10 Burst results for "Child Movement"

Stephanie Miller's Happy Hour Podcast
"child movement" Discussed on Stephanie Miller's Happy Hour Podcast
"<Speech_Female> Knowles played the clip <Speech_Female> and comment. And what is he <Speech_Female> talking about with guns? <Speech_Female> You're <Speech_Male> saying the big threat to <Speech_Male> children is guns not <Speech_Male> drag queens. No one's saying <Speech_Male> that drag queens are murdering <Speech_Male> children, he added, <Speech_Male> were saying that <Speech_Male> drag queens are scandalizing <Speech_Male> children and <Speech_Male> drag queen story hours <Speech_Male> ringing often <Speech_Female> sexual criminals <Speech_Female> child molesters <Speech_Female> into places like libraries <Speech_Male> and schools to <Speech_Male> jiggle around in sexualized <Speech_Male> costumes <Speech_Female> for children <Speech_Female> and that's <Speech_Female> obviously depraved <Speech_Female> and wrong and in some cases <Speech_Female> already is illegal <Speech_Male> in other cases <Speech_Female> should be illegal and we <Speech_Female> should stop it. <Speech_Female> What is he talking about? <Speech_Female> If you go to <Speech_Male> churches if you want to <Speech_Male> find people that are actually <Speech_Female> molesting children, <Speech_Male> <Speech_Female> have you seen one story <Speech_Female> of a drag queen <Speech_Female> sexually molesting <Speech_Male> a child? <Speech_Male> No, because <SpeakerChange> it hasn't <Speech_Male> happened. I haven't even seen <Speech_Male> one drag queen jiggling <Speech_Male> in front of children <Speech_Male> at these things. Drag queens <Speech_Male> don't jiggle in. <Speech_Male> They're there <Speech_Male> to read <SpeakerChange> stories. <Speech_Male> Yes, and thus the title. <Speech_Male> Exactly. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Yeah. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Dana, <SpeakerChange> I just, I don't <Speech_Female> know, I guess I want to <Speech_Male> story hours <Speech_Male> as he going to. <Speech_Male> I guess they just need <Speech_Female> new things because I'm <Speech_Female> like, where did this come <Speech_Female> from? This drag <Speech_Female> queen, you know, <Speech_Female> we've talked about the <Speech_Female> men have been dressing <Speech_Female> as women for comedy <Speech_Male> purposes. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Our profession <Speech_Female> for, since time <Speech_Female> and memorial, I <Speech_Male> suddenly it's the, <Speech_Male> you know, <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> that because those <Speech_Female> those words <Speech_Female> straight men, Stephanie, <Speech_Female> how dare you those <Speech_Female> for straight men and <Speech_Female> they assume that every <Speech_Female> single drag queen is <Speech_Male> a queer man. <Speech_Male> So we're to trans <Speech_Male> person. <Speech_Male> So that's the <Speech_Male> difference for them. Oh, if it was <Speech_Male> tootsie and it was <Speech_Male> that was fine. That is <Speech_Male> straight man <Speech_Male> a <Speech_Male> technically <Speech_Male> a drag queen. <Speech_Male> It was in drag. <Speech_Male> You know, gentle <Speech_Male> was drag. It just <Speech_Male> went the other way around, <Speech_Male> although they would probably have <Speech_Male> a problem with yentl because <Speech_Male> Barbara is Jewish, <Speech_Male> but <Speech_Female> we're going to split hairs <Speech_Male> on that. And this has been <Speech_Male> forever. They've been joined <Speech_Male> entertainment forever. <Speech_Male> No one cares <Speech_Male> about drag queens on the right. <Speech_Male> They don't think they're <Speech_Male> indoctrinating the children. <Speech_Male> It is smoke and <Speech_Male> mirrors so they <Speech_Male> don't have to deal with the <Speech_Male> issues that are actually in <Speech_Male> hand because they <Speech_Male> have no platform. <Speech_Male> No <SpeakerChange> platform. <Speech_Female> I can't even <Speech_Female> keep track of. I just saw <Speech_Female> several a couple other, <Speech_Female> I don't know, pastor <Speech_Male> something, whatever. <Speech_Male> Church guys <Speech_Male> convicted of <Speech_Male> child movement. It's not a drag <Speech_Female> queen. But it really <Speech_Female> is always projection, <Speech_Female> isn't it? They're <Speech_Male> always the ones that are warning <Speech_Male> about look over there. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Okay. <Speech_Female> Since <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> we're on awful <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> right-wing <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> policies, going <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> against professional <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> medical advice, lawmakers <Speech_Female> advanced a bill. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> This is in Kansas, <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> requiring <Speech_Male> healthcare providers to tell <Speech_Female> people undergoing drug <Speech_Female> induced abortions, they <Speech_Music_Male> can still change their minds, <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> providers who <Speech_Male> refuse to do so could face <Speech_Male> thousands in fines <Speech_Male> and potential jail time. <Speech_Female> The <Speech_Female> American college of obstetricians <Speech_Male> and gynecologists <Speech_Male> opposes the idea <Speech_Female> of an abortion <Speech_Female> reversal process <Speech_Female> calling it scientifically <Speech_Female> unsound, <Speech_Female> unproven and unethical. <Speech_Female> I <Speech_Female> mean, <Speech_Female> it's just <Speech_Female> they have become just <Speech_Female> the anti <Speech_Female> science party on <Speech_Female> top of everything else, <Silence> right? <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Oh, a 100%. I <Speech_Male> mean, are you kidding <Speech_Male> medical professionals? <Speech_Male> They don't care. <Speech_Male> Although <Speech_Male> they like their own medical <Speech_Male> professionals, they'll <Speech_Male> know the ones that say <Speech_Male> that <Speech_Male> they think that they're <Speech_Male> transitioning kids <Speech_Male> at the age of 6. <Speech_Male> They're insane. Like, <Speech_Male> I don't know what <Speech_Male> science they're following, but <Speech_Male> it's all junk science. <Speech_Male> Every single person they say, <Speech_Male> that is a <Speech_Male> medical professional <Speech_Male> or <Speech_Male> a <Speech_Male> professional and anything <Speech_Male> that they're trying to back <Speech_Male> their subject. <Speech_Male> It's junk science. It's so frustrating.

TechtalkRadio
"child movement" Discussed on TechtalkRadio
"Here's an analogy. Think of it as a Nintendo Wii. Remember, we think of now a we for books merged with elite pad. Oh, so handheld device. With colored orbs on it, it responds to your motion and when you hold this one and you take a book, in fact, if you download software into it, we'll have a library of software for books. Download your favorite book into it. You can take that book off your bookshelf. If you already own it, use your wand and your one will read the book to the child and let them interact with it. Just like a leap pad did, but much more because it will respond now, not just to the child being able to interact with it with words and pictures and the games that we did with what I call paper based multimedia. But also, the one will respond to the child's movement. So for instance, how, just with this book, that child could be well, they could be driving the car. And as they moved their one, like they're driving a car, they'll hear the sounds of the roaring engine in the drive. They could reach up and grab a seat belt and move it down to wand. You could down to their side and they'll do the seatbelt plugin. And dip in a paint bucket and they'll do the sloshing paint and move it back and forth and paint a doom Bucky, sitting on the moon, and then maybe climb up into a rocket or even around and hear the rocket take off as they waited over their head. So the canoe magic wand is really kind of a gateway to progressing that learning, whether it be turning a page, driving a car, counting, showing where places on a map when it comes to is somewhere and then you get to see more of that country, whether it be Italy or the United States or Canada or Britain. So what families basically would have is like a magic wand that could give them unlimited really different scenarios depending on the book for them to enjoy and share with each other. Love it. That's it. It's a magic wand that works with books works with magazines and books. We also have a done a partnership with highlights magazine. Oh, I love it. And we'll be bringing highlights magazines to life. So hidden pictures, I'm looking right now. At a hidden picture and highlights magazine an issue we've done, and this will be coming out this fall by the way. So the new magic wand will be released supporting the books and magazines. This spread is called my first hidden pictures on the moon, beautiful artwork from highlights. And there's a picture of a dog holding a moon rock and a rooster connected to a spaceship floating upside down. We've made this come to life. With the wine. So you do exactly that. You'll paint the dude in bungee on sip the tea and you'll throw the baseball into space. While you're looking at the pictures and then flip over to a story and have the story be read to you and listen to it and interact is its reading with the pictures and with what you're hearing. I want our listeners to take a look at the website canoe dot com that's KI and OO dot com and you'll see. And I totally see your vision now. You're reading a book and to give you an example. There is a page there. The wipers on the bus go swish, swish, swish. And it shows you, this is the movement you would make. So the kids understand the child understands Swiss Swiss left to right, and they get that they get that movement. They do that and then they go to the next one. So it's really really well put together. I got to tell you. Thank you. Thank you, Andy so much. It's what you're seeing there, by the way, is a precursor to what will be coming out this fall. So this magic wand with the reading capability will be available this fall and

The Addicted Mind Podcast
"child movement" Discussed on The Addicted Mind Podcast
"It worked in saving my family in the sense that my mom stopped drinking as much. And my parents stopped fighting as much because they had to come together to deal with the nightmare that I was. You know? Right. So there were some benefits to it, even though it was hard and maybe you were the identified problem child, so to speak and got all the focus. There was also positive parts that came out of that. You know, so that happened and then in the 7th grade, I became, I was at a private school and I became the school slut. And just became the outcast and so that was it was just all this toxic shame, right? It was just all the shame. What I think is so interesting, when I think about my story as the scapegoat and the identified patient, it was like, I was deemed as such by my parents, but then I leaned into that role. You know, I owned it. Yeah. And often in dysfunctional families, each child in the family takes on a certain role, you've got the hero, like you said, you've got the scapegoat that if only this child behaved right, we wouldn't have any problems in this family and then you have the misfit and the lost child and all of that. It sounds like it all plays out. You start to see the whole structure. As you do your work and you move into it. So yeah, so just unpacking all this. So it was like the childhood stuff, but then it was all the subsequent experiences I had after that. That really laid the foundation. But yeah, just realizing it's like our template for a relationship and love is all developed during childhood and the times that I felt most connected to my dad was when my mom was drunk. I mean, that was really the only time that he was emotionally available for me. Right now. Yeah. And we also just become addicted to that. One of the characteristics of an adult child is we become addicted to excitement. And so, you know, I just remember being a little girl, I really feel like the dysfunction in my home was really my first drug of choice. I just remember sitting on the stairs and listening to my parents fight and just get an adrenaline rush, you know? Right. Right. Yeah, you get addicted to that stress that anxiety. It's like if it's not there, then for some people, they don't even feel alive if they don't have some kind of stress going on. So it's like you go out and you create distress just to kind of feel something. And in relationships, right? It's like I had to I didn't know that this was what was going on. But I found people that triggered that in me, right? I needed people that would, if it was somebody, it even says in the adult child book, it talks about how we find emotionally healthy people as boring. Yeah. Well, it doesn't have the stress and anxiety around it, which is kind of you think about it, yeah. This doesn't feel normal. I've grown up in this household that has some level of distress and stress and anxiety and chaos and I don't know how to live outside of that. And it's hard to create the life that I want. I mean, I know I want something over there, but this just feels like it's supposed to be this way. So I have to create this chaos. And that's that PTSD you talked about earlier comes in. So you go into an adult child meeting and what does someone see maybe when they first walk in the door? What's their experience? Or what was it for you? Well, so for me, I would say that the primary focus of my healing has been in therapy, so I saw my therapist for the first, I saw her twice a week for the first year and a half. I think that adult child meetings are definitely helpful and useful, but I really do think that therapy is the way to work through this stuff because we are talking about trauma here. The problem is is that I don't think that there's lots of practitioners out there that really know how to really our verse to treat this. It's so crazy. So I host these peer support groups. All of our experiences in there is like, we all sat in therapy for years and years and years and nobody was able to put a finger on what the hell was going on with us. You know? Right. So I had been working with a therapist since I was four years sober and she was great and wonderful and she helped me in so many areas. But this wasn't her niche. She didn't know this stuff. And I was very hesitant to find somebody else because I was like, oh my God, I'm going to have to start over and it's going to take me forever to catch them all up before we can even get into what's presently going on. But I Googled so I did. It was during Brian number two. I just Googled adult children of alcoholics therapists and I found there's this woman her name is Stephanie Brown and she's one of actually the pioneers of the adult child movement. And she has a therapy practice. It's called the addiction institute. It's out of Menlo Park. And so I called her and I told her what was going on with me. And she was like, I don't have any availability, but a woman in San Francisco dies. And so she connected me with my therapist. And I mean, this woman has saved my life, like she has saved my life. And I just feel so grateful that one that I found her into that I have the economic resources to be able to work with her. Because I'm telling you, there's just not a lot of there's like a desperate need for clinicians and practitioners to like, I was even talking to somebody the other day, he works in treatment. He's run treatment centers for years and over 20 years. And I was talking to the other day and he goes, this is the first time I'm hearing the term adult child. And I'm like, how? How? For me. I believe that this is like the core. For me, I believe that this is the root issue, and it just manifests in all different ways, right? Some people it might come out in addiction, an alcoholism, but it could come out in other compulsive behaviors or just various degrees, but I do believe that this is like the core wound. Is all of this faulty programming that occurred during childhood, and I think that for somebody in recovery, they have to get sober and they have to have some stability there, and then it's like your psyche then knows, okay, now let's deal with the real shit. Right. And so that bubbles up. And I think a lot of the times that people who relapse with long-term sobriety.

People of the Pod
"child movement" Discussed on People of the Pod
"It's a secret kind of cabal of pedophiles, George Soros is often mentioned in this gab also as the Rothschild family. And this group, they kind of latched on to the save the children movement. And blaming, again, quote unquote, powerful, Jewish globalists for doing inappropriate things to children and the need to rescue children. And that really does harken back to the blood libel against Jews and anti semitic en route. Again, blaming Jews for trying to control the world. That has a long history. And so that is something that was kind of underneath some of the things that we saw at the insurrection. But one final point I want to mention that I think is really important here is research is showing that the insurrection many of the individuals were actually not tied to the groups that we just mentioned. That's what we recognize, but many people that were there weren't anti semites. They weren't connected to any of these groups. And I think that's the scary part that they were joining with anti semites to undermine our government. And that's something we need to unpack and better understand. One of the other theories that we hear, again, not from everyone, as you just noted importantly, that not everyone who was part of this protest is affiliated with one of these groups, but we saw also in Charlottesville. The other notorious incident where we saw some of these same groups that we just discussed and mentioned, marching and chanting things like Jews will not replace us. And that is a reference to what is described or called the replacement theory. That was one manifestation of it. Can you just explain a little bit about what replacement theory is and what those adherence to this theory are hoping to achieve. Right, so replacement theory or great replacement is a conspiracy that believes that the white race is under threat of extinction. An extreme actually version of this theory is something called white genocide theory, which, again, saying that there's a intentional effort once again led by Jews to promote mass or non white immigration, intermarriage, other efforts that would lead to the extinction of whites in America, but also in Europe, for instance. There's a lot of transnational ties between these groups. And so that was the sentiment that we really saw promoted at 2017 at the unite the right rally in Charlottesville when they were chanting Jews will not replace us. They will not take over. They will not replace the white race, but this great replacement has the undercurrents for terrorist attacks. We saw this in 2018, a tree of life in a God shooting. That was the motivation behind the murderers thinking there. In 2019, in El Paso, the same idea, the Christ church shooting, New Zealand. This is the same piece. And the conspiracy really blames Jews again for being the masterminds behind and Guinness is where the end of symptoms being the masterminds behind bringing in immigrants to our country to kind of quote unquote unseat the white race from the proverbial throne. But one thing I think that's important to note, some of it's obvious, when we saw what happened in Pittsburgh, even Charlottesville, the anti symptom was obvious, the great replacement theory was obvious. I think we need to be vigilant when it's hidden under things. And that's something we saw, for instance, with Tucker Carlson using the great replacement theory under the guise of voting rights last April. And we spoke out against it, other spoke out against him, but it wasn't as notice. I think by more people in the public. And that's where we need to make these connections saying it's not okay to invoke these anti semitic conspiracy theories in any aspect of our engagement. Thank you. And you've just described what these groups seek to achieve when we look at January 6th..

Security Now
"child movement" Discussed on Security Now
"So the watch is that the doctor Webb researchers examined. Had default passwords of one, two, three, four, 5, 6. And most of them don't bother to employ encryption in their communications. They just use plain text. What this brings to mind is the glaring gap in consumer protection that currently exists in our tech industry. Because the difference between purchasing a well designed Wi-Fi router that might still have an inadvertent security vulnerability and this colorful plastic child's watch that communicates without encryption with remotely located command and control servers continually sending back all of the child's movements and is able to autonomously download any additional software at any time. To me, seems extreme. I mean, it's like it takes the consumer Ness way down to sort of a different lower level. And who knows what they're doing in the U.S., the engineers and scientists at underwriters labs are able to test toasters and vacuum cleaners because they were able to carefully examine and stress test the important functional safety aspects of those consumer products. But today's text gadgets tech gadgets are closed, black boxes, which are actively hostile to reverse engineering. I don't see any solution to this mess. Other than to take every possible precaution. You know, we're able to place our IoT devices on their own segmented network. If these wrist watches also have Wi-Fi radios, placing them on the IoT Wi-Fi would help. But they can still spy. Oh, and the whole point of this is to follow your kid when they're out and about, not in the home network. Right. Right. Exactly. And so to me, I would stay as far away from this ilari brand as possible, and I guess the only advice I would have. I mean, I could imagine, as you listen to these bullet points, these seem like cool things. The kind of features you'd want in and watch this tracking your child. Yeah. But use Garmin or you use American companies to begin with, I would say. Yes. Apple has watches that do all of this, probably at a much higher price. But they're available..

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
"child movement" Discussed on America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
"Beverly hills full home on a shopping spree for full names. One of the founders who calls herself marxist right and then the mothers of the victims will of all these things brand. Taylor i think george floyd's mom's involved trayvon martin from down in near where i grew up in sanford florida. All these these guys that were kind of the the figurehead her children movement. They all said. Hey we're sitting high and dry here when they eight million and the and the survivors of the family go got nothing. No support no beyond this message. Yeah because we have critical race theory. We have the school boards. We have this idea that is really permeating across america. I think a lot of parents have have woken up. That if you're white even if you're a six year old you can't help it you'll you'll raise Whatever you do your racist and you don't know it all if you're black you're always going to be a victim right. Does that help anybody. It doesn't and i think that that has to be that last part you mentioned sebastian has to be something that Parents black parents particular That they reject and they don't tell their kids. I'll tell you that the only reason why past middle and high school and this is a shout out to my mom. If she's listening my mother would stand by the basic right. We love ya. My mom would stand the front door when i was leaving for school every morning and she would say to me son. Do your best your best look your best. Speak your best because you are the best. Every day. Five days a week she would say that until black parents have to reject said whatever you do. You're gonna you're never gonna get anywhere. The white man's going to put you down and so parents have to do that. They haven't tell their kids. they are the best. They're not that they're not in that. Every day bash leaving the house gave me this thought process. Hey have to work hard. Because i'm the best now. You put me in a math class. Realize back but what happens is i had the stock price i said i had to perform. I had to work. There was an expectation because expectation. And i didn't ever think that i was oppressed or less than simply because i had a little bit more melanin than the next guy. So let's go beyond the role of the mother and the father the thing You may be. I'm not allowed to say this. Because i'm why but i am an american so i'm gonna. I'm really saddened. i'm worse than that. I am maybe disgusted. even get. yeah. I'm gonna say disgusted if you talk to my buddy larry elder who has all the facts larry elder radio show. God bless my. He's running for governor of california. Hope he gets it. Larry elder as a black american He just he tells it like it is six not nineteen nineteen unarmed Black man shot by police in nineteen six thousand shot by their fellow black american. That's genocide i want black lives matter talking to me about derek. Show van when six thousand blacks are dying every year at the hand of their fellow black americans. So i'm really disgusted at the lack of and i hate the word community organizer. I wanna see the black community. The lead wanna see. I wanna see the the church leaders stand up and do something where where all the black community leadership that is radical and. There's an old church on my daddy used to play. Saturday said sweep around your own front door for you. Try to remind until that absolutely is an issue that we have to address in disappointed Absolutely people push back. When i make this statement but i say all the time when i asked the question. What about black on black crime. I'm not saying to ignore other crime. I'm just saying hey why we're here finding so let's find this to you. Know we can absolutely take care of this issue in the black community. There's nearly a million police officers long for thousands in the country and the numbers simply. Don't add up. Sebastian of the amount of i think there's somewhere around three million police in iraq. It happened today and the the number of times that police officers discharged their firearms. Whether it be in defense or neglect simply. Don't add up to the narrative but when you go to chicago when you go to washington dc when you go to. Somebody's make conroy. That when you go to these places The numbers are astounding and so there absolutely is a level of accountability. And self police. If you will that the black community that we have to do in order to address the situation and what doesn't work is saying that we're killing ourselves because of the white man doing this issue right. There is not the diplomat. A shooting guns because of people. Matt right doesn't work that narrative dead work and i shot sebastian as a younger person when i hear my grandparents talk and they talk about their generation. There were the same issues and we still haven't found the same proposed solutions. And we still have found the you know. My dad grew up in the seventies and eighties. And you know they were the same issues then that there are now some of the same people that we're still putting our trust and faith into right. I won't go political bureau very rich saying that. Fixing it yeah and so it's not it's like taking your car to a car mccain for forty seven years and he's like no no this time i'm gonna get it but that's kind of where we are so i let me ask you because you've been very candid..

UK Column Podcasts
"child movement" Discussed on UK Column Podcasts
"So joe we've mentioned you on the program before we've done a a prerecorded interviews that we've had on the program before Because you've are particularly interested in this police and crime bill at the moment on the implications for protests. And you also a happens. Written a book about These types of groups like extinction about in some of these larger groups so thought you were perfect. Personnel have on for a few minutes to discuss this so before we talk about controlled opposition and the types of groups that are implementing that Just bring us up to date with the police and crime bill. It's getting its third rating on monday. Is that correct. Phosphate cocoas hawks along. So what will save bill second. The coleman states stuff a call. That's what it does what it is really It's it's the main pasta bill for native. I folks is is distinction between assemblies demonstrations because the demonstrations all the console position because ever since agreed with the crispy fall on gonna policy while saw gonna moss when they go to march accepted exists with with grocer exposes benefit. Anyone at all the country is it's the nation state protest. Since because it's issues that evolves focal democracy ball what we found children movements with with the cultural protests was there was controlled opposition which is a which for me is the cold it states. I'm they speak to the place of negotiations with the place. Holler gonna protest that. This shulte accepted accented. Born the same. Like a custom restaurants compares the wanna protests not way they protest as a label rice. However that may be these people would also at the same time. Likes you know pull. This calls out busy among suits. We get locked walked. Excessive a not with cetane little community x. grassroots campaign And so what you have.

Gloss Angeles
"child movement" Discussed on Gloss Angeles
"You should be medicating your child to how you should be medicating yourself to literally like how you should be voting. It is so bunkers and also the causes that you should be supporting exactly a big part of the mommy community last year. That really upset me in many ways was when the whole wayfair only handle down because i had people sharing that wayfair was trafficking children and kitchen cabinets that you could buy for twenty thousand dollars and what. A lot of people didn't realize when the rally around stopping child sex trafficking yes. Of course that is a common ground. We can all agree. We need to be aware of it and it needs to end. But the miss information that i saw and disinformation that i saw that was being spread on places like instagram and facebook. Specifically by mommy bloggers who said that. We need to start carrying about this more so it truly did went on. It was a q- non conspiracy that trickled into mommy influencing hostile cunanan. Yes yes and that's why when people would ask me well. Don't you think it doesn't matter where it came from that. The cause is enough. I'm like no actually it matters because you're not just supporting ending child sex slavery you're actually supporting a conspiracy that cunanan is perpetuating to their benefit. So the reason why that hashtag save the children movements language came up is because social media algorithms were catching up to cunanan and so kyun on needed to disguise itself needed to come up with new language in order to evade those social media algorithms and in order to get more people on board with the ideology not everybody is going to subscribe to the most extreme sort of like satanic q. Drop side of cuban on but people can certainly get behind a hashtag like save the children and then fall down a rabbit hole from there so save. The children was this hashtag. That was co-opted from legitimate child trafficking organizations and then use to totally distract away from that to get people on board with cunanan ideology and then save the children rallies were held were any children..

NewsRadio WIOD
"child movement" Discussed on NewsRadio WIOD
"Parents can sign up to get text, email updates information and advice about how they can create word rich environments in their homes because you know, at the end of the day, Brian again for someone like me who's been doing this for more than a decade. I don't think there's a more important data point that we could be looking at. For those of us who care about education. For there's there's no more important data point that we could be looking at them in third grade reading scores. And while Florida has made remarkable progress in public education outcomes over the last 20 years, We still have 43% of our third graders who cannot read at grade level. And why I think that data point is so important is when you look at the number of students who are coming into our K 12 system who are deemed quote not ready to be there. That number is at 42%. And then when you move out to 10th grade reading proficiency for most counties in Florida, you're still sitting Somewhere close to 40% of 10th graders who aren't reading at grade level. So there really is this very straight line that you can draw from whether another child is ready for kindergarten, whether he or she is going to be reading a proficiency by third grade. And ultimately, whether or not they're gonna be reading a great level by 10th grade. So for for our Legislature to look at third grade reading and to acknowledge that this is a challenge that we have to overcome in Florida on, we need to take a multi pronged appropriate approach to it. I think is is really In my time in this space, probably one of the most encouraging policy steps that I have seen. Well in my research mirrors what you're articulating about proficiency with literacy by the third grade, And so I bought you for also looking at, you know the information through an empirical lenses Well, along with what you're proposing here. One other item I'm watching in the state session is expanded school choice. I don't think it's a coincidence that as we have seen expanded school choice in Florida over the past real 15 or so years we've seen Significant improvement and education outcomes statewide, specifically in south border but also with previously underserved communities. Your thoughts Absolutely. The Senate has come up with a school school choice package They are. Our chamber has not yet ruled out a comprehensive package so I can't really speak to the substance of the impact of the of the state of the Senate bill, but Well, I think your point is is it is extremely important because I think there's a lot of misinformation in Florida about what the role of school choice has played. I mean, if you look at Florida of the last 20 years We have We have gone from the bottom quintile and student outcomes to the took to the top on Do you know to me as somebody who again was dedicated his professional life to educational equity. There's no more important data point that we should be looking at in public education policy than student outcomes. Amen. And right. I'll look we're gonna have to. We have to hold it there. We're up against the clock, but I appreciate it and we'll talk again. Continue the good work that strippers in it. Cancer. Lupus skin, the CEO of the Children's Movement of Foreign State Representative for District 1, 15 on Baloo pus and at Child Movement, FL on Twitter, and that would be right back to Brian Mud Show news. Ready to.

WNYC 93.9 FM
"child movement" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"And we looked for him and we look for him and All of a sudden, this man named Mr James Baldwin. Get up and introduce Uh Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. And we were some disappointed too. Where's King? The dog where he is our king. You know both point and 11 kings started to speak. Everybody got quiet and steel and Was looking up at him with wonder. And I and I know I woz and trying to hear every word, he said. A lot of things that didn't understand him, but he was talking about Our parents having the right vote. And, um Getting that right to vote. Through Nonviolence. Now, he said, that you can get anybody to do anything with steady, loving confrontation. And I heard it. When we said it the first time But the second time he said it in a speech. He said. Linda, you can get in a body to do anything with steady, loving confrontation and Remember jumping up saying, Oh, yeah, that's how I'm going to do it and my grandmother pulling the bag down and the on the pew thing shit up, Jack behaved very But it was, um It was an awesome speak T gave me at 13. He gave me the power or the Energy. I need it. To keep mad bow that I made it. Seven folks, I am talking with Lynda Blackmon Lowery about her own experience as the youngest marcher on the Selma Voting rights march. It's very really was interested in your book. You write a lot about How important kids were In the civil rights movement and how they were you used. I don't mean in a bad way, but they were used very effectively to help out will you share with people how you and your friends? Part of the silver has been to the point where you got Tossed in jail nine times before 15. Well, we'd lead new Do doing the year but between 63 65. We would trained And, um None violence. But the Children of Selma also knew that their parents couldn't go. March. If they went to jail, the India Children would be taken from them less known, um the job, but their Children would So we were the ones that know we needed to do this. Um We organized outsells With the help of Some young people from S E L. C. And snick. We had it all planned and arranged Whenever they said we were going to go March we knew That some Children would be staying in school. We knew and we get them on board because they had to do out homework and lessons for us. If we weren't in jail. We will go to school that morning. Say present for whatever better world dollars the school got, you know. And then we'd let out. Teachers know what March We wanted to go on the How teaches with some of the smartest And care is people you'd ever wanna meet, but they couldn't vote. Um Couldn't pass the voter registration tips and so we organized the Selma movement was the Children's movement. And the Night. Um 1965 Voting Rights Act passed back Congress on August 6 of that year. Was because of Children. I'm gonna ask you to read this passage about Being taken to a place called Camp Selma's Beaudry that through there, sir. Okay, sinners can get a little taste your book, turning 15 on the road to freedom. Okay, once, uh, when the city jail was fool, the police tow three busloads of us kids to a prison camp called Camp Sima. This prism was about five miles away from town after about three days there. They took us. To another prison camp even further away. It was late at night, and we couldn't see anything. So at first we felt they must be taken us back to Selma. But pretty soon we knew we've been riding too long to be going home. I was scared, and I think everyone Own. All three Busses were scared. We shoot? We wish you out. Parents did not know. Where we were. And they didn't know That we had been put in the state prison camp. We were gone for six days. Find Luke. When our leaders and sama found out where we were, they demanded our release. The bus is brought us back to Sam and we all ran home as fast as we could. We needed baths and something teat. This, says Black Happy's. That was the longest time I was ever in jail. It's Lynda Blackmon. Lowery. She is my guest today On MLK Day, the name for book is turning 15 on the road to freedom. My story of the 1965 Selma Voting rights march and I hope you don't mind. I think I think you don't. Well, I'd love to talk to you about bloody Sunday. You know about that day and and What do you remember the most from that day? The, um the says getting beaten. I remember that it was a solemn March, leaving, um The playground next to Brown Chapel Church, and, um That was unusual. For us because songs and the music kept the spirit up. But we were marching to a breath. Get to the apex of the bridge and How we could see with Alabama state troopers. Standing across this double highway. I mean, it was ah, lot of them. And the sheriff Jim Clark and his posse, and then he had he had the posse on horseback. Two. Um And John and Josefa. Got down to the front. Um and the Stay Tuber told him that we were need legal set Assembly. There would be no march from Selma to Montgomery that day. We needed it. We had three minutes to disperse and go back to our homes. A church um.