About 1000 families in the UK brought a mass legal action against the UK National Health Service for using the Tavistock Centre to rush their children into taking life-changing puberty blockers, SaharaReporters reported.
The lawsuit was sparked after a judge denied Clare Page, a concerned mother the right to see the content of the lessons being taught to her 15-year-old daughter in her Relationships and Sex Education (RSE) classes, which were made compulsory three years ago.
This came in the wake of a report by Daily Mail that many teachers in the UK are 'indoctrinating' children with scientifically false claims about biological sex, presenting gender as fluid and promoting a narrative that people can be born in the wrong body.
Secretive lesson plans have revealed that children in UK schools are being taught about anal sex, orgasms, and masturbation before they have reached puberty, the outlet said.
According to the report, MailOnline said it discovered graphic teaching materials, including a sex manual for pre-teens — being taught to children in classes around the UK.
Its investigations reveal
that coloring books, word searches, and cartoon drawings have been given to young girls and boys by 'activist teachers' in their 'overarching mission to sexualize children in the name of inclusion'.
The outlet also found that a lot of questionable teaching resources are already available online.
Relationships Education became compulsory in UK primary and secondary schools in September 2020 and left many teaching staff seeking guidance.
The gap was filled by charities — some of which have unconventional views on biological sex and share materials on their websites that teach about underage sex.
MailOnline noted that some children are taught that from birth until the age of one, babies can 'experience pleasurable sensations' by touching their genitals.
Children are also taught ways for 12-year-old girls to achieve orgasm while masturbating, including pinching or stroking the clitoris.
The report also said, children are further given 'masturbation' homework from a pre-compulsory RSE resource and told that girls as young as 12 can find sexual pleasure from anal, vaginal, and oral sex.
It noted that young schoolchildren are taught that it's normal to want to masturbate during and even before they reach puberty and told that it's normal for prepubescent children to be sexually attracted to anyone.
Children are also told that gender is different from sex but is a much more intrinsic part of who a person is and taught that people can change their sex from being a man to being a woman.
They are taught that some 'non-binary' humans are neither men nor women and that men with the male Y chromosome can be women, which goes against the teachings in biology.
An 'award-winning' teaching pack for children as young as nine who have learning disabilities created before RSE was made mandatory was similarly graphic, the Mailonline revealed.
One of the lesson plans in the pack suggested that teachers 'show the group pictures of male and female masturbation' and 'simulate anatomically correct dolls masturbating'
In that lesson plan, the images are not blurred and show a boy and a girl masturbating. The boy is shown as he is in the middle of ejaculating while the naked girl is seen touching herself while closing her eyes and opening her mouth.
A coloring book aimed at children as young as five invited users to color Zoë, who is 'non-binary', which according to the book means 'they are neither a boy nor a girl'.
Another very popular RSE lesson book called Great Relationships and Sex Education points children aged 11 to 13 to a 'hands-on guide' to masturbation that suggests it can be 'highly pleasurable' to touch your anus, genitals, and nipples.
Some teachers and educators believe RSE and relationship education are necessary subjects for children to learn.
Danielle Baron, a teacher and assistant head for 10 years who has run her own education and coaching company for eight years said: "It is of utmost importance to educate children about navigating relationships, as they are particularly vulnerable, and education and knowledge empowers them to recognize warning signs.
"By providing children with this education and support, we can help them navigate relationships safely and empower them to protect themselves against potential abuse."
A trainee teacher, who teaches RSE three times a week in a 20-minute session
at a multi-academy trust in southeast London session said it was "vital' for it to be compulsory for children to learn about sex and relationships.
"Schools have a role outside of family and religious groups to teach it, informed by science. The kids need to know it.
"Teaching about gender is important.
"Many schools think [RSE is] secondary. Teachers want resources given to them. The issue is that the resources are not good enough.
'Maybe we need a firm curriculum. If it's left up to private groups then potentially different schools give different RSE," he said.
However, the director of the National Council of Integrative Psychotherapists, Ray Freeman disagrees.
He told MailOnline: " We need to let children be children. What I fear is more of a political movement, where we have classes of girls saying they are a different sex.
"Sex is biological. Gender is socially constructed. The aggressive movement is mixing the two.
"It's dangerous. Has the world gone mad?
"I think it is psychologically damaging and it can be physically damaging for a young person to be told they are or can be the opposite sex.
"We must protect our children. How can we if you don't know what they are being taught?"
Lucy Marsh of The Family Education Trust told MailOnline 'activist teachers' were on a path to rip children from their families.
"It's an overarching mission to sexualize children in the name of inclusion.
"If you normalize underage sex to children, it's grooming and exposing them to sexual abuse.
"It's a mission to sexualise children and people don't understand there's a huge safeguarding risk in that. It is child indoctrination.
"When you think of cults, the first thing they do is separate people from families.
"They are trying to put a distance between children and their families.'Marsh said:
Mrs Marsh narrated a personal experience of her child being taught shocking sexual material.
She said: "My daughter came home and asked if she was asexual. I said, ''Well I hope you are, because you're 11!''
"Children come home and become very upset about it.
"We need a full public inquiry into the Department of Education. A lot of these providers are sanctioning underage sex.
"We would like [the government] to press pause on RSE lessons until this investigation is over."
According to Mailonline, Vagina Matters is the top free teaching resource on sexual health charity Brook's website. The book which is targeted at 12 to 14-year-old girls covers sex, masturbation, and orgasms and includes cartoons of a woman's naked breasts, buttocks, and vagina.
The guide, for 12 to 14-year-old girls, teaches: " You can be sexually attracted to anyone."
It also listed ways to find "sexual pleasure' that included 'anal sex' and 'oral sex'.
Under an 'advice' heading it added: "You can use your fingers to play with your clitoris - stroke it, massage it, rub it, pinch or squeeze it lightly".
Meanwhile, political activist Laurence Fox told MailOnline: "Disgusting ideologues are trying to put children down an irreversible path of manipulation.
"The fact they want to hide what they are doing is disgusting. It should alarm every parent.
"This is entirely anti-scientific dribble. It's total warfare on the family in the name of inclusion and kindness," noted Fox.
Some of the leading charities that create lesson plans for schools include the Sex Education Forum (SEF), Coram Life Education, and Brook. They hold PSHE workshops and direct teachers towards related educational material.
On its website, SEF states that it "has a long history of successfully influencing policy".
Coram Life Education supports 50,000 teachers. Their PSHE education reaches more than 600,000 pupils each year.
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