The Michigan Christian Homeschool Network, along with other homeschool groups, are preparing to fight against the latest assault on liberty by seditious Democrats who seek to use the government to intimidate, harass, and criminalize families who dare not hand over their children to the hate-filled indoctrination centers their party controls with a fascist iron fist.
The Democrats want to use a couple that abused 30 kids they were “homeschooling” to “justify” the creation of a database that can be used to micromanage and intimidate law-abiding homeschool families despite the fact laws already exist making what this couple did illegal.
They want to punish law-abiding citizens for the crimes committed by others, a worn-out tactic of the fascist left to fear people into surrendering their freedoms for the sake of the children (see gun control tactics by the left for a good example of this deceptive and anti-American practice).
Michigan‘s homeschooling parents have vowed to fight plans by state Democrats to force families who opt out of public schools to sign on to a mandatory registry.
The Michigan Christian Homeschool Network and other groups have held meetings to rally support and protect themselves from what they call unnecessary red tape and supervision.
Officials in the Democrat-run state seek more oversight of homeschooling, including a registry of students who opt out, after reports of child abuse that were linked to education in private homes.
‘It doesn’t help students academically,’ he told Bridge Michigan.
‘It doesn’t keep any student safe. It’s needless government red tape.’
The uproar in the Great Lakes State comes as ever more families across the US homeschool their kids, often over political and religious views or fears about the quality of education and safety in public schools.
Michigan has relatively relaxed rules on homeschooling.
It is one of 11 states where parents don’t have to tell anyone they are opting out of traditional schools.
Unlike homeschoolers in New York and Massachusetts, those in Michigan don’t have to take proficiency tests.
Officials seek to tighten the rules after the arrests in December of two couples in the Lansing area accused of abusing and profiting from nearly 30 kids they adopted and homeschooled.
Attorney General Dana Nessel said the couples were able to ‘go unnoticed’ thanks to poor oversight of homeschooling across her state of 10 million people.