/
Fairfax County’s ABCs leading to O-U-T for parents in public schools, family advocate says

Fairfax County’s ABCs leading to O-U-T for parents in public schools, family advocate says

Link Successfully Copied
Facebook
Twitter/X
Truth Social
Gab
Email
Print

Fairfax County’s ABCs leading to O-U-T for parents in public schools, family advocate says

A public high school in Virginia is teaching students the alphabet all over again.

But this time, each letter stands for a political cause.

West Springfield High School in Fairfax County, Virginia has put up a display along its high school hallway that goes through the alphabet. 

The Daily Signal reports it is titled "The ABCs to ME." Each letter has a couple of pictures and phrases on what the letter stands for.

The first is A, which is for abortion. It is accompanied by a picture of a coat hanger with a positive pregnancy test.

Others of note include F is for femicide. Then there’s H is for hope, with the accompanying picture being of a smiling Kamala Harris waving to a crowd.

There’s J is for Justice with the statue of liberty with a fist in the air, surrounded by a Palestinian flag, a Ukrainian flag, a transgender flag, and a Black Lives Matter insignia.

Cobb, Victoria (Family Foundation - Virginia) Cobb

Victoria Cobb, President of the Family Foundation of Virginia, talked with AFN about this.

"Parents in Fairfax continue to be shocked by the new lows that their county goes to in order to indoctrinate their children into left-wing propaganda. This was a totally unacceptable display and is the entire reason that parents have been up in arms about Fairfax's discussion about trying to put LGBT concepts into curriculum all the way down to kindergarten."

It's a leftist take on the alphabet and one that most parents aren’t seeking for their children.

"We did hear about this from Fairfax parents. And honestly, I mean, A is just the beginning of it. Abortion isn't even where that whole display stops. It's everything from abortion to pushing Kamala Harris to including things about being queer. I mean, this is every sort of center parent who's just simply trying to teach their kids the actual ABCs worst nightmare."

Some other ones of note include L is for leadership with pictures of Kamala Harris, Michelle Obama, Alexandria Ocasio Cortez. Others include M is for Mansplain, P is for persecution, T is for Trans women, and Z is for male gaZe. 

So what can parents do about this? 

"Well, parents have been flooding their way out of the Fairfax public high schools. If they have any ability to educate their child elsewhere, they're choosing that. Fairfax has been on a steady decline of people choosing to enter the public school system over the last five or so years, and this is why."

Cobb agreed it seems the two Virginia counties who most appear in the news are Fairfax and Loudoun. She speculated as to why.

"Well, I don't think there's any doubt that its proximity to Washington, D.C. does not help it, meaning that we have politicos who are involved in these school systems, people who live in that area for very specific reasons, and they're running these schools.”

Schools off mission

Cobb says school leadership has drifted away from the mission of education.

“Instead of running education centers, they're trying to run political organizations. They're trying to activate kids to the left, and parents are done. They're sick of it. Frankly, they're trying to stand up. It's unfortunate that we can't seem to have enough voice when it comes down to selecting those that are in charge of these school systems up in Fairfax."

Cobb concluded with her own thoughts on this.

"It's just disappointing, and I think even the kids know that they're being indoctrinated. So, it's just-- parents are just going to continue to have to make their voices heard, and these need to be made examples of nationwide that schools ought not follow this path because more and more kids will walk right out the doors into private schools and homeschooling."

Previous Article

Daily Poll

AFN March 27 Morning Update

March 27, 2025 Hear More

00:00
00:00
00:00

Latest AP Headlines