A activist of transit rights has repeatedly kidnapped the meetings of the Community Education Council in Manhattan – and even “Macarena” dance last week to disrupt a meeting and protest against those who oppose boys playing girls' sports.
A group of about 100 demonstrators got off the monthly meeting of the District Society Education Council, boycotting bubbles, fatigue, and blowing, with one person who speeds the stage and falls in Dais for members.
When the present spoke Joe Vitaly on behalf of female mathematics during the general suspension part of the meeting, the group stood up and silently rose – and embarrassed – “Macarena”, a lot of step while hitting dance in the 1990s.
“I am here to talk about mathematics who fear this nonsense that happens behind me, all dance and dancers,” said Vitaly while many dancers, and many of them were masked, a slow dance in silence.
“I am talking about mathematics who do not want to obtain biological males competing with them,” Vitaly told the council, which covers the upper eastern side and a lot of the city center.
At almost every meeting of CEC 2, the group protested for the last year, since the Consultative Council approved Resolution 248 calls on the city's Ministry of Education to review its policy, which allows students to play on the teams according to the sex they know.
The demonstrations have become increasingly turbulent, as there are no transit activists, most of whom are children in public schools in the second region, and they gather in advance and bring cakes.
One of the main organizers is Alaina Daniels, who runs a program after school for LGBTQ children called transit training schools, and tries to open a “middle school across”, according to its website.
The group held a “strategy and tactics” last week, then urged supporters to attend the CEC 2 meeting. Wearing pink, blue, and/or white! He said in an Instagram post, referring to the colors of transient science.
“Your physical presence makes the greatest effect,” added.
CEC members complained that the council barely dealt with important issues such as academics and declines in registration.
“I can invite them, but it is completely in its place,” Leonard Silverman, Vice President of CEC 2, told The Post.
Silverman said that the controversial decision will not be canceled, and noted that the Ministry of Energy, which was standing on its policy, already said that no review would be held.
“But they are still continuing to appear, which is really annoying because it discourages other parents about talking about other educational issues,” said Silverman.
Many attendees spoke last week in favor of two decisions that were identified at the meeting, confronting Resolution 248 and supporting the current sporting policy of the Ministry of Energy, and another in opposing President Trump's CEO, which aims to end “radical indoctrination in K-12 schools”.
The voices were postponed on the decisions because the group lost the quorum.