JEFFERSON CITY–Emails and
threatening phone calls have been directed to Rep. Steve Cookson,
R-Fairdealing, and those co-sponsoring his bill that would prohibit the
discussion of sexual orientation as part of classes on human
reproduction in public schools.
The homosexual community has risen up in opposition to House Bill
2051 (HB 2051) and the 19 representatives who have signed onto it. They
insist it would have a harmful effect on students struggling with their
sexual identity.
“We need to focus on how to get jobs. We want education to be about
developing mathematicians and civil engineers. We do not like education
to be the place where a political agenda uses it to social engineer our
children,” Cookson said.
“We still need to be focusing our dollars toward good subjects and the primary mission.”
Calling for Cookson and other sponsors to withdraw the proposed
legislation is a group of 36 representatives, led by Rep. Stacey Newman,
D-St. Louis, calling itself the “House Progressive Caucus.”
Cookson said his bill does not target a particular sexual orientation
but would ensure that the focus is on the curriculum parents expect
their children to learn when they send them to school.
Kerry Messer, legislative liaison for the Missouri Baptist
Convention, said that all the bill does is to remove the social
engineering regarding the homosexual agenda.
“In 28 years, I have seen over 45,000 bills going through the
Legislature. Until today,” he said, “I have never seen one group of
legislators publicly call out another group of legislators to remove
their names from a bill related to an issue those sponsors believe in.”
Messer said the homosexual network is doing everything it can to
harass the 20 representatives who are in support of the bill. “They’re
being beaten up with hundreds of harassing phone calls from around the
state.”
Messer pointed out that the homosexual lobby is more than the
homosexual community. It includes those who have empathy with them, and
it is made up of groups who are affiliated based on the sexual fetishes
that they hold in common, which may include criminal sexual behavior
such as pedophilia, he said.
Cookson, who said he has been threatened as well as harassed, plans
to work with House leadership but has no intention of withdrawing the
bill or changing his stance on what the 23 words of the bill actually
say:
“Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, no instruction,
material, or extracurricular activity sponsored by a public school that
discusses sexual orientation other than in scientific instruction
concerning human reproduction shall be provided in any public school.”
“I am a man of faith,” Cookson said. “I prayed to God before I filed
the bill, like I do with other legislation. He gave me the words to
accomplish what His goals are, to further His glory. That’s why I filed
the bill.”
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