
Canadian high schoolers questioned by RCMP for signing ‘straight and proud’ poster
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The decision to summon the police comes as students are increasingly standing up to school administrations and against the LGBT agenda.
(LifeSiteNews) — A Saskatchewan principal called in police to question students who said they were “straight and proud.”
Students at Swift Current Comprehensive High School were summoned to the ninth-grade principal’s office by a Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officer for signing a poster saying they were “straight and proud,” according to a report by independent journalist and former RCMP officer Nadine Ness.
Discrimination based on sexual orientation is very much alive and well in this Sask school, especially if that sexual orientation is straight.
High school students in Swift Current were pulled into the principles office for signing their name on a poster that said “I’m straight… pic.twitter.com/ANR5viDtix
— Nadine Ness (@NadineGNess) June 23, 2023
“The kids have disclosed to their parents feeling being intimidated by this RCMP officer who was saying things like this borderlines a hate crime and they could get in legal trouble,” Ness wrote.
According to Ness, the school failed to inform parents that their children were interrogated by the police for voicing their beliefs.
“As a former RCMP officer, I find this alleged behaviour of the officer very disturbing and made worse by the fact parents were kept in the dark and kids were not offered parents to be present,” Ness declared.
While the name of the principal has not been disclosed, it was not the main principal of the high school, who was forced to step in to prevent the incident from escalating.
Jack Fonseca of Campaign Life Coalition (CLC) told LifeSiteNews that this is a “seriously disturbing incident.”
“Objectively speaking, it’s an example of the increasingly totalitarian state apparatus, which includes the education system, cracking down on what it considers ‘thought crime,’” he stated.
“It appears that in Saskatchewan you are now considered a criminal for ‘wrong-think.’ Any thought or expression which signals a deviation from the state’s pro-LGBT orthodoxy must be stamped out ruthlessly, even with police enforcers,” Fonseca warned.