California bill would list hotline, chatroom considered ‘a pedophile’s paradise’ on ID cards of every student in grades 7-12

By CatholicVote | Created at 2025-03-06 18:00:57 | Updated at 2025-03-06 21:23:25 3 hours ago

CV NEWS FEED // A California bill would require that every student ID card for grades seven through 12, whether at a public, private, or religious school, have contact information for the Trevor Project, an LGBT advocacy organization.

The group presents itself as being responsible for mental health resources such as a suicide prevention hotline, according to the California Family Council. However, the Council notes, the advocacy organization Gays Against Groomers has called the Trevor Project’s online forums “a pedophile’s paradise.”

Since the bill would offer no religious exemptions for Christian schools, the California Family Council has stated that it violates the schools’ First Amendment rights. 

“While no one wants to see a child struggle with bullying, depression, and suicidal thoughts,” the Council wrote, “many family-oriented faith-based groups do not want students pushed further toward a transgender identity or encouraged to embrace same-sex desires and sexual behaviors, which only results in further despair and long-term harm.”

Besides the many dangers that the Trevor Project presents to vulnerable youth, the California Family Council noted that promoting it in schools is a direct violation of President Donald Trump’s Jan. 29 executive order banning LGBT indoctrination in schools.

The Trevor Project’s suicide hotline asks each person who calls about their gender identity. The article argued that pushing struggling students toward a pro-LGBT organization, instead of providing mental health resources, “is not suicide prevention — it is grooming children into gender ideology.”

The project’s resources encourage students to engage in role-playing activities where they must “come out” as LGBT, which was a required activity at Vista Unified School District (VUSD).

“Students who objected due to religious beliefs were pressured to comply,” the article stated, “and parents were not informed that such content was being introduced into their children’s education.”

The Trevor Project’s online chat rooms for anyone aged 13-24 allow minors to interact with adults and engage in sexual conversations, under the guise of “mentorship.” Though there is a minimum age requirement of 13, there is no age verification process. 

California Family Council reported that former school board member, teacher, and education activist Brenda Lebsack went undercover as a minor on the website. She discovered chat rooms for witchcraft, gay men, furries, polyamory, and nonbinary people.

There was also a chat called “Ask Sam Brinton Anything.” Brinton is a prominent LGBT activist who promotes dangerous sexual practices such as bondage dominance and sadomasochism. He is also a drag queen for the blasphemous group “Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence.”

ANTI-CATHOLIC DRAG QUEEN ARRESTED FOR ALLEGATIONS OF CHILD PORN AND SEXUAL EXPLOITATION

California Family Council Vice President Greg Burt summarized the issues of the proposed legislation.

“No child should experience bullying, but The Trevor Project takes advantage of troubled and vulnerable youth who need our compassion and help, and leads them down a path that will destroy their futures,” he stated. “These struggling kids are being offered lies about their true God-given identity as a boy or a girl and told to let their sexual desires determine their identity and behavior. That’s not the answer to depression and suicidal thoughts — it’s a path toward deeper confusion and despair.”

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