Colorado public school teacher forced into re-education for challenging transgender madness

By Jonathon Van Maren

A couple of years back when the LGBT movement was gaining steam, conservatives on Twitter would often jokingly respond to stories of the latest cultural capitulation with the response: “See you in the gulag!” It was a reference to the sinister passion of our cultural elites to re-educate everyone into the new values of the sexual revolution while suppressing expressions of the old, Christian values that once animated the West.  

The joke seemed less funny in 2018 when trans activists at the U.K.’s Goldsmiths University made the case that gulags were, actually, “benign places where inmates received education, training, and enjoyed the opportunity to take part in clubs, sports, and theatre groups.” The more than one million people who died in these camps were not mentioned by the trans activists, because you need to break a few eggs to make an omelet, as another gulag fan once said. 

We would do well to take this sort of enthusiasm seriously. Re-education camps—usually referred to as “training seminars” with soothing corporate-speak that cannot mask the compulsion behind it—are a tool that the LGBT movement is only too happy to use.

Just ask Phil Vagos, a Jefferson County Public School teacher in Colorado who, during a May 2021 email exchange with a student who identified as “transgender,” noted that the huge spike in students identifying with different genders was a “trend” and observed that some young people come to regret their transition. Both of these facts are obviously true (and recently articulated by none other than the liberal TV host Bill Maher). The student, a biological girl identifying as male, took umbrage with these facts. 

And as much as I don’t want to interfere in anything that isn’t my business, given the P.S. of the email I thought it might be helpful for me to provide a link regarding the transitioning process that has become a recent trend among young people in the United StatesI typically wouldn’t do this, although you did mention that you are using an alternate name and gender outside of your parents’ presence, which tells me that this might not be the result of a consensus of agreement between you and them. In any event, please forgive my presumptuousness on my part regarding this issue. But I am a firm believer in making fully informed decisions … especially when they may completely and permanently alter one’s life. 

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