Reverend delivers part two of "who are the perverts" to Wake school board
Rev. John Amanchukwu told the board "God is not mocked" and they will reap what they sow
Dozens of speakers had signed up for the public comments portion of the June 6 meeting of the Wake County Public Schools (WCPSS) Board of Education. Among them was Reverend John Amanchukwu, who said he was there to deliver part two of “who are the perverts” while singling out Lindsay Mahaffey, the board’s chair.
Amanchukwu delivered the first definition of pervert to the board at the April meeting.
"It means to lead someone away from what's considered right, natural, or acceptable,” Amanchukwu told the board just before reading very graphic excerpts depicting gay sex from a book available in the district’s libraries.
After finishing the reading, Awanchukwu asked the board, "Who is the pervert that thinks that this is OK? Who is the pervert that sits smug in the school board meeting while this is allowed to take place? Who is it?"
Amanchukwu used the same pattern at the June meeting, diving into sexually explicit and graphic portions of a book called “Jack of Hearts.”
“Lindsay Mahaffey, you open this session earlier on celebrating pride month and so I brought a book that I read from about a month ago called "Jack of Hearts," and other parts to read,” Amanchukwu said. “I guess part two of a message entitled "Who are the perverts."
The reverend then begins to read a passage from the book.
Fair warning, the text that follows is extremely graphic and is transcribed just as Amanchukwu read it to the board.
“Eventually he finishes and pulls out and the condom of course is covered in and he gets mad at me like it's my fault. I don't know about how to clean up down there. He makes me take the crap-covered condom off and flush it and then he showers alone. When he gets out of the shower he frowns at me and goes, “You're still here?”
Anyway here's my advice to you: make sure you want to do it because it's going to be uncomfortable at first for sure, but it can be fun too even if you don't have a prostate. There are nerve endings and pressure. Just make sure you've taken an S H I T beforehand and cleaned after him, preferably with soap and water in the shower ‘cause if you gotta go while he's inside of you, it is going to come out gross.
When you're ready to get f-u-c-k-e-d, use lots of lube, a finger first, go slow.
Make sure he's still focused on keeping you turned on too. It helps if you start out riding him face forward, then you have more control over how deep it goes and you can still communicate what you need. Once he's in you, tell him to just stay there for a while so you can get used to it. Then when you give the okay he can slowly start effing you. If you don't like it, tell them to stop. If you decide to switch holes, use a fresh condom and be prepared sometimes S H I T just happens. But if you take it slow it can be really great."
“Is that what you celebrate, Lindsay?” Amanchukwu asked. “Happy pride month to what? Feces on condoms? Stimulating prostates? Whether you have one or not? Is that what you condone? Is that what you celebrate when you acknowledge pride month?”
“Be it known today that Galatians chapter 6 verse 7 says, "Be not deceived. God is not mocked." You can't laugh at him, whatever a man sows that shall he also reap,” Amanchukwu told the WCPSS board members. “And the operative word is that you sow this filth to children, Lindsay, and you're going to reap it if you celebrate pride month and push this filth on kids.”
Pointing to the board, Amanchukwu said, “You're going to reap it. It's going to be more terrible for you because you are of age. You're adults. You know what's right, you know what's wrong.”
“Tyler, you're going to reap it if you say nothing and only speak about the black issues. You're going to reap it, brother,” the reverend said. “Monica, you're going to reap it if you say nothing about it and you know in the Black Culture we don't even condone this stuff. We fight against it.”
As his time had run out, Amanchukwu told the board to “Stand for what is true. Stand for what is right.”
Click HERE to watch the portion of the video including Amanchukwu’s remarks. The full video of the meeting is included at the bottom of this article.
More To The Story
Amanchukwu was not the only one to read passages from sexually explicit books that are still available in WCPSS libraries. His wife Crystal also gave remarks during the meeting concerning academic investment and said “Resources are being spent in the wrong places.”
She, like her husband, also read from a book available in the district titled, "Queer" and described it as the "Ultimate LGBTQ guide for teens and is in high schools throughout Wake County." She described how the book talks about rubbing, touching, and genital stimulation as well as the "use of foreign objects" for "penetration" both vaginal and anal.
“I think it's easy to see that this book is of concern,” Crystal Amanchukwu said. “This book is not informational, it's instructional - it's an all-out endorsement and encouragement and Playbook on how to discover the rainbow; in other words to be promiscuous.”
Speaker Jessica Lewis read graphic sexual instructions in the book called“It’s perfectly normal,” and told the board, “Here we are a year and a half later and we as parents are still speaking to you about the obscene material that our children have access to - this is ridiculous!”
Another speaker named Margaret Hamilton detailed the contents of the” book “Feels good to be yourself,” which she said is in 26 WCPSS elementary schools and the publisher says is aimed at kids “ages four to eight.” The book has four characters, all with different “gender identities.”
“It makes it seem as if gender is an imaginary concept that can be changed on a whim when the truth is gender is factual,” Hamilton said. “You're either a boy or a girl and gender identity - what you see yourself as - that's imaginary.”
Hamilton later went on to say the book says that some kids feel like boys and some kids feel like a little bit of both; part boy, part girl.
“Reminds me of that old commercial - sometimes you feel like a nut sometimes you don't,” said Hamilton. “Is that okay some kids don't feel exactly like a boy or a girl or they feel like neither? Some kids feel that their gender identity isn't always the same, it's often changing? So now are we endorsing schizophrenia, is that what are we doing?!”
Easily a dozen speakers complained about pornographic books, but only two speakers approved of the board’s actions, education activists Renee Sekel and Susan Book.
Sekel works for the Cary chapter of “Red, Wine, and Blue,” a left-leaning national group sometimes referred to as the Chardonnay Antifa which arguably was formed to counter Moms for Liberty. Book and Sekel run “Save our Schools,” an education activism group aligned with the NEA’s NC affiliate that supports public schools while decrying school choice.
“It's June and it's time to celebrate pride, Book said in her public comments. “And we should be especially conscious, especially in our policy meetings that our LGBTQ+ students and employees have the right to be, the right to have safe existence.”
Laughing, Book, referring to an earlier commenter’s remarks criticizing the district’s safety spending, said safety is not "SRO's patrolling hallways" or "how we monitor entry doors." She said “real safety” is “about the resources and most importantly the relationships we build knowing that there is someone in your building who validates you is important for everyone. Knowing that there are books for you and your library is important for everyone.”
Sekel talked mainly about cracking down on a parent’s right to challenge a book.
Read here about how the WCPSS board is cracking down on challenges made to graphic and pornographic books available in the district’s libraries.
Bear in mind, Sekel gave her comments dead last; after all of the other speakers there who objected to explicit books and had just read excerpts from them.
She applauded the requirements being added to the book challenge policy such as the challenger needed to have a child in the district, but said that the policy should also “require” the parent or guardian who is complaining about a book or material to “attest that they have actually read the challenged materials in their entirety before filing their protest.”
“I would ask you to please consider a requirement that the child actually have encountered or is imminently to encounter the material that could maybe ameliorate some of the outrage farming that we've been seeing... oh, I don't know... tonight,” Sekel said, later adding that all parents should have a way to be notified if a book challenge has been filed.
Here is the full meeting video. One may need to skip around in the video of the public comments because comments were given in two separate sections of the meeting due to the large number of speakers that signed up that night.
One more thing to note about the public comments is a group of 8th Grade students at Dillard Drive Magnet Middle School spoke at the beginning of the meeting about gun violence and how they feel unsafe at school.
One of the speakers, Cora Wexler, repeated a false claim often made by anti-Second Amendment activists that one of the causes of gun violence in schools is “the fact that almost anyone can easily purchase and use assault weapons without proper background checks.”