Across the country, our children’s classrooms have become political battlegrounds, and parents are waking up to a troubling reality: the American school system is no longer about reading, writing, and arithmetic. It’s about ideology, indoctrination, and control.
For too long, the Left has used public education as a vehicle to push radical ideas—Critical Race Theory, gender theory, revisionist history, and policies that cut parents out of the conversation entirely.
But the tide is turning. Conservative leaders, school board challengers, and millions of everyday moms and dads are stepping up to say: Enough.
Education, Not Indoctrination
What happened to teaching kids how to think—not what to think?
Instead of focusing on academic excellence, too many public schools have turned into laboratories for social experiments. Children are told to view themselves as oppressors or victims based on skin color. Boys are told they can become girls without parental knowledge. And test scores? They’re plummeting—while woke bureaucrats pat themselves on the back for “equity” initiatives.
This isn’t education. It’s propaganda.
And parents, once expected to sit down and shut up, are taking their rightful place back at the table. From Virginia to California, conservative candidates are winning school board elections, restoring parental rights, and putting real education back into the curriculum.
The Rise of School Choice and Parental Control
It’s not just about fighting the bad. It’s about building the good.
Conservatives are leading the charge for school choice, vouchers, and charter schools—because no child should be trapped in a failing district just because of their ZIP code. And no parent should have to fight their own government just to see what their child is being taught.
Freedom in education means accountability, transparency, and results. And that’s exactly what the Left fears.
Lessons from Healthcare: The Need for Truth
The crisis in education mirrors another broken system: public health.
Just like in schools, Americans have spent years being talked down to, lied to, and shut out of the process. We’re told to “trust the science”—but only the version approved by unelected bureaucrats and corporate interests. Questions are silenced. Dissent is demonized.
Whether it’s the classroom or the clinic, the message from the establishment is the same: “We know best. Sit down and obey.”
But this is America. And Americans don’t blindly obey—we ask questions, demand answers, and hold leaders accountable.
The University Crisis: Indoctrination Masquerading as Higher Learning
If K-12 schools are where the indoctrination starts, America’s universities are where it’s perfected. Once bastions of free thought and intellectual diversity, our colleges have become echo chambers for left-wing orthodoxy—where conservative voices are mocked, silenced, or outright banned. Campus “safe spaces” now protect students from facts they don’t like, while Marxist professors lecture them on how to dismantle the very country that funds their education.
From Ivy League schools to state universities, students aren’t being challenged—they’re being programmed. Dissent isn’t debated—it’s punished. Just try quoting the Constitution or defending free enterprise in a political science class and see what happens. Universities are no longer shaping minds—they’re manufacturing activists.
Parents Pay, Students Pay—But the System Is Broken
Let’s not forget who foots the bill: hardworking American families, paying tens of thousands a year so their children can be taught to hate their values. And what do students get in return? Degrees in grievance studies, crushing debt, and zero preparation for the real world. Meanwhile, bloated university bureaucracies rake in billions in federal aid and foreign donations—while demanding “equity audits” and renaming buildings.
It’s time for accountability. No more taxpayer handouts to institutions that attack the very principles this nation was built on. Education should expand opportunity—not indoctrinate, isolate, and divide. The American university system doesn’t need reform—it needs a reckoning.
The fight for our schools is not a culture war. It’s a parental revolution. And it’s long overdue.
We want schools that teach—not preach.
Doctors who listen—not lecture.
And leaders who serve—not rule.
This is our country. These are our children. And we’re taking them back.


Let me hear your voice