
The textbook goes on with an image of children performing some of the sex acts they were just talking about.
This is what the left wants to show K through third graders.
This is what Disney is advocating to protect.
I showed at the top of the show last night a gender questionnaire.
It was produced by the new Hanover Title IX coordinator.
He claimed he he got it from a university and adapted it for K through 12 students.
So this is meant for college students and they're introducing it to kindergarteners.
Another form from the school district in North Carolina, it specifically states that there should be measures taken to conceal information from parents while the school continues gender identity treatment.
Is this happening to your child right now?
There's actually no way of knowing because the schools are being told to keep it from you.
Now,
what is a groomer?
I would think that we would all agree that a groomer is somebody.
I know if I, you know, we happen to have a creepy uncle
and he was taking my kids aside, and he was talking about these very things,
and then said, Let's keep this from your parents.
Don't tell anybody in your family.
You'd have a hard time me not killing that family member, quite honestly.
I'd chase him out of the house with a shotgun, wouldn't you?
Wouldn't you claim, rightfully so, that he was grooming your children?
I would.
This is just doing it with your tax dollars.
Now consider all of this and then keep in mind the views of our new Supreme Court justice
in, you know, giving light sentences to sex offenders.
But surely that's not the view of the mainstream Democratic Party, right?
Well,
really?
Here's Dick Durbin making the case that somehow the abundance of child porn on the internet makes everything okay.
These guidelines that you promulgated don't reflect the reality of today.
We know as well that
the guidelines were written, some were written, in an era when the materials we're talking about were physical materials, and we now live in a world of internet and access to not just tens and hundreds, but thousands of images, if that is your decision.
If if that is your decision
if that is your decision
who is protecting our children the answer is no one
and you know what
we have given this job up
we have got to be the ones protecting our children and our children will protect their schools and their teachers because they don't want you, I know mine don't, do not want me going in through the halls and talking to the teachers and everybody else and going, wait, what the hell are you teaching?
Because then they feel they'll be singled out.
And they will be.
They also, because they've watched enough Disney and everything else, they also think this is normal.
What do you call groomers?
What is a groomer?
Well, how about this?
This is one of the the people from the San Francisco Gay Men's Choir.
Is this grooming?
Quote, we'll convert your children.
It'll happen bit by bit, quietly and subtly, and you'll barely notice it.
You can keep them from disco.
You can warn them about San Francisco.
You can make them wear their pleated pants.
We don't care.
We'll convert your children.
Yeah, that sounds like grooming.
How about this from the most popular kids network in the world, Nickelodeon?
In honor of International Transgender Day of Visibility, meet Time and Nickelodeon's 2021 Kid of the Year finalist, Rebecca Brusohoff.
Growing up in the LGBTQ plus community has given me a different perspective on how I see the world.
Trans kids are so much more than their gender identity.
This is crazy.
This is like maybe a nine-year-old, ten-year-old that is talking about trans kids and saying that they're so much more than their gender identity.
Yes, that is our point.
Everybody is much more than their sexuality and their gender identity.
Here's a gay porn star that bragged about talking to his preschoolers, preschoolers, about sex.
There's
go ahead.
This is a fifth grade teacher openly disclosing proudly her lesson plan for teaching gender and sexuality.
Then we have gender expression, which is how you show your gender to the world.
It's usually based in a sort of binary system, which isn't perfect.
Again, you can slide this up and down to show the different gender groups.
You know what's great about this is it has a giant stuffed unicorn off to the side.
So the kids, I mean,
when you have to have a stuffed unicorn
standing next to these charts, you're aiming pretty low.
Now the Biden administration is pushing puberty blockers for trans kids and radical trans agenda being openly bragged about and taught to five years old five-year-olds
Does anybody have any idea the damage that is being done?
Do you know the experiments that are being conducted on your children?
And quite honestly, I don't think they're
experiments.
I remember the day my probably eight-year-old son, seven-year-old son
ran into porn on the internet.
He came in crying.
He was devastated by it.
Devastated.
He ran into something horrible.
He didn't know how to, what to do with it.
He didn't, he didn't have his arms around that at all.
They're now teaching that it is okay.
And you don't, I want to show you the slippery slope.
Remember when we said pedophilia, the next thing we'll just start normalizing pedophilia?
Oh, that's crazy.
Let me give you something else.
Try this.
This is from three years ago.
This is Dennis Prager and Bill Maher.
Three years ago.
These are giant left-wing lies.
We're talking about degrees.
To say that men can menstruate is a lie and that is now that is what is said
anyone who says a man cannot menstruate is considered transphobic i i missed this whole story are you dead you did are you telling me tell me where
are you getting just google it can men menstruate who is saying this
who is saying this everyone is saying this now bill that was three years ago The entire audience laughed at him, laughed at Dennis Prager for saying, it's crazy what's coming, what's going on, that men can menstruate.
And they all laugh.
Those same people that laughed three years ago are now the ones enforcing it and saying that you are a hateful bigot
if you say no, men cannot menstruate.
This is how fast it's happening.
You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.
I know what you're thinking.
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We want to welcome to
the program Stephanie Allod.
She is running for the Texas School Board position.
And that voting
begins, I think, Monday the 25th, which is next Monday, right?
Stephanie, welcome to the program.
Thank you, Glenn.
I wanted to put you on because I wanted to use you as an example of somebody who is just a normal person,
just a parent that started seeing problems and you're getting involved.
So tell us your story, Stephanie.
Sure.
So I actually moved to Texas about nine years ago.
I live in Frisco, so it's the Frisco Independent School District.
And my husband and I moved here nine years ago.
I was born and raised in California, lived there my entire life.
And we moved here due to my job promotion.
And when we were trying to select, you know, community to join and be a part of, we had two, we have two kids who are still in frisco schools they were much younger then everywhere we went we heard frisco isd was the best school system in north texas or one of the best right so we my husband and i we wanted to do the best for our kids of course and so we said i guess we're moving to frisco and so we did and the first few years it was really amazing and and we couldn't believe our luck and then we started to notice some things and we didn't really know you know maybe that's just how things are you know as our kids got older um and then we started to notice some more things.
And then I think like a lot of parents in COVID, during COVID, we really started to notice some things
about how things were run, what was going on, what they were teaching, what they weren't teaching.
And so I decided to show up to a board meeting last April, actually.
And as I was sitting in the audience waiting, you know, very politely for my turn to speak, the school board president at the time said, this is our meeting.
And he said it kind of rude.
And he said it a couple times.
and I thought wait a minute isn't this supposed to be the community's meeting isn't it our meeting I was really kind of flabbergasted quite honestly by the comment so instead of reading my prepared comments that I had brought with me I decided to talk about that and so I said you know you said this was your meeting and I don't I don't think so I think it's our meeting and I think the people who've been sitting here for that point almost three hours deserved a little more respect than that when they were spending their time trying to be involved in their community so that's what kind of started this for me.
And then I started, you know, just I was also interested.
I'd been hearing about the CRT thing in the news, right?
And I just wanted to make sure we weren't doing that in Frisco.
And I was assured, oh no, we're not, we're not doing that in Frisco.
We would never do such a thing.
And then I started looking and I, and one day I went on the board's website and I read their board priorities.
And they have one specific priority about equity, diversity, and inclusion.
And one of the bullets underneath that said, work to eliminate unconscious bias and support equity and social justice through institutional leadership.
And that sounded a lot like CRT to me.
Yeah, it's got, there's a, there's a, there's a lot of buzzwords there.
Yes, in one sentence.
Yeah.
There's a lot.
So you saw that.
And when did you decide you have to be involved?
Well, I think in that moment where they said this is our meeting, I think something inside of me just fundamentally shifted.
And I just got,
I couldn't believe that that's how our so-called elected leaders were treating.
I said there was never any apology or clarification either later in that meeting or afterwards where we said, where someone said, actually, it really is all of our meetings.
We didn't mean to communicate otherwise.
There was none of that.
And I realized that's how they really think, like we're subjects or something.
And so so at that moment I knew I had to do something I don't think I knew I was gonna run but I knew I had to do something so I started meeting with other parents who were equally concerned we started to learn about some of these you know CRT inspired assignments
at the next board meeting in May there was a parent who came who read from his son's assignment and the writing prompt for his eighth grade middle schooler was basically the the prompt was you know was assumptive that we're a systemically racist society and so he came because he was very offended and upset by that, and he wanted to bring it to the board's attention.
He also filed a formal grievance about the assignment, and nothing was done.
So
it just sort of snowballed from there where parents wanted to do something, and we had dozens, and then it turned into hundreds, and then it turned into a Facebook page of over a thousand parents and community members who've kind of had enough and who want to do something.
And so in the midst of all that is when I decided to run for the board.
so Stephanie have you found SEL social emotional learning in the district
yes well they they talk about that all the time and they're implementing it and they're they're quite proud of their efforts in that regard and I just learned at the last board meeting that they've they've approved some kind of program I haven't had a chance to really dig into it yet because I'm in the midst of the campaign, but they've basically approved a program that's going to, you know, survey students and ask how they're feeling and their emotions and things like that.
And that is obviously of concern.
And I know that parents can opt out and I will be opting
my kids out.
But
what people don't know.
Go ahead.
Let people know.
Well, they just don't realize what's really going on and they don't know that these things are even occurring, let alone how problematic it can be because they can ask questions like, you know, do you have a trusted adult you can talk to at home?
Right.
You know, well, those kinds of questions can be very invasive.
And we've seen, you know, I haven't seen a ton of that in Frisco yet.
I've seen little bits and pieces, but you see where, you know, the schools sort of come in and start to sort of take over the role as the parent.
And you see, we've seen those things.
I'm from California, so I hear about this stuff all the time.
All the time.
Yeah.
And so again, I haven't seen a ton of it in Frisco.
I've heard little bits and pieces, but I'm just afraid this kid
could make it work.
And I also, you know, my big thing, Glenn, too, is that I really just want the schools to teach my kids math and science and, you know, Spanish and whatever else they're taking and focus on academics instead of all of these other character building things.
I mean, let's be nice to everyone.
Let's treat people with respect, right?
Everyone should be treated with respect at school and have some, you know, behavior standards.
We shouldn't bully.
We shouldn't do any of those things.
But we also don't need to be spending time and resources on things other than the academics because while we're doing that, our academics are falling off a cliff.
So
here's the interesting thing.
I just did a special last night on SEL, and I urge you to watch it, because this one comes from the CDC
and then through the board of, I mean, the Department of Education to our schools.
And it's the reason why they can say, oh, we're not teaching that sexuality stuff.
We're not teaching
CRT because it's embedded in everything.
And so you'd have math problems that are dealing with, you know, social injustice.
And it's everywhere.
Social emotional learning, S-E-L, is, I think,
the key to understanding all of it.
There might be something bigger than this, but this is coming right from the CDC.
And it's our whole government is involved.
I mean, I just, you've got to get on the, parents like you have got to get on the school board and,
I don't know, take on the teachers union.
And the rest of us have got to start standing up and demanding that the Department of Education is abolished because it's a poison right now.
Well, I think in Texas, the larger issue is really the Texas Association of School Boards.
They're actually a bigger concern of mine.
And as you may know,
there are over 20 states, I think it's up to 22 or 23 states now who have left the National School Board Association because of the stance that they took on calling parents like me domestic terrorists, right?
Texas is not on that list.
Texas has not left the National School Board Association.
California has and Texas hasn't.
That's embarrassing to me.
I will tell you, I think.
It's California and current Texan.
It really is.
Stephanie, people like you are more awake than Texans that have grown up here.
They're just so numb to it all.
They're just like, it ain't going to happen here.
And it's happening right under their nose.
And they're not getting involved because they've just grown accustomed to being Texas.
The people who are coming in for the right reasons, you know, you might move here because your job transferred you, but you also were happy to escape California.
And
you know what that looks like.
You guys are on the front lines in Texas.
It's really vital that people like you that understand the state you came from take this one by the reins and say, uh-uh, don't go that way.
Because most Texans, I don't think, get it.
Well, that's such a good point because
I am from California, I see this stuff a mile away.
I see the seeds of it and how it starts and how it grows.
And, you know, we moved to partially, yes, because of my job promotion, but we had been talking about leaving California for a couple of years prior to that.
And when all this stuff came up, you know, like I said, the first few years, we kind of lived in a bubble.
We thought we were kind of done with all this.
We were in Texas.
We were safe.
Right.
But then we realized we weren't.
And so my husband and I looked at each other and we said, I guess we better get involved and fight here because where else are we going to go?
So that's what we're doing.
Good for you.
I'm sure there's no polls or anything, but if somebody wants to find out more about Stephanie, if you happen to live in the Frisco area, it's Stephanie, the number four
FISD.com.
Stephanie, good luck with your campaign and your election.
God bless.
Yes.
Thank you so much.
You bet.
Bye-bye.
The best of the Glenbeck program.
I saw a letter that honestly I want to frame and hang in my office.
I love it so much.
It was from the Office of the Secretary of Education
to the Oklahoma State Board of Education.
And Ryan Walters is the name of the Oklahoma Secretary of Education.
He writes, I am asking the State Board of Education for an emergency special board meeting this week to address the Stillwater Public School Board's complete avoidance of their elected duty to protect, educate, and oversee the care of our most important asset, our children.
Since the Stillwater Public School Board has neglected to do this, I'm asking the Oklahoma State Board of Education to give crystal clear guidance that boys use the boys' restroom and girls use the girls' restroom.
I could not be more disappointed in the Stillwater Public School Board after they had heard from parents, teachers, and leaders across the state and country asking them to stop playing this woke gamesmanship.
Our kids need better role models and it is disappointing that the board members of the Stillwater Public Schools did not pay attention in their biology classes and they need further instruction on what a male and a female are.
Both myself and the Attorney General have tried to offer them a common sense solution.
Have males use the the male bathroom, females use the female restroom.
I don't know how much more clarity I can give them.
Special accommodations have been made for students struggling with gender dysphoria in the past, allowing them to use private bathrooms that every school has.
Instead of using common sense, the Stillwater Public School Board has caved to far-left radicals.
Our schools should be focused on educating kids in reading, writing, and
mathematics and not involving themselves in a role that is not within their authority.
There are basic values that we as Oklahomans strive to live by.
Chief among them is the desire to put our children's safety first.
The Stillwater Public Board School Board has failed to put their children first and I need you to guide them back to reality.
Perhaps you can succeed in giving Stillwater Public School Board the clarity they so desperately desperately need.
Again, what I'm asking you for is to instruct the Stillwater Public School Board on what a male and female are.
That's fantastic.
The author is Ryan Walters.
He is the Oklahoma Secretary of Education.
Ryan.
Yes, sir.
Thank you for having me on today, Glenn.
This is epic.
I love this.
I'm sensing there was a little,
you were a little peeved when you wrote this.
I was, and I still am.
I mean, you know, I have sent them, I sent them a letter a few weeks ago.
I thought they could solve this.
I told them not to put radicals over their students, not to put ideology over biology, and not to put wokeness over safety.
We've had school, we've had parents.
grandparents showing up at school board meetings talking about that we have girls in the school that are telling their parents they're not drinking any liquid during the day because they don't want to go to the bathroom because there's males in the female bathroom and they are uncomfortable.
We're talking about middle school girls, Glenn.
This is not hard, it's not difficult, but we've got a far-left extreme group that is showing up and getting in the ear of these school board members.
And again, they're caving to them rather than putting student safety first.
And we're not going to tolerate it in the state of Oklahoma.
I tell you, you couple this with just CSE.
I don't know if that's in schools in Oklahoma, but you couple this with CSE and
your kids in middle school are all screwed up and hyper-sexualized and it's going to be a disaster.
Right.
And I mean, and that's the thing.
And when I talk to parents across the state, parents want the reading, writing, arithmetic.
We want our kids to go to school and a focus on academics.
We want better for our kids.
We want them to have opportunities in life that comes from that understanding of our academics standards.
But this whole nonsense of pushing in radical extremism under the form of CRT or this hyper-sexualized curriculum,
it's not going to happen.
I mean, we're going to continue to fight on this front and we have to stand up.
And I have gotten hundreds of emails and phone calls from parents, you know,
asking for more help on, hey, we're speaking up, we're showing up at school board meetings, and this is still going on.
And we have to take a stand.
We have to stand with families and say, your child is not going to go to school and face indoctrination.
We're just not going to allow it.
I have to tell you,
I wish Texas was as bold as you are right now.
But unfortunately, Texas, I think, is asleep at the switch in many ways.
Do you have SEL being
incorporated into your schools now?
Social-emotional learning?
Yes, sir.
That's something we're taking a look at.
We're starting to look back through our textbooks and look back through what's actually going on.
I've got a stack of complaints and issues from parents that I'm sifting through.
We've got parents that, again, are doing a great job here of being engaged.
And they've been sending me stuff, and we're digging into this because, again, you've seen these national groups that are sticking all this in curriculum.
And again, what in the world are we talking about all this stuff in a math class?
It has absolutely no place for it.
I'm going to tell you something else, Lan.
You know,
we are a conservative state here.
I've got teachers that send me this stuff going.
You won't believe this.
I just got this curriculum and told I need to teach this in my class.
This isn't math.
This is not what I signed up for.
And so, yeah, I've been getting it from parents and teachers sending me this curriculum going, hey, what is this?
And so we are doing a deep dive.
Governor Stitt and I are very committed to ensuring that our students are getting academics and not indoctrination in our schools.
So we are actively taking a look at all those materials and what's available and making sure parents have that transparency that they deserve and seeing what's being taught in their schools.
And again, you send your kid to school, you're expecting them to learn those academic standards, not to be part of a social experiment by the far left.
So, Ryan, when I did a special last night on SEL and I found that it really started through the CDC and then through the Department of Education down into our schools, all these radical groups are involved in it.
The unions are involved in it.
What is the solution here?
I mean,
I think, A,
the
Board of, or not the Board of Education, the
Department of Education needs to be abolished.
It needs to go to the states, and the states need to take care of it, not the national, because the federal government is just corrupt through and through with all of this stuff.
Also, I think
everything shows me that the schools, the teachers' unions, they may not be involved in the local level, but they are involved up at the top in a big way.
What is the solution?
What's the biggest problem that we should be aiming for?
Absolutely.
I'm gonna give you three things.
Glenn, first of all, you're spot on.
Isn't it amazing how many problems we have in education that come from the feds?
The Federal Department of Education should have nothing to do with the states.
We don't need it.
They're not helpful in any way, shape, or form.
All they do is find a new social experiment.
It was Common Core, and then it was CRT.
And now it's all this over-sexualization.
That is all that we've gotten from them.
There's no help, to your point.
They cause more problems.
They don't need to be involved.
That's why Article, you know, Amendment 10 of the Constitution reserves power to the states.
And that's where education should be wholly located.
And so that's where we've got to get back to that.
Number one, number two, we've got to have school choice.
I mean, that's something I'm a champion for school choice because at the end of the day, you've got to empower a parent to say, I want to send my kid to this school.
If you're going to do this in this school, we're taking the money and we're going to go to another school.
And that is really the way to empower parents.
And by the way, that's why the Biden administration is attacking charter schools now.
I mean, the Biden administration, they force indoctrination and then they say, and by the way, you can't opt out of it.
You don't have another choice.
So that's part of this bigger national plan there.
And so we absolutely have to have school choice.
We have to get the feds out of education.
And lastly, we got to have transparency so that parents can actually see what's being taught in the school, have that relationship with the teachers and the school board.
And, you know, that's one of the things we want to see is school boards that are actually very open with what's being taught in their schools.
Again, Glenn, my background is I'm a former public school teacher.
And you know what?
Every time I have a parent that wanted to talk to me or wanted to work with me on their kid's education, I always thank them.
There's nothing better for a kid's success than an engaged parent.
It is outrageous.
that you've got a federal department of education and a president that act like it's a problem for parents to be at school board meetings.
It is absolutely outrageous.
We have to keep parents engaged, and we need to be finding ways to get them more engaged.
I will tell you that I've had teachers actually tell me, Mr.
Beck,
we've got this covered.
When I asked, tell me the books that you're going to be reading.
Do you have an extra textbook I can bring at home and work with them so I know where you are?
You know, let me help.
And they just scoffed at me.
We have this, Mr.
Beck.
I'm like, really?
Because you work for me.
I don't work for you.
You are to supplement me, not the other way around.
It's unbelievable.
A good teacher, and again, you know, I work with teachers every day.
Good teachers say, absolutely, parents, come on.
You know, here's what we're doing.
Here's things you can do at home.
Here's things to reinforce what we're learning.
I mean, I'm a history teacher, Glenn.
If my kids go home and mom and dad are going over World War II with them and asking them about what we covered in class and are showing the kids that, hey, what you're learning at school is important and we want to be a part of it.
I'm telling you, there's nothing better in an educational experience than to have a parent like that.
So I have, it is outrageous that we wouldn't have that approach in all of education to include parents, grandparents, in their kids' education.
I mean, we all know the family unit is what's central to our society.
We need to be ensuring that those conversations are happening.
And that's where, again, I want the conversation around the kitchen table to be about school choice, what school is best for you, but about what's going on in your school.
What are you learning about?
Let's get it all out here on the table.
Let's talk about it.
That should be the type of behavior we're encouraging rather than labeling parents to show up at school board meetings, domestic terrorists, and trying to make it tougher for charter schools around the state so parents have less choices.
Every good teacher I've ever met has always said, My gosh, we're so glad that you and others are showing up to these things, that you're talking to your kids.
We're so grateful because so many parents are disengaged.
We've gone from from that to parents need to shut up and sit down.
We've got it.
And that's so dangerous.
Ryan, I appreciate it.
Thank you so much for your frank words and standing true to American values.
Oklahoma Secretary of Education, his name is Ryan Walters.