PDA

View Full Version : Wacky Christians spoil the fun


Varaj
04-07-2008, 03:51 PM
REEDSBURG, Wis. (AP) — An elementary-school event in which kids were encouraged to dress as members of the opposite gender drew the ire of a Christian radio group, whose angry broadcast prompted outraged calls to the district office.

Students at Pineview Elementary in Reedsburg had been dressing in costume all last week as part of an annual school tradition called Wacky Week. On Friday, students were encouraged to dress either as senior citizens or as members of the opposite sex.

A local resident informed the Voice of Christian Youth America on Friday. The Milwaukee-based radio network responded by interrupting its morning programming for a special broadcast that aired on nine radio stations throughout Wisconsin. The broadcast criticized the dress-up day and accused the district of promoting alternative lifestyles.

"We believe it's the wrong message to send to elementary students," said Jim Schneider, the network's program director. "Our station is one that promotes traditional family values. It concerns us when a school district strikes at the heart and core of the Biblical values. To promote this to elementary-school students is a great error."

Schneider co-hosts "Crosstalk," a nationally syndicated call-in Christian radio show.

After the program aired, both the school and Reedsburg School District office were flooded with calls complaining about the event.

The response surprised Principal Tammy Hayes, who said no one had raised any objections beforehand. She said a flier detailing Wacky Week had been sent home with children the prior week, and an announcement was also included in teacher newsletters.

The dress-up day was not an attempt to promote cross-dressing, homosexuality or alternative gender roles, district administrator Tom Benson said.

"The promotion of transgenderism — that was not our purpose," Benson told the Baraboo News Republic. "Our purpose was to have a Wacky Week, mixing in a bit of silliness with our reading, writing and arithmetic."

The theme for Friday's dress-up day came from students, Hayes said.

"It's different every year. They basically present the ideas, and they vote on what they would like from Monday through Friday," Hayes said. "... They did not mean anything by this day. They were trying to have fun and come up with a fun dress-up day."

About 40 percent of the student body dressed up Friday, Hayes estimated, with half portraying senior citizens and half dressing as the opposite sex.

"I can assure you we will not be having this day (again)," Hayes said.

Reedsburg is in southern Wisconsin, about 60 miles northwest of Madison.

So the kids vote on silly fun and some Christians get their panties in a bunch and ruin it. :mad:

Here (http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hRM8TuoUDOrMtqw1uM5VuMGqyNvwD8VSOJOG0)

Trainz
04-07-2008, 03:54 PM
So the kids vote on silly fun and some Christians get their panties in a bunch and ruin it...

.. and the sky is blue and water is wet.

Am I a bigot? Fine, I'm a bigot.

Name Lips
04-07-2008, 03:57 PM
At least they foiled this small part of the Gay Conspiracy that was threatening their kids' values!

Harry
04-07-2008, 08:45 PM
I was introduced to this sort of silly farcical thing at my god-damned conservative Southern Baptist church, for christ's sake. The church got together for some good clean slapstick fun with a "shotgun wedding" once a year or so, as part of a fund raising for Lottie Moon. Of course, only the adults cross dressed.

Radu
04-07-2008, 09:51 PM
Of COURSE, Harry. Adults are old enough to know they'll be going to Hell for crossdressing. We can't inflict the same fate on innocent kids, can we?

:what:

Lady Fury
04-08-2008, 12:54 AM
I really hate radical Christians. They make the rest of us "normal" Christians look like bat shit crazy people too.:what:

pandiculator
04-16-2008, 08:34 PM
A very similar event like this, which recieved a very similar reaction from the Radical Right, was discussed in one of my methods classes this semester. The assignment was in response to a couple of readings that were "gendered" against males and females. The students, then, were to "dress up" as the reading depicted the opposite gender.

There is validity in learning about how the other gender thinks, feels, and relates to the world. It builds empathy, understanding, and generates creative thinking - to respond to it as though the assignment were going to make every student shift into transgendered roles overnight is both foolish and ignorant. Their complaints should be treated as such.

Dawnstar
04-19-2008, 10:40 AM
Kids do not think that way, they just wanted to have fun and be silly and dressing up like a girl if you are a boy is silly or vice versa. Why do people have to throw such fits over things like this.

Space Cadet B^3
04-19-2008, 11:03 AM
We used to call it Spirit Week. I don't think we ever had a day like that, but it was good times.