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North Carolina republicans in the House are trying to do what some local school boards and leftist education bureaucrats won’t: protect kids.
Two new bills—HB636 [ [link removed] ] and HB775, [ [link removed] ] sponsored by Reps. Neal Jackson, Brian Biggs, Jennifer Balkom, and David Willis aim to clean up classrooms, kick predators to the curb, and slam the door on sexually explicit content being pushed in public schools.
These bills aren’t just common sense—they’re a direct response to the radical nonsense the Left has been smuggling into schools for years.
Whether it’s sexually charged books in elementary libraries or grown adults with sketchy criminal histories teaching or managing schools, it’s clear the system’s broken. These bills bring the hammer down.
What the Law Looks Like Now (and Why It’s Not Working)
As it stands, North Carolina has no consistent way to vet school library books or make sure all school employees—especially charter school board members and contractors—go through proper background checks. Meanwhile, kids are being exposed to graphic content disguised as “literature,” and adults with no business near children are slipping through the cracks.
Democrats have let this happen on their watch.
They’ve defended obscene books, fought parental oversight, and turned classrooms into battlegrounds for sexual ideology. These bills flip the script.
What the Bills Do
🏫 House Bill 636: "Promoting Wholesome Content for Students"
This bill nukes the porn pipeline into public schools by setting clear rules:
No smut in school – If it describes sexual activity or is full of vulgarity, it’s out.
Community control – Library books must go through a parent-staff committee before being added.
Sunlight is the best disinfectant. All book recommendations are posted online with a public objection form.
Public can sue – Parents and county residents can take schools to court and collect $5,000 for every violation.
It also forces principals to review every book sold at school book fairs personally.
No more hiding behind third-party vendors like Scholastic.
🛡️ House Bill 775: "Criminal History Checks for School Positions"
This one tightens the net on who’s allowed to work in or run schools:
Everyone gets checked – Charter board members, teacher licensure applicants, school employees, and contractors.
Fingerprints + FBI checks – No shortcuts. Full national background screening.
You lie, you’re done – Anyone caught submitting false info faces criminal charges.
Past crimes matter – Violent offenses, sex crimes, drug charges, fraud—you’re out.
It even ensures that if someone got checked for a license in the last three years, that check counts for hiring, so schools don’t waste time or money.
Three Big Ways These Bills Protect Kids
Ban the filth. No more hiding porn in middle school libraries under the label “graphic novel.” If it’s not age-appropriate, it’s gone.
Put parents in charge. Moms and dads finally have the power to reject content, and they can sue schools that break the rules.
Keep creeps out. With mandatory background checks, no more excuses for letting predators or people with weighty rap sheets near students.
Why This Is Happening Now
Because Democrats made it happen.
Let’s be honest: The Left has turned schools into indoctrination zones. They’ve been pushing gender ideology, normalizing explicit content, and attacking any parent who dares to speak up.
This didn’t come out of nowhere—these bills directly respond to that twisted agenda.
Teachers’ unions (NCAE), activist librarians, and woke school boards ignored families for too long. Now, the state is taking back control.
What Other States Are Doing
North Carolina’s not leading the pack here—we’re catching up. Here’s what other red (and even purple) states already require:
Florida – Background checks for everyone on campus, including volunteers.
Texas – Fingerprinting and FBI checks for all certified educators.
Tennessee & Virginia – State and national checks for all school staff and contractors.
NC needs to get on their level, and these bills do just that.
Bottom Line
HB636 and HB775 are about protecting kids from two significant threats: inappropriate content and dangerous adults.
They return control to parents, inject transparency into the system, and set a new standard for school safety. And most importantly—they tell the Left: hands off our kids.
No more hiding behind buzzwords like “inclusivity” while slipping graphic sex scenes into elementary libraries. No more looking the other way while shady characters get hired to teach. These bills are the firewall North Carolina families have been demanding.
Both bills are working through the House K-12 Education, Judiciary, and Rules Committees before the General Assembly’s crossover deadline on May 8th.
Watch Sloan & Margo Breakdown These Bills:
They’re teaching anal sex and promoting filth in school libraries—and if you speak up, they call you the problem. This bill says screw that—parents get power, predators get sued, and the smut gets burned.
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