Why not? Why wouldn't you take children to one of these events?
I didn't mention laws. I did mention Democrat indoctrination going on in the schools.
Have you ever held a conversation with someone without trying to put words in their mouths?
If you want to see laws, you can read here:
"California was the first state to require that the teaching of history and social science
accurately portrays (are you saying that we should hide these facts of life from our kids?) LGBTQ+ people and their identities. The FAIR Education Act was passed in 2011 and mandates that instructional content be fair, accurate, inclusive, and
representative of minoritized communities, including LGBTQ+ populations. Over the following six years, state leaders worked to develop the
History and Social Science Framework that now guides this inclusive content. The framework informed development of the first new textbooks, which teachers began using in classrooms during the 2017-2018 school year. Although it wasn’t mandated as in Nevada’s new law,
this framework shapes instruction beginning in kindergarten, with lessons on varying family structures and what it means
to work together. In these earlier grades, LGBTQ+ inclusive content might look like lessons about different family structures, for example. This content, while sometimes not thought of as specifically LGBTQ+ inclusive, is typically what inclusion looks like for young students;
developing self- and community-awareness are inherently inclusive practices that help students begin to understand similarities and differences in the world around them. For older grades, the framework mandates what might be more obviously-inclusive content, such as lessons about LGBTQ+ historical figures.
Finally,
Nevada last week became the sixth state to pass a law mandating LGBTQ+ inclusive curriculum and, like Oregon, specifically includes contributions of LGBTQ+ people, Native and Indigenous people, people of minority racial groups, and people with disabilities to science and history. While other states, such as New Jersey and Illinois, have created inclusive content that spans kindergarten through 12th grade, the legal code in those states does not mandate it at specific grade levels. Nevada’s law, however, requires that inclusive history
be taught beginning in kindergarten—a big step forward on an issue that is often the most contentious when it comes to early and elementary education. Other states will likely look to Nevada as it moves through implementation."