One of Governor Abbott’s requests for the Special Session was for lawmakers to take further steps to protect the unborn. Abortion pills, which allow for the chemical destruction of unborn babies, are technically not allowed to enter Texas; however, an estimated 19,000 abortion pills are ordered online and illegally brought into the state through anonymous websites and underground networks each year. These deadly drugs pose the greatest threat to unborn babies and vulnerable women.
Senate Bill 7 (Hughes) has already passed the Senate. Its companion bill, House Bill 7 (Leach), was heard in committee last Friday and will take steps to hold the entities responsible for trafficking abortion pills accountable.
The Woman and Child Protection Act by Sen. Bryan Hughes and Rep. Jeff Leach will:
Protecting Texas Children fully supports all of these measures and recognizes the immense danger abortion pills pose to the unborn across the state. The only way we can begin to protect the innocent is by holding the entities responsible for producing and distributing abortion pills in Texas accountable through legal action.
A new Texas law requiring every public school classroom to display the Ten Commandments will take effect in just days. But shockingly, some government school teachers are already declaring they won’t follow it.
SB 10, signed by Governor Greg Abbott and passed by the Legislature, is straightforward: starting September 1, every public school classroom must display a poster of the Ten Commandments in a prominent location.
Yet, in online forums like Texas Teachers on Reddit—home to over 17,000 government school educators—dozens of so-called “professionals” are boasting about their plans to defy the law.
“Most of us will not comply. We know where this goes if we do. Do. Not. Comply,” one self-identified history teacher bragged after admitting to throwing away multiple posters.
Others have suggested decorating the Commandments with rainbow colors, claiming the signs were “damaged or lost,” or even replacing them with propaganda like a “Gonzales flag with two stone tablets.” Many openly tied their rebellion to radical ideological agendas. Teachers shared that their classrooms are already filled with rainbow flags, LGBT slogans, and DEI propaganda. One even promised to post a competing “10 Science Commandments” as a way to undermine the law.
In other words: they don’t just want to ignore Texas law—they want to mock it, twist it, and use taxpayer-funded classrooms to push their progressive worldview in its place. And they’re proud of it.
Meanwhile, the ACLU has filed a lawsuit, desperate to block the law before it takes effect. But unless a federal judge intervenes, school districts are legally obligated to have the Ten Commandments in place starting September 1.
That’s why Protecting Texas Children is calling on every parent, every taxpayer, and every school board member to demand transparency and accountability.
If a teacher refuses to follow the law, they should not be trusted with your children.
As the clock ticks down, one question remains: Will Texas schools honor the law or let activist teachers decide which laws they feel like following?
PTC is watching, and so are thousands of parents across the state.
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