New Hampshire father banned from elementary school property dresses Julius Caesar at board meeting
A New Hampshire parent who was barred from setting foot on the grounds of an elementary school showed up at a board meeting dressed as Julius Caesar to argue how the school district was “facilitating gender confusion” because the school employs to a male art teacher wearing women’s clothing.
Guglielmo’s claims are based on allowing the art teacher, Silas Allard, to continue teaching at the school. The teacher, who identifies as a member of the LGBTQ+ community, typically dresses in women’s clothing during the school day.
It also alleged that Allard had been posting inappropriate material on social media.
In full Roman regalia, the father announced: ‘I am Caesar. Julius Caesar of Rome, the emperor. I am also a woman,’ Guglielmo announced in a video of the meeting.
‘Does anyone here believe that? What am I Julius Caesar? Does anyone believe that? Of course not. It’s ridiculous. I am not a woman By involving and facilitating gender confusion, gender dysphoria is detrimental to the development of children’s mental and emotional capacity…’, Guglielmo said.
The father, Michael Guglielmo, showed up at a school board meeting dressed as Julius Caesar to affirm his claims that the public school district is promoting gender confusion.
Guglielmo called for the suspension of the superintendent and principal for allowing an art teacher who identifies with the LGBTQ+ community to teach
Guglielmo then called for the suspension of Concord School District Superintendent Kathleen Murphy and Christa McAuliffe Elementary School Principal Kristen Gallo, and for their role in “facilitating gender confusion” by allowing Allard to continue teaching there.
According to Guglielmo, the school district had been promoting a social agenda instead of focusing on teaching truth and facts.
According to a CSD-written letter sent to Guglielmo, the father asked Allard to take a photograph, to which Allard agreed, it reports. Fox News.
The Concord resident then asked Allard to pose, which he later denied. CSD considered Guglielmo’s behavior to be harassment.
Guglielmo, who spent 17 1/2 years in state prison, according to InDepthNH he also has a lengthy criminal record that began in 1985 after a violent confrontation with Manchester, New Hampshire police.
In 2019, he was charged with ‘grabbing a minor in a sexual manner,’ reports WBUR.
His criticisms prompted an investigation by the school district and Allard was initially suspended, but the district ultimately decided to bring Allard back to the classroom.
Guglielmo continued to voice his opposition to the teacher’s presence at the school, which led to his being banned from school property.
At the school board meeting, Guglielmo argued that the school board had a duty to act in the best interest of children and prioritize teaching truth and facts over promoting a social agenda.
At one point, Guglielmo removed his helmet to declare that he was not, in fact, Julius Caesar.
Guglielmo claims the school is ‘facilitating gender confusion’ as the art teacher, Silas Allard, pictured above, wears traditionally female clothing during the school day.
Guglielmo’s criticisms prompted an investigation by the school district and Allard, above, was suspended, but the district ultimately decided to bring them back to the classroom.
According to the letter that CSD sent to Guglielmo, Guglielmo had asked Allard to take a photograph, to which Allard agreed.
Guglielmo has called for the suspension of Concord School District Superintendent Kathleen Murphy, left, and Christa McAuliffe Elementary School Principal Kristen Galloand, right, for their role in “facilitating gender confusion” by allow Allard to continue teaching there.
He said that as taxpayers, parents deserve to have their children taught what they paid for, and not be subjected to inappropriate material or biased curriculum.
While many gathering attendees waved signs reading “Choose Love” and “Love is Stronger Than Hate,” Guglielmo’s controversial appearance as Julius Caesar drew attention and sparked further discussion about the role of representation. LGBTQ+ in public schools.
‘Your duty is to act in the best interest of the children. It is teaching the truth, not the lie. Facts, not fiction. Biology, not a social agenda. Guglielmo said.
“As taxpayers, we deserve to be taught to our children what we pay for, and it is not a social agenda, be it left or right,” he added.
In response to the controversy, a CSD spokesperson stated that the district “rejects all forms of hate and discrimination” and strives to “rejoice” in the diversity of its community.
In schools across the country, parents have been the subject of controversial issues being taught in school, including critical race theory, along with certain books in public libraries that show a widening gap between those who support the diversity and those who consider it a threat.
Guglielmo was in the news earlier in the decade when his five-year-old son lost his battle with a rare immune disorder that made him the face of a global campaign for bone marrow donors.
Giovanni Guglielmo was born on July 24, 2006 with NEMO, a debilitating disease that meant his life depended on receiving a successful transplant.
Michael Guglielmo and his wife Christina Poulicakos appear in 2007 with their three children, Alex, Adrian, and Giovanni.
Guglielmo was in the news earlier in the decade when his five-year-old son lost his battle with a rare immune disorder that made him the face of a global campaign for bone marrow donors.
Giovanni Guglielmo was born on July 24, 2006 with NEMO, a debilitating disease that meant his life depended on receiving a successful transplant.
Doctors diagnosed the condition at five months, and the baby’s heartbreaking story made the front page of a local newspaper, prompting dozens of people to call Children’s Hospital Boston offering help.
Doctors had told her parents that the chances of finding an exact match for the desperately ill baby were 1 in 20,000. On any given day, 6,000 people around the world look for a bone marrow match and only three in 10 find it.
Unable to find a match for the baby, doctors tried an alternative treatment that involved removing blood cells from an umbilical cord donor to try to develop a new immune system.
A billboard was erected in Times Square with the adorable photo of the little boy, wide-eyed pleading for help, and the campaign for bone marrow intensified.
Websites and Facebook pages dedicated to the young man appeared on the internet as his inspiring will to live and sad stories touched the hearts of people around the world. The news channels were immediately interested in his story and joined the mission to save Giovanni.