You may or may not be following the investigative reporting over at Andrew Breitbart’s Big Government by Jim Hoft of Gateway Pundit regarding President Barack Obama’s Safe Schools Czar Kevin Jennings and some disturbing things he has been involved with. Well, disturbing may be putting it mildly.
You can read the reports for yourself; we’re not going to repost the content here, but will give you some background in a moment. But be warned, if you are offended by graphic sexual content, you should just go on about your business and forget all about this. If you have the stomach for it, you can read the first three reports here, here, and here.
Again, reader be warned. There is graphic sexual content ahead.
Okay, so what’s this post all about? A quick run-down. According to Hoft, Obama’s Safe Schools Czar Kevin Jennings “founded the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network (GLSEN) in 1990. In 2007 Kevin Jennings was paid $273,573.96 as the executive director of GLSEN.” Jennings and GLSEN allegedly demonstrated a sexual act, to youths between the ages of 14 and 21, termed “fisting” and promoted the behavior by handing out “fisting kits.” Jennings was also the keynote speaker at a GLSEN conference in Boston in which “high school students at the conference learned about fisting and watersports.” If you don’t know, watersports is an euphemism for “piss play,” or urinating during sexual activity.
Okay, so enough of that. You get the idea about what sorts of things this man and his organization were “teaching” to children. Without further rehashing all the good work being done by Hoft, one thing that seems absent from the reporting and what The Washington Times editorial board had to say today about it is, why has this man not been prosecuted for obscenity?
Obscenity? Yes. The federal government still charges for obscenity and has convicted numerous individuals and their companies in recent years. In one case, Paul F. Little, also known as Max Hardcore, was sentenced to 46 months in prison for multiple obscenity charges and began serving his sentence earlier this year. Little was accused and found guilty of “distributed films through the U.S. mail” and “transmitting five obscene video clips over the internet” which depicted acts of… wait for it… fisting and watersports, among other grotesqueries.
The question is, if the government prosecutes and incarcerates individuals for filming consenting adults and then distributing and transmitting to consenting adults such behavior, how can they not prosecute adults for “educating” and promoting such behavior to children?