Posted on 01/08/2005 7:02:35 AM PST by NYer
In a new video to be distributed to 61,000 schools across the nation, homosexual activists are using popular children's TV characters such as SpongeBob SquarePants and Barney the dinosaur to surreptitiously indoctrinate young children into their lifestyle, a pro-family activist group charges.
SpongeBob Squarepants is one of the popular children's TV characters appearing in a new 'tolerance' video. |
Based on the 1970s hit song "We Are Family," the video will be distributed to public and private elementary schools nationwide March 11, along with lesson plans for teachers, points out the American Family Association.
The distribution, sponsored by FedEx, will coincide with the video's broadcast March 11 on Nickelodeon, PBS, and the Disney Channel in celebration of the proposed National We Are Family Day.
AFA researcher Ed Vitagliano sees the project as an "open door" to a secondary discussion of homosexuality, noting the the foundation has a "tolerance pledge" on its website that children and others are encouraged to sign, which includes sexual orientation. [Editor's note: This story previously linked to the website of a group that has the same name but no connection to the video. WND regrets the error.]
"While we want everyone to respect other people's beliefs, we do not consider it appropriate for children's television to be used in an effort to indoctrinate children to accept homosexuality," he said.
Vitagliano says the foundation is employing a bait-and-switch approach, with popular children's figures such as Arthur, Dora the Explorer, JoJo, Clifford the Big Red Dog, Big Bird and Bob the Builder.
The objective is to get children to the foundation's website "and there they're given the full pitch about homosexuality," he said.
Video producer Christopher Cerf called the video an "unprecedented event."
"For the first time characters from all of the important kids shows came together to appear in the same video," he said in a November news release. "The producers and performers from each show embraced the spirit and message of this project."
The We Are Family Foundation was founded by singer-songwriter Nile Rodgers, who wrote the hit song recorded in 1979 by Sister Sledge.
The video was financed by a grant from the Toni Mendez Shapiro estate.
"Cooperation and unity are the most important values we can teach children," Rodgers said. "We believe that this is the essential first step to loving thy neighbor."
The We Are Family Foundation says its partners in the production are the Anti-Defamation League, Crown Theatres, Disney Channel, FedEx, Nickelodeon, HIT Entertainment, Nile Rodgers/Sony Publishing/The Bernard Edwards Estate/Warner Chapel, Nelvana, PBS, Scholastic, Sesame Workshop, Toni Mendez Shapiro Estate, and WGBH-TV in Boston.
A Federal Express spokesman said the company is "proud" to provide shipping for the project.
"Promoting diversity is part of our corporate culture at FedEx," said William G. Margaritis, senior vice president, worldwide corporate communications.
Characters appearing in the video are from award-winning shows including "Arthur," "Barney," "Bear in the Big Blue House," "Between the Lions," "Blue's Clues, Bob the Builder," "The Book of Pooh," "Clifford the Big Red Dog," "Dora the Explorer," "Jimmy Neutron," "JoJo's Circus," "Kim Possible," "Lilo & Stitch: The Series," "Little Mermaid," "Madeline," "The Magic School Bus," "The Muppet Show," "The Proud Family," "Rugrats," "Sesame Street," "SpongeBob SquarePants," and "Zoom."
The video also features cameo appearances by entertainers Bill Cosby, Diana Ross and Whoopi Goldberg.
This debate is not over whether "Spongebob is gay" or not, this discussion is about Spongebob, Disney, and PBS characters are being used to indoctrinate America's children in a socialist "tolerance" program.
The characters appear in the materials. They are the Pied Piper for this organization.
And if you find out that UPS has domestic partner benefits you're going to send stuff by carrier pidgeon?
http://www.bookfinder.com/ new and used book search engine to corporate and individual book dealers.
Yep. She was looting the money of her donors, converting it to gold, and then got stabbed in the back by some other theives in the organization.
Thanks. Already use that site, but I appreciate you sharing info.
As far as I can tell they appear in a video where they sing a song. The rest of the stuff may be used as a discussion guide. The AFA has made it sound like Spongebob will be shouting "gay is okay".
I'll let my husband know about this. See what he says. I can't ban FedEx, though. I'd miss out on kissing the FedEx guy every day. ;)
Should they? Whose moral authority are you using to tell them what they should do?
A leprechanist. Theist is just as made up a word, it just wasn't made up by me. In fact, the word "atheist" was first used by the Romans to describe Christians and others who did not recognize Casear as god.
What if your grocery store sells food to homosexuals. And you probably bought clothes from stores that have sold homosexuals clothing. And you've done business with places that have active homosexuals working for them. And you talk to me of purity!
As a member or supporter of Third Wave, you are joining our commitment to act out against organizations, businesses, and people who discriminate on the basis of gender, race or sexual orientation. (Ignorance is ignorance, no matter what the logic, or lack thereof.) Often it's the unjust behavior right under your nose that's the hardest to identify and rectify. It's easy to get used to the way things have been done since the day we were born. And discriminatory practices can come to seem almost natural. For instance, most of us have probably been conditioned to believe that women and girls just aren't as good at math or science.
The first step in bringing about change is to open our eyes to the day-to-day happenings around us. The I SPY SEXISM campaign will help you identify and take action quickly and effectively. Plus, you'll be getting good practice adding your voice, loud and clear, to the chorus of your community.
Take Note
The first step is to sit up and take notice of what's going on around you. Have a look at these questions and see if any of them sound all too familiar:
How often do the movies you see have women as the central characters?
How many of the movies you see were directed by a woman?
How many of the elected officials in your city are openly gay? State? Federal?
How many people of color serve as judges in your local judicial system? State? Federal?
In your favorite general-interest magazines, how many articles are written by women? How many are about women/people of color/lesbian and gay people?
Which news stories get front-page coverage in your daily paper?
Do gay teenagers socialize openly and safely at local school-wide events?
How many women's professional sporting events are broadcast by the major networks?
As a woman, can you walk home alone at night in your neighborhood without being nervous?
Does your local newsstand carry lesbian and gay magazines?
How many average-size or heavy women appear on your favorite sit-coms? Are they ever the central characters?
How many women artists are covered in your art history classes?
How much street crime is reported on your local news? By comparison, how much corporate/white collar crime is reported on your local news?
How many local school principals (or chancellors or presidents) are women? How many are men? Compare that to the teacher female/male ratio?
These are just a few of the ways that sexism, racism, and homophobia are built into the culture we live in. No doubt, you can think of dozens more. In order to make change, we have to identify these practices and let it be known that we think it's lousy. So keep your eyes peeled. Carry a notebook and jot down incidents that strike you as unfair. Ask the people involved for their names, so they know you are watching. Talk to your friends. Ask them if they've ever witnessed similar behavior. Ask your teachers what they think of it? Let them know what you think.
Sound Off
Once you recognize unfair behavior for what it is, the next step is to let your feelings be known. You can download postcards that will help you get the word out.
First and most important, send a card to the wrongdoer. Let him or her or it know that you are watching and that you will continue to watch until the situation changes.
Send a card to a member of the media (newspapers, TV news programs, magazines, web sites). These are open channels you can use to get your message to people who share your views and want to help you make change.
Send a card to your elected officials (your Senator, the President of the United States or of the school board, or your Mayor). Their job is to listen to your concerns and act on them. If they don't respond to one postcard, get others to send more.
Send a card to Third Wave. We are a resource for you. We can put you in touch with others, near and far, who may be encountering the same situations. Third Wave will also document what you are doing and how you are working to change it.
And finally, send a card to a family member or friend. Although you may not talk much about it, you'll be amazed to find that people close to you often have the same concerns about unjust activities in your community. By sending them word of your own work in writing you will encourage and inspire them to take actions of their own.
That's it. It's that easy. And that's what we call MOVEMENT.
All you say is true, except you left out the parts about male homosexuality, and adult/child sexual awareness, all of which are presented in very positive lights.
a·the·ist n.
One who disbelieves or denies the existence of God or gods.
ag·nos·tic n.
1Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Editiona One who believes that it is impossible to know whether there is a God.2 One who is doubtful or noncommittal about something.
b One who is skeptical about the existence of God but does not profess true atheism.
ag·nosti·cal·ly adv.
Word History: An agnostic does not deny the existence of God and heaven but holds that one cannot know for certain whether or not they exist. The term agnostic was fittingly coined by the 19th-century British scientist Thomas H. Huxley, who believed that only material phenomena were objects of exact knowledge. He made up the word from the prefix a-, meaning without, not, as in amoral, and the noun Gnostic. Gnostic is related to the Greek word gnsis, knowledge, which was used by early Christian writers to mean higher, esoteric knowledge of spiritual things hence, Gnostic referred to those with such knowledge. In coining the term agnostic, Huxley was considering as Gnostics a group of his fellow intellectualsists, as he called themwho had eagerly embraced various doctrines or theories that explained the world to their satisfaction. Because he was a man without a rag of a label to cover himself with, Huxley coined the term agnostic for himself, its first published use being in 1870.
agnostic adj
uncertain of all claims to knowledge [syn: agnostical] [ant: gnostic] n : a person who doubts truth of religion [syn: doubter]Source: WordNet ® 2.0, © 2003 Princeton University
I'm curious. I you don't judge a person by their beliefs or by what they do, how do you judge a person? Have you ever been on a jury? How do you choose your friends? Would you be friends with a member of the KKK? By choosing to associate yourself with only certain people you have had to make judgements about them.
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