FLORIDA TEACHER ACCUSED OF PROMOTING HOMOSEXUAL ADVOCACY IN MATH CLASSROOM~LGBT PROPAGANDA COVERED THE WALLS

  FOSTERING PEER PRESSURE ON CHILDREN TO BE “ALLIES” OF LGBT PERSONS & ORGANIZATIONS
SHIFTS BLAME FOR “MANIPULATION” ONTO PARENTS WHO COMPLAINED
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 FLORIDA TEACHER ACCUSED OF PROMOTING HOMOSEXUAL ADVOCACY IN MATH CLASSROOM
BY HEATHER CLARK
republished below in full unedited for informational, educational, and research purposes:
 TAMPA, Fla. — A religious liberties organization has
 submitted a letter of complaint to a school district in Florida after 
being contacted by parents who say that their child’s math teacher is 
promoting homosexual advocacy in the classroom. The teacher denies any 
wrongdoing.

Attorneys with Liberty Counsel wrote
to Hillsborough County Superintendent Jeff Eakins on April 19 to
express concern about Riverview High School teacher Lora Jane Reidas,
who identifies as a lesbian. They advised that they had received reports
that three children in Reidas’ classroom had been prohibited from
wearing crucifixes because they could be considered to be “gang symbols”
and “disrespectful.”


It provided a photograph of one of the crucifix pendants.

Meanwhile, according to additional photographs
provided to the organization by parents, Reidas has decorated her
classroom with various homosexual advocacy material, including buttons
on her desk that read “I Love My LGBT Students” and “Safe Schools for
All” in promotion of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network
(GLSEN).

A poster is also displayed on the wall advising that her classroom is
“safe and inclusive” for “lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
students and their allies,” and the word “ally”—also posted to the
wall—is spelled out in large cut-out letters and covered with
handwritten sayings in support of the homosexual lifestyle.


“Moreover, at the beginning of the semester, Ms. Riedas placed LGBT
rainbow stickers on students’ classroom folders without their consent,
which were there one day when the students arrived,” the letter from
Liberty Counsel alleged. “One of our clients reports that after she
removed the LGBT sticker, Ms. Riedas’ behavior toward her changed
markedly for the worse.”

At the time of the correspondence, it was also believed that Reidas
planned on promoting the GLSEN’s “Day of Silence” and was apparently
tweeting about homosexual advocacy issues during class time.

While Reidas serves as the sponsor of the school’s “gay-straight
alliance,” Liberty Counsel believes the teacher’s actions violate
district policy, which states that staff “may not dedicate work time to
an outside interest, activity or association,” since her homosexual
advocacy has nothing to do with math class.

“Ms. Riedas has … ‘use[d] institutional privileges for personal gain
or advantage’ in promoting her own politically activist LGBT viewpoint
to the students, which are a captive audience. Her choice of buttons and
classroom décor give the overwhelming impression that her lesbian
identity is foremost in her mind at all times, and is designed to show
students in no uncertain terms how she views the world,” the group
wrote.

However, Reidas has denied any wrongdoing, stating that she only told
one student at the beginning of the year not to wear rosary beads
because they could be considered gang symbols as per district policy.
She said she would never prohibit students from wearing crosses,
claiming that she herself identifies a Christian.

“I’m a Christian myself. I would never do that because I would be
hurt if someone would tell me not to wear my cross,” Reidas told the
Tampa Bay Times.

And while she didn’t deny the homosexual advocacy displays in her
classroom, she asserted that such discussions are separate from math
class and that she’s simply trying to let students know that her room is
a safe space from bullying.

“I am trying to let kids know that if they need a sanctuary, my
classroom is it,” Reidas said. “Some teachers, they let it go because
they’re kids. But I will address it. ‘That’s so gay?’ Not at all.”

She said that as word has spread about the controversy, some students
are now purposefully coming to class with Roman Catholic rosaries
and/or are drawing crosses or writing Scripture on the back of their
math papers.

“I’m just annoyed that they’re using my students,” Reidas contended.
“They’re manipulating them. They’re getting kids as teenagers to lie for
their agenda.”

Liberty Counsel President Mat Staver disagrees.

“She’s free to do what she wants to do in her own time outside of
that classroom,” he said. “She’s free to be a sponsor of a
student-initiated, student-led club. But she crosses the line when she
brings things into the classroom that pushes her ideas onto the
students. You talk about being inclusive. But she’s not including people
who do not agree with her.”

The district is currently investigating the complaint.