Close X
Friday, October 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Conservative Leadership Hopeful Compares Ontario Sex Ed To Residential Schools

The Canadian Press, 22 Sep, 2016 11:44 AM
  • Conservative Leadership Hopeful Compares Ontario Sex Ed To Residential Schools
TORONTO — Conservative leadership hopeful Brad Trost raised some eyebrows Wednesday when he compared Ontario's new sex-education curriculum to residential schools.
 
Trost joined a couple hundred parents gathered outside the provincial legislature to protest Liberal changes to the way sex education is taught in the province.
 
The updated document includes warnings about online bullying and sexting, but some parents have taken issue with discussions of same-sex marriage, masturbation and gender identities.
 
Unlike at their previous rallies, the protesters also lashed out at Progressive Conservative Leader Patrick Brown, whose flip-flopping on the issue has made him a target of the ire of many social conservatives.
 
Trost, known for his opposition to same-sex marriage, was one of the guest speakers at the protest.
 
"You have a responsibility, a responsibility that you take very seriously, a sacred responsibility to do what is right for your children," the Saskatchewan MP told the crowd.
 
"We in Canada, when we have taken away those rights from parents we have had a disaster each and every time. The most tragic incident in our history was the residential schools and that was the underlying problem: parental rights were not respected."
 
About 150,000 First Nations, Inuit and Metis children were taken from their families and forced to attend government schools. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission heard graphic testimony from survivors who detailed physical, sexual and emotional abuse at the schools.
 
 
Trost said after his speech that the Ontario sex-ed curriculum is "not nearly" the same level of seriousness as residential schools, but "the underlying principle is the same."
 
He was hesitant to comment on the controversy surrounding Brown, his former Conservative caucus colleague, but said his "personal friend" has always been "a shy guy when it comes to policy and things like that."
 
Brown told social conservatives last year that he would "repeal" the curriculum — a promise he never made publicly. A letter went out under his name last month in a Toronto byelection saying he would "scrap" the curriculum if elected premier, but Brown disavowed it in an op-ed days later, saying he hadn't seen it and that he now supports the changes.
 
Social conservatives have since produced emails that appeared to suggest Brown was aware of the promise to scrap the updated curriculum. Tanya Granic Allen of the group Parents as First Educators says she had discussions with Brown's chief of staff during the byelection about what commitments the leader could make to win her group's support.
 
Brown said Wednesday they're upset he has changed his position.
 
"It's their mission now to make life difficult for those that oppose them," he said.
 
"I've made my position very clear on sex education. It is today what it was when I wrote my op-ed, that I support an updated curriculum."
 
The crowd of protesters booed when social conservative leader Charles McVety mentioned Brown's name.
 
"Patrick Brown, I supported him," he said. "I want my $10 (membership fee) back because it was taken from me in a fraudulent manner."
 
The curriculum was implemented last year and all of the three major party leaders now support it, but the protesters insist it is age inappropriate.
 
"(Premier Kathleen Wynne) does not get to tell us parents what our children will learn, we tell her what they will learn," Granic Allen said. "Most parents don't want their kids indoctrinated by the state and whatever new fad is taking hold of society these days."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. College Issues Cease And Desist Letter To 'Death Midwives' Group

B.C. College Issues Cease And Desist Letter To 'Death Midwives' Group
  "It was such an honour, such a privilege to be able to do it," said Bains, a professor of Sikh studies at the University of the Fraser Valley in Abbotsford, B.C.

B.C. College Issues Cease And Desist Letter To 'Death Midwives' Group

Jason Kenney Says United Alberta Right Would Face 2nd Leadership Race

Jason Kenney Says United Alberta Right Would Face 2nd Leadership Race
Kenney made it clear at a news conference in Edmonton that he isn't interested in the Progressive Conservatives or the Opposition Wildrose taking each other over.

Jason Kenney Says United Alberta Right Would Face 2nd Leadership Race

P.E.I. Restaurant Creates Lobster Ice Cream, Says People Seem To Enjoy It

P.E.I. Restaurant Creates Lobster Ice Cream, Says People Seem To Enjoy It
A Summerside, P.E.I., restaurant has created lobster ice cream, and its owner insists people are enjoying it.

P.E.I. Restaurant Creates Lobster Ice Cream, Says People Seem To Enjoy It

'Not Out There Alone:' Winnipeg Nightclub Owner Plans Bus Trip To Steinbach, Man., Pride March

'Not Out There Alone:' Winnipeg Nightclub Owner Plans Bus Trip To Steinbach, Man., Pride March
WINNIPEG — A Winnipeg nightclub owner is organizing a bus trip to support marchers in a gay pride parade this weekend in the heart of what's referred to as Manitoba's Bible Belt.

'Not Out There Alone:' Winnipeg Nightclub Owner Plans Bus Trip To Steinbach, Man., Pride March

Oscar-winner Gibney On Cyberwarfare In 'Zero Days'

Oscar-winner Gibney On Cyberwarfare In 'Zero Days'
NEW YORK — Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker Alex Gibney believes the first atomic bomb of the cyberwarfare age has already been dropped.

Oscar-winner Gibney On Cyberwarfare In 'Zero Days'

Environment Canada Says 5 Tornadoes Hit Alberta Over Canada Day Weekend

Environment Canada Says 5 Tornadoes Hit Alberta Over Canada Day Weekend
The agency says two of the twisters were rated EF-1 wile the others were EF-0, meaning moderate to light damage.

Environment Canada Says 5 Tornadoes Hit Alberta Over Canada Day Weekend