Kindercare carrollton tx: Hebron KinderCare | Daycare, Preschool & Early Education in Carrollton, TX

Опубликовано: October 6, 2020 в 11:12 am

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Категории: Miscellaneous

Daycare, Preschool & Child Care Centers in Carrollton, TX

KinderCare has partnered with Carrollton families for more than 50 years to provide award-winning early education programs and high-quality childcare in Carrollton, TX.

Whether you are looking for a preschool in Carrollton, a trusted part-time or full-time daycare provider, or educational before- or after-school programs, KinderCare offers fun and learning at an affordable price.

  1. Fairgate Kindercare

    Phone:
    (972) 323-1300

    1300 E Frankford Rd
    Carrollton
    TX
    75007

    Distance from address: 3.22 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  2. Addison KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 980-2858

    5080 Spectrum Dr Ste 120
    Addison
    TX
    75001

    Distance from address: 3. 89 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 5 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  3. Bent Tree KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 732-4025

    4025 Frankford Rd
    Dallas
    TX
    75287

    Distance from address: 4.15 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  4. Creek Valley KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 492-8558

    4052 Huffines Blvd
    Carrollton
    TX
    75010

    Distance from address: 5. 08 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  5. Hebron KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 862-6700

    4241 Marsh Ln
    Carrollton
    TX
    75007

    Distance from address: 5.34 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  6. Las Colinas KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 550-8479

    1121 Greenway Cir
    Irving
    TX
    75038

    Distance from address: 6. 22 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 8 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  7. Spring Creek KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 404-9020

    15610 Spring Creek Rd
    Dallas
    TX
    75248

    Distance from address: 6.83 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  8. Burnham Rd KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 519-8361

    1325 Burnham Dr
    Plano
    TX
    75093

    Distance from address: 7. 28 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  9. Legacy KinderCare

    Phone:
    (214) 474-0011

    6819 Communications Pkwy
    Plano
    TX
    75024

    Distance from address: 8.66 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 5 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  10. Forest Lane KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 234-3174

    9131 Forest Ln
    Dallas
    TX
    75243

    Distance from address: 8. 95 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  11. Campbell Rd KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 669-1130

    511 W Campbell Rd
    Richardson
    TX
    75080

    Distance from address: 9.08 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  12. North Custer KinderCare

    Phone:
    (972) 618-0011

    6525 Custer Rd
    Plano
    TX
    75023

    Distance from address: 11. 69 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  13. Southlake-Grapevine KinderCare

    Phone:
    (817) 481-3122

    3115 E Southlake Blvd
    Southlake
    TX
    76092

    Distance from address: 12.32 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  14. Young Stars

    Phone:
    (214) 767-8888

    207 S Houston St Ste 130C
    Dallas
    TX
    75202

    Distance from address: 13. 08 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 5 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

Hebron KinderCare (2022-23 Profile) | Carrollton, TX

Overview
Student Body
Tuition and Acceptance Rate
School Notes
Nearby Private Schools
School Reviews
Edit School Profile

School Overview

Student Body

Tuition and Acceptance Rate

School Notes

  • Welcome to Hebron KinderCare. We are very excited to meet you and
    your family. We believe in developing the whole child with an
    emphasis on assisting your child’s growth with their social,
    emotional, cognitive, and physical development. Our experts
    designed our classrooms – and every activity and lesson – to help
    prepare your child for success in school and beyond. You’ll also
    find that our classrooms feature a print-rich environment full of
    carefully selected materials. By helping your child connect spoken
    words and print, we’re helping develop early literacy and writing
    skills. Here at Hebron KinderCare, we believe it takes a village to
    raise a child, and our parents consider us to be an extension of
    their families. Your child will not only have a safe, secure, and
    stimulating environment to learn in, but will also have support
    from a team of child development experts, who have a true passion
    for educating children. Whether your child has first words or first
    grade on the horizon, we’re excited to show you how everything in
    our center is designed for learning.
  • Education and development are important, but we know that nothing
    matters more than the safety, security and health of your child. At
    Hebron KinderCare, our most important goal is to provide a safe and
    healthy environment for all our children, families, and employees.
    Our center has a designated Health and Safety Coordinator on staff.
    The primary function of this role is to create, maintain, promote,
    and implement activities that foster a safe and healthy environment
    for all. Likewise, the center prides itself on the safety and
    security of the children. Therefore, our center is secured so that
    only authorized staff and families may enter. In addition, we have
    secured perimeters to ensure that children can enjoy outdoor play
    safely. Other safety features at our school include a computer for
    clocking in and out, as well as cameras in classrooms and on
    playgrounds. It is also mandatory for all staff to be current on
    CPR/First Aid certifications and to obtain 25 training credit hours
    per year. Here at Hebron KinderCare, you can have confidence that
    your child is cared for in a secure, nurturing environment every
    day.
  • Hours Of Operation: 6:30 AM to 6:30 PM, M-F
  • Languages Spoken: Spanish
  • CCA for Denton or Dallas County (very limited availability), Accept
    CCMS from 3 years and up but are currently on a waiting list so
    check with the center

Source: National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)

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School Reviews

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  • 5712 WILLOW WOOD LN
    DALLAS, TX

    $789,500

    • 4 Beds | 3 Baths
    • (2.65 miles from school)
  • 5100 CAPTIVA DR
    PLANO, TX

    $788,000

    • 4 Beds | 3 Baths
    • (3.11 miles from school)
  • 5955 ROSEBUD DR
    DALLAS, TX

    $535,000

    • 3 Beds | 2.5 Baths
    • (3.53 miles from school)
  • 4509 CHESTERWOOD DR
    PLANO, TX

    $674,950

    • 4 Beds | 3.5 Baths
    • (4.03 miles from school)

redfin.com™View Homes Near Hebron KinderCare

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KinderCare in Carrollton TX – CareLuLu

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Recent Reviews for KinderCare in Carrollton TX

Hebron Montessori School, Carrollton

“I absolutely love Hebron Montessori. My twins started here after a bad experience at a school that was shut down. One of my twins was potty trained at 2 years which is amazing!”
Read More

Other KinderCare near Carrollton TX

Frankford Road East KinderCare

Frankford Road East KinderCare is a year-round center in Dallas, TX. We are open from 6:30am until 6:30pm and care for children as young as 6 weeks…

Burnham Rd KinderCare

Burnham Rd KinderCare is a year-round center in Plano, TX. We are open from 6:30am until 6:30pm and care for children as young as 6 weeks through 12…

Addison KinderCare

Addison KinderCare is a year-round center in Addison, TX. We are open from 7:00am until 6:00pm and care for children as young as 6 weeks through 5…

Legacy KinderCare

Legacy KinderCare is a year-round center in Plano, TX. We are open from 6:30am until 6:30pm and care for children as young as 6 weeks through 5 years. ..

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many KinderCare centers are there in Carrollton?

There are 3 KinderCare centers in Carrollton, based on CareLuLu data. This includes 0 home-based programs and 3 centers.

How much does daycare cost in Carrollton?

The cost of daycare in Carrollton is $712 per month. This is the average price for full-time, based on CareLuLu data, including homes and centers.

How many KinderCare centers accept infants in Carrollton?

Based on CareLuLu data, 3 KinderCare centers care for infants (as well as toddlers). This includes 0 home-based programs and 3 centers.

How many KinderCare centers offer part-time care or drop-in care in Carrollton?

Based on CareLuLu data, 3 KinderCare centers offer part-time care or drop-in care in Carrollton.

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THE Top 10 Daycares in Carrollton, TX | Affordable Prices

Daycares in Carrollton, TX

Lonestar Playhouse

4501 LONE STAR DR, Carrollton, TX 75010

Starting at $360/day

Description:

Lonestar Playhouse provides daycare services for toddlers through preschool age groups. Our mission is to provide a loving, caring, fun, and educational environment. We believe the first years of a child’slife are the most fundamental for developing their skills. We focus on lesson plans targeting their cognitive, social, speech, and motor developments. Give us a try, you won’t regret it! We are rated 5 stars on Google. Check out our website….

Damita B.

4025 Huffines Blvd, Carrollton, TX 75010

Starting at $20/day

Description:

Welcome! My name is Damita and I currently work at one of the best known accredited daycare centers in the U.S. I’m beginning the process to having my own in home daycare. I will care for two babies at a timefrom 6 weeks old to 12 months old. I’ve been helping with children all my life and nothing brings me greater joy! To have a job you actually love doing is incredible and I’m thankful that I was made to do this. I can assure you, there is no safer care for your baby than with me. I am adult and pediatric CPR certified as well as first aid certified. Background check is cleared and I’m more than dependable as you must have completed the aforementioned to work at a daycare. Please feel free to reach out and I can answer any questions you may have! Thank you for your time and I can’t wait to start this journey with you!…

Description:

At Amazing Li’l Faces (in-home) Childcare we understand how challenging it is for professionals today. We get it when you have to stay until the job gets done.
We also get it when parents just need some alonetime.
At Amazing Li’l Faces Childcare, I cater to the busy parent. Like you, I am also a parent and I understand the pressures of needing quality childcare.
We are proud to say that we offer healthy, home cooked meals sure to please even the pickiest of eaters.
Amazing Li’l Faces (in-home) Childcare also offers an extensive physical and learning curriculum that will entertain and strengthen developing young minds and bodies. We don’t believe quality childcare has to cost a lot.
Our rates are:
Full-time: $160. 00 to $200.00 weekly.
Prices based on need.
Part-time: $100.00 weekly or $7.00/hr for drop-in.
In addition, we have just added a Amazing Lil sleepers night time room. Designed to bring our night time sleepers every comfort of their very own room.
For more information please call 970-988-4770 or text 586-943-4825….

Description:

Choosing child care is one of the most important decisions a parent makes. The early years of a child’s life are very important for his or her development. This is why I am passionate about providing a safe andloving environment for all children in my program while encouraging social, emotional, intellectual and physical development. If they are successful as young children, then they are very likely to grow to be successful adults. Our daily activities include lots of play-based, hands-on activities centered around music, art, math and science. There is a separate playroom with dress up, block and reading areas as well as other learning centers. There is also a large fenced, child-friendly backyard equipped with fun, safe playing equipment and areas for running and climbing. I do not provide care for children under the age of 16 months. We currently have one more opening for children ages two years and up. Come join our school family. For more information, visit my website at www.preciousheartscc.com….

Recent Review:

We had a great experience with Ms. Mary. Her day care is an ideal setting for kids to get ready for kindergarten. It has home away from home feeling. I always felt safe having my son in Ms. Mary’s care. Greatcommunication, transparency as well as affordability and convenience of her day care made it an easy choice for us to enroll our 3 year old with Ms. Mary…

Reviewed by Iryna K

Description:

Welcome from Ms. Judy (or JuJu as the toddlers call me). With over 25 years’ experience in family child care, I offer a program tailored to the individual needs of children, ages 18 months-4 years old. As partof your child’s daytime family, I strive to offer the same kind of program I provided for my own children. Together, we explore, learn, play and grow! I offer the children hands-on experience with science, math, technology, engineering and art (S. T.E.A.M.). My home features a playroom for the children with a family living center, dramatic play area, block center and science/discovery center. Arts and crafts and fine motor activities are done at the kids’ table in my large kitchen. The science/math center and art/writing center are accessible to all of the children and used daily. Natural materials are available to the children for open-ended play and exploration. We read, dance, sing, and have circle time in my comfortable family room. I have a huge outdoor play area with sand/water tables, picnic tables for snack and activities and lots of fun equipment for the kids. I welcome the children with love and nurturing, providing peace of mind for the parents who place their children in my care. I’ve been registered with the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (TDFPS) since 1997 and received my Child Development Associate Credential in October, 2011 (current through 2021), through the Early Childhood Department at Brookhaven Community College. I and all of my household members have passed background and FBI fingerprint checks. I participate in the Child and Adult Care Food Program through Red River Child Care Food Program. Excellent references provided. Visit my website at http://www.judysfamilychildcare.net. Come play and learn with us!
Now interviewing for one full time opening for a child 20 months and up….

Description:

We are a State Licensed Private Child Care/Preschool Center located in Carrollton Tx. We offer a loving Faith based program for children ages 6 weeks & up. With over 20 years in business, we strive on ourrecord of low ratios, excellent retention in not just families, but also our teachers & being one of the best in our industry.
We would love to invite you in for a tour of our newest location. You’ll love how we are not your typical Child Care Center. We offer amazing low ratios of no more than 10 children per classroom.
Our teachers are second to none. They go above & beyond the requirements in training, but also in loving children & having a drive for this career choice. We truly believe we are raising the future of America. Therefore our hearts are in 110%.
Contact us today for a tour! We are offering after hours tours at the moment due to Covid requirements….

Description:

Get set for a thrill-filled summer! Our age-specific, kid-approved camps add up to a season of discovery and fun for preschool to school-age children. This year, our 12 weeks of camps fall into six greatthemes: Mighty Bodies, Bendy Brains; Awesome Art; Gravity Galore and More; The Wondrous World of Food; Wild about Water; and Featured Creatures.
We’re in session when your local public schools are on break and you’ll find our flexible scheduling works for your busy family. See why our summer (and winter and spring) break camps are the place to be when school’s out….

Description:

CURRENTLY FULL and No longer accepting. Thank you.
Currently accepting Full-time 18 months to school age
Warm and loving atmosphere
Clean and safe environment
Fun and educational projects
CPR& First Aid Certified
Large fenced backyard
Experienced Caregiver
All meals Included
State Licensed and inspected
The safety, care and personal growth of the children I am entrusted with is our main priority, the reason I decided to open my own daycare. We are here to provide safe, fun and loving environment for your children. We came from a diverse background and children in our care must receive fair treatment. We do not discriminate base on race, religion, gender and or disability.
We worked with children to enhance their social, academic, and emotional development in an atmosphere of love, acceptance, and respect for each child. Our class size is a maximum of 6 full-time Children with a capacity of 12 children, we do not take part-timers or drop-ins. Additional activities include story time, music time, baking, holiday projects and parties. All of our activities are all hand-made with the involvement of your child. You will receive photos of your child via text or email on how well your child is doing in class. They will be taught how to identify strangers and the basic of what to do in the event of emergencies.
Call, text or email to set up an appointment for a tour!…

Lala’s Home Daycare

2202 Old Mill Rd, Carrollton, TX 75007

Starting at $195/day

Description:

I have worked with infants in my home daycare since 2003.
My home daycare is a Licensed Child Care Home with the Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Service since 2005.
My license capacity is for12 infants between the ages of 2 to 23 months old.
Babies are my passion as I love to play with them and to see how they grow and learn new things.
My development program consist of weekly themes, I love to work one on one to help each infant to explore and learn new things.
Teaching them how to eat, crawl, walk and be independent is my daily goal….

Description:

Rising Starz Child Care located in Carrollton, TX is a non-profit organization and dedicated to providing the highest quality services for children and families, and to demonstrating success in clear andmeasurable ways.The center provide care for kids from Infant, Toddler, Pre-Kindergarten, and School Age Program….

Description:

We offer care for infants 6 weeks to school aged children up 12 years old. We teach with ABEKA which is a faith-based curriculum. We are open 6:45AM to 6:45PM Monday through Friday and closed only for majorHolidays. Our center is connected to Dr. Naz’s pediatrician office. All staff are CPR and First Aid certified and are trained in the latest child care practices and training. We are located off of Hebron and Marsh Ridge in Carrolton….

Description:

I am a registered and licensed in-home childcare provider, caring for children ages 6 weeks to 5 years old. I have 30 plus years of experience as a childcare provider. CPR and First Aid certified every twoyears, and have at least 25 hours of continuing education training a year.
Our childcare is a hands on learning environment for all ages including arts and crafts, story time, visual learning, imaginative play, dramatic play, music and singing, an a preschool curriculum that begins at age 2 years old. Our Mother Goose curriculum is geared specifically to get your child ready for kindergarten. We work daily on nurturing your child’s social and emotional development. We also provide a nutritious breakfast, lunch, and snacks, and are members of the Nutriservice Food Program. A national program established by USDA to make sure children in daycare settings receive sound nutrition.
Through out the years I have met many different families, and have watched many children grow up. Some of those children still come back and visit me from time to time; I have enjoyed being a part of their lives. If you are in need of childcare in the Carrollton area, please contact me for further information or would like to set up an interview. References are available upon request….

Byrds Nest Day Care

3212 Delaford Dr, Carrollton, TX 75007

Costimate: $192/day

Description:

Byrds Nest Day Care provides caring and dedicated child care and education services in Carrollton, Texas, for kids from Infant, Toddler, and Pre-Kindergarten and school. The center provides education, social,cultural, emotional, physical and recreational areas to provide parents the opportunity to give their child the best start possible.

Description:

Precious Hearts Day Care in Carrollton, Texas offers preschool and childcare for infants to toddlers. They provide age-level and developmentally-appropriate play activities to stimulate the children’semotional, social, cognitive, and physical development. They also introduce STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) topics to prepare the children for school. Precious Hearts Day Care is open Mondays to Fridays, from six thirty AM to six PM….

Glen Hollow Day School

1921 E HEBRON PKWY STE 114, CARROLLTON, TX 75007

Costimate: $192/day

Description:

Glen Hollow Day School in Carrollton, Texas seeks to provide a nurturing, high quality, safe and fun learning environment that is fit for the child’s overall growth and development. It is a Child Care providerthat can accommodate up to 62 children in preschool and kindergarten….

Kids Play Child Care

2324 Old Denton Road, Carrollton, TX 75006

Starting at $150/day

Description:

We serve children from the ages of 2 years to 6 years of age. We have a preschool program that helps your child prepare for kindergarten. Check us out today!

Bluebonnet Academy

3626 Field Stone Dr, Carrollton, TX 75007

Starting at $500/day

Description:

Preschool for ages 3-4 years old
9am – 12noon
Various options available.
2 Days/ Week Tuesday & Thursday $250/ month
3 Days/ Week Monday, Wednesday, Friday $375/month
5 Days/ Week $500/month
Visitour website for more information check out my website. www.bluebonnetacademy.com…

Description:

The Mona Montessori Schools located at 1417 Ismaili Center Circle, Carrollton, Texas, offers basic childcare and learning services. It offers programs for infants, toddlers, preschool and kindergarten prep. Itoffers before- and after- school programs, including summer camps and winter breaks. The school is open from six-thirty AM to six-thirty PM, Mondays through Fridays….

Description:

A Christian pre-school in North Dallas dedicated to creating a unique learning experience for the explorers of the next generation.
The Hayes School of Wonder is founded upon the values and legacy of Rolandand Wanda Hayes. Their love for people and education compels us to provide a quality learning experience for the next generation….

Description:

Get set for a thrill-filled summer! Our age-specific, kid-approved camps add up to a season of discovery and fun for preschool to school-age children. This year, our 12 weeks of camps fall into six greatthemes: Mighty Bodies, Bendy Brains; Awesome Art; Gravity Galore and More; The Wondrous World of Food; Wild about Water; and Featured Creatures.
We’re in session when your local public schools are on break and you’ll find our flexible scheduling works for your busy family. See why our summer (and winter and spring) break camps are the place to be when school’s out….

Showing 1 – 20 of 385

FAQs for finding daycares in Carrollton

In 2022 what type of daycare can I find near me in Carrollton, TX?

There are a variety of daycares in Carrollton, TX providing full time and part-time care. Some daycares are facility-based and some are in-home daycares operated out of a person’s home. They can also vary in the degree of education and curriculum they offer. Additionally, some daycares offer bilingual programs for parents that want to immerse their children in multiple languages.

How can I find a daycare near me in Carrollton, TX?

If you are looking for daycare options near you, start several months in advance of when you need care for your child. Care.com has 356 in Carrollton, TX as of September 2022 and you can filter daycares by distance from Carrollton or your zip code. From there, you can then compare daycare rates, parent reviews, view their specific services, see their hours of operation and contact them through the website for further information or to request an appointment.

What questions should I ask a daycare provider before signing up?

As you visit daycare facilities in Carrollton, TX, you should ask the providers what their hours are so you can be prepared to adjust your schedule for drop-off and pick-up. Ask what items you are responsible for bringing for your child and what items you may be required to provide that will be shared among other children or the daycare staff. Also, make sure to check directly with the business for information about their local licensing and credentials in Carrollton, TX.

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46 Results

Cadence Academy Preschool (Infants and Pre-K)

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Cadence Academy Preschool (School Age Care)

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Parker-Chase Preschool (Carrollton)

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Xplor Preschool (Carrollton)

Carrollton, TX

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Lionheart Children’s Academy at Bent Tree Bible

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Hebron KinderCare

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Fairgate Kindercare

North Central

Carrollton, TX

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Mona Montessori Academy

Central Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Jiji’s Home School

5. 0

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Wonderland Montessori (Carrollton)

Northwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Ridge Preschool

North Central

Carrollton, TX

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Creek Valley KinderCare

Northwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Oak Crest Private School

Original Town

Carrollton, TX

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Dar-Lings Learning Center

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Hebron Montessori School

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Spanish Schoolhouse

North Central

Carrollton, TX

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Childcare Network

Northwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Enchanted Courtyard Child Development Center

Carrollton Highlands

Carrollton, TX

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Cadence Academy Preschool

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Robbie Jones Head Start

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Primrose School of Castle Hills

North Central

Carrollton, TX

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Holy Covenant Early Childhood Development Program

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Happy Flower Day Care

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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St. Catherine of Siena Preschool

North Central

Carrollton, TX

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LMNOP Children’s Academy

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Happy Days Preschool

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Castle Hills Montessori

Northwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Camden Hill Montessori

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Easter Seals North Texas Child Development Center

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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King Arthur Montessori Academy

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Freedom Church Mothers Day Out

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Prince of Peace Christian School & Early Learning Center

Carrollton, TX

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The Happy Tree Child Development Center

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Primrose School of West Carrollton

Northwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Kids R Kids Learning Academy of Castle Hills

Northwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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First Methodist Preschool

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Xplor Preschool & School Age Care

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Glen Hollow Day School

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Cumlaude Academy, Llc

Northeast Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Semihan Early Learning Academy

West Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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My Sprouts Academy Texas

Northwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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The Learning Center

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Hope Christian Childcare And Academy

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Little Texans Academy LLC

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Wisdom Academy

Original Town

Carrollton, TX

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Carrollton Farmers Branch ISD Employee Daycare Academy

Southwest Carrollton

Carrollton, TX

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Preschool & Daycare Carrollton, TX

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Our top priority is providing peace of mind to our enrolled families and to our community. Our school is Now Enrolling, and we would love to meet you! Contact us today for details.

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We are an award-winning extended-day preschool offering an exclusive curriculum and a stimulating childcare environment for children 6 weeks through 12 years of age serving the North Carrollton and Castle Hill Area!

Our passion to provide the best in quality early education and our caring professional teaching team places us above the average daycare or childcare center. Our state-of-the-art facility and exclusive curriculum creates a welcoming, dynamic, and safe learning atmosphere. We are committed to being The First Step to Higher Education™ for your child!

We invite you to come take a tour, meet our teachers, and see why Kids ‘R’ Kids of Castle Hills is the best choice for your family. We understand that you want the best for your child, and we do too! Your child is your pride and joy, and we would love the opportunity to contribute to the educational foundation they deserve!

Our learning academy offers engaging curriculum and premier programs for infants, toddlers, preschoolers, pre-K, and before/after school care. We are not just a team, but a family dedicated to giving your child the skills and educational foundation for a lifetime of success!

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Hours of Operation: 6:30am – 6:00pm

Location: 4516 Maumee Dr, Carrollton, TX 75034  | Directions

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Welcome to Kids R Kids Castle Hills

Meet The Owners

We want to meet you!

Kids ‘R’ Kids is proud to deliver first-class child care and early education to our community for families with children aged 6 weeks through 4 years. We also offer before and after school programs for children 5 to 12 years of age who attend local elementary schools for kindergarten through 5th grade.

We want to meet you and show you around our Learning Academy. Remember to Like us on Facebook and be sure to visit our blog often for great advice on everything from education to parenting.

Parent Testimonials of Kids R Kids Castle Hills

Parent Testimonials

“I cannot say enough great things about this school! My son is very happy everyday to go see his friends and teachers. They are kind and gentle and always thinking of ways for improvement. Love Kids R Kids Castle Hills!”

Amber L.

“I cannot say enough good things about this kids R kids location its more than awesome, great and happy environment for the kids and great staff, teachers, management and Owner. I never seen such an engaged and caring owner and management who keeps us updated with everything that is happening or issues that arises from running a day to day complex operation taking care of our precious ones. I have seen my little baby developed so much!”

Zak B.

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Our Accredited Programs

Kids ‘R’ Kids Learning Academy is fully accredited and offers the ultimate foundation for your child. We are very proud to provide the most effective educational programs and innovative facilities for children 6 weeks through 12 years of age.

Our Exclusive Curriculum

Our exclusive line of curriculum is designed specifically for every developmental stage of education with theme-based units, specific learning activities and teacher-friendly lesson plans. As a parent, rest assured your child is benefiting and advancing from the most innovative curriculum available.

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10/12: Our Kids Cafe serves healthy meals!

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12/12: Come Tour Our School!

Addison, Texas – Addison, Texas

Addison is an incorporated city of [Note 1] in Dallas County, Texas, in the United States. Addison is located north of the city of Dallas. The city’s population at the 2010 census was 13,056. [7] Addison and Flower Mound were the only two Texas municipalities named “towns” with populations over 10,000 in the 2010 census; since then the municipalities of Prosper and Trophy Club have also had a population of over 10,000, also defined as towns. Addison is best known in the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington Metroplex, a region teeming with restaurants and nightlife. [ Doubtful – discuss ]

Content

  • 1 Geography
  • 2 Demography
  • 3 Climate
  • 4 History
    • 4.1 List of mayors
  • 92 Private Schools

  • 5.3 History of Schools Serving Addison
  • 6 Economy
  • 7 Parks and Recreation
  • 8 Lifestyle
  • 9 See Also
  • 10 Notes
  • 11 Recommendations
  • 12 external link
  • Geography

    Addison is located at 32°57′28″N. 96°50′6″W / 32.95778°N 96.83500°W / 32.95778; -96.83500. [8]

    According to the US Census Bureau, the city has a total area of ​​4.4 square miles (11 km 2 ), all of which land.

    Addison borders the cities of Dallas, Branch Farmers, and Carrollton.

    Historical population
    Census Pop.
    1960 308
    1970 593 92.5%
    1980 5,553 836.4%
    1990 8.783 58.2% 2 ). There were 8,205 housing units at an average density of 1,853.4 per square mile (715.1/km). 2 ). The racial makeup of the city was 67.79%. White, 9.63% African American, 0.41% Native American, 7.81% Asian, 0.11% Pacific Islander, 10.79% from other races, and 3.46% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 24.04% of the population.

    There were 7,378 families, of which 14.3% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 24.5% were married couples living together, 8.2% were women living without husbands, and 63.9% do not have a family. 52. 2% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size is 1.77 and the average family size is 2.69.

    In the city, the population was spread out: 14.5% under the age of 18, 11.6% from 18 to 24, 43.9% from 25 to 44, 22.6% from 45 to 64, and 7, 2% aged 65 and over. . The mean age was 32.5 years. For every 100 women, there were 99.4 men. For every 100 women aged 18 and over, there were 99.1 men.

    The median household income in the city was $56,761. The per capita income for the city was $45,655. 7.7% of the population and 13.1% of people were below the poverty line. The average house price has been steadily rising in recent years. In 2007, the median home price was $350,000.

    Climate

    Addison is considered part of the humid subtropical region, the edge.

    History

    Joe Chow, Mayor of Addison from 2005-11 and 2017 To date

    The land occupied by Addison was inhabited as early as 1846 when Preston Witt built a house near White Rock Creek. [11] In 1902, the congregation named itself Addison, after Addison Robertson, who served as postmaster from 1908 to 1916. cotton gin, opened in 1902 on Addison Road.

    The community was formerly known as Noel Junction, after settler Sidney Smith Noell, after whom Noel Road and Knoll Trail are named.

    City of Addison was incorporated on June 15 1 [12] [13]

    All residents of the DISD area of ​​Addison may attend George Bush Elementary School in Addison. Bush’s attendance boundary covers most of Addison. [14] DISD Addison residents who reside outside the Bush traffic area are not provided with transportation to visit Bush. [12] Other DISD elementary schools serving parts of Addison include Anne Frank Elementary School in Dallas and Jerry Junkins Elementary School in Carrollton. [15] [16]

    The City of Addison asked Dallas ISD to build the Bush with sustainable materials. [17] PreK-5 was built under a mortgage approved in May 2008. Bush is adjacent to Greenhill School and is located along the Addison trail system; therefore, the school will be accessible by bike or on foot from Les Lacs and Midway Meadows. Bush has a 60,000 square foot (5600 m2) ground floor. 2 ) area and second floor 30,000 square feet (2800 m 2 ) spaces. [18] Bush has two sports fields located north of the playgrounds. During off hours, residents of Addison may use the fields. [19]

    Residents located in the Bush and Junkins area are divided into Walker High School and W.T. White High School, daytime in Dallas. [20] [21] Residents in the Frank area refer to Benjamin Franklin High School and Hillcrest High School, daytime. [22] [23]

    Part of the C-FBISD area is served by Stark Elementary School at Farmers Branch. [24] The other part is served by Neil Ray McLaughlin Elementary School (K-2) in Carrollton and Nancy H. Strickland High School (3-5) in the farm branch. [25] [26] The entire portion of C-FBISD is served by Vivian Field High School in the Farm Division, and R. L. Turner High School in Carrollton. [27] [28]

    Private Schools

    Addison is home to two private schools, both coeducational: Greenhill School, which has over 1,200 students from Preschool to High School, and Trinity Christian Academy, which has over 1,400 students from Preschool to High School.

    History of Schools Serving Addison

    The Addison School building was opened in 1914. In 1954, the school became part of the Dallas ISD and the school closed in 1964. The school building is now the Magic Time Machine restaurant. [29]

    McLaughlin was built in 1959. The field was built in 1960. Stark opened in 1963. R. L. Turner High School opened in 1962, replacing Carrollton High School. [30]

    Until the fall of 2006, all Addison residents were divided into Frank Kindergarten through 4th grade, E. D. Walker Elementary School for 5th and 6th grades, and Marsh High School for 7th th and 8th grades. [31] [32] In the fall of 2006, Junkins Elementary School opened, releasing Anne Frank, and Tom S. Gooch Elementary School occupied an additional portion of Frank’s attendance area. [33] [34] [35] Walker became a high school that year, serving the Frank and Junkins zoned areas of Addison while the Gooch zoned section was still assigned to Marsh. [36] [37]

    In the fall of 2008, boundary changes rezoned the Addison Francon Zone from W. T. White and Walker to Hillcrest and Franklin. [38] [39] [40] In addition, Strickland was dedicated in 2008. [30]

    George Herbert Walker Bush Elementary School opened in Addison in 2011. [41] As a result, [14] boundary changes during this year are due to Bush taking the area from Tom S. Gooch, [42] Frank, [43] and elementary schools Junkins. [44] Due to the Bush opening, Walker MS and White MS now served the Junkins and Bush areas, [20] [21] while Franklin continued to serve the Frank area. [22] [23] Because Gooch no longer serves parts of Addison, Marsh High School no longer serves parts of Addison. [45] [46]

    Economics

    This section of needs additional citations to check . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Material not received from the source may be challenged and removed. (January 2010) (Learn how and when to delete this message template)

    Today, Addison is the result of a booming business since the 1980s. Although Addison has a little over 13,000 residents, the daytime population is over 100,000. [47]

    The city has over 170 restaurants for every 79 Addison residents. Addison is a popular location for many Dallas restaurants because Addison allows restaurants to serve Alcoholic Beverage while many nearby municipalities do not. [48] Addison has 22 hotels with at least 4,000 hotel rooms and meeting space. [47]

    Addison Airport occupies approximately half of the city’s 11.5 square kilometers (4.4 sq mi) and is the third largest general aviation airport in the country. [47] Major corporate headquarters in Addison include: Dresser, [49] Daseke Inc. and Mary Kay Cosmetics. [50] Other major employers in Addison include Bank of America, Concentra and IWG. [51]

    Parks and Recreation

    Addison has 118 acres (48 ha) of parkland. [47] Addison’s first city park opened in 1978. [29] B The Dallas Independent School District operates the Alfred J. Loos Athletic Complex in Addison. [52]

    Addison Athletic Club is a 52,000 sq. ft., which has indoor and outdoor pools, a gym, fitness equipment and racquetball courts. [53]

    Lifestyle

    This section of needs additional citations to check . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Material not received from the source may be challenged and removed. (November 2011) (Learn how and when to delete this message template)

    typical of other suburbs.

    Residents and visitors can enjoy Addison’s many attractions. 22 weekends a year, Addison hosts special events. [47] The WaterTower Theater puts on plays and musicals and hosts the annual Out of the Loop festival. [54] The Cavanaugh Flight Museum keeps a collection of aircraft since the First World War. Addison Circle Park Built in the early 2000s, it is home to several seasonal outdoor events such as Addison Kaboom Town!, Addison Oktoberfest and Fork & Cork gourmet entertainment. The Addison Improv Comedy Club hosts weekly regular shows featuring famous headliners. 9 “Archived copy”. Archived from the original on 2013-08-18. Retrieved 2013-08-31. CS1 Main: an archivated copy as a title (communication)

    External link

    • Official website of the city Addison
    • Community Web Addison
    • Rotari Clotar
    • Gerbae Bermoque schools
    • Gerberta Gerbert
    • “Addison” entry in the Texas Handbook

    Coppell, TX – Coppell, Texas

    this article needs more citations to check . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Material not received from the source may be challenged and removed.
    Find sources: “Coppell, Texas” – News · newspapers · Books · Scientist · JSTOR (June 2018) (Find out when delete, as and when to remove it, as and when and when to remove it, as and when and when to remove it, as and when and when to remove it when this message template)

    Coppell (/kəˈpɛl/ kə-PEL ) [5] is a city in the northwest corner of Dallas County in the U. S. state. It is a suburb of Dallas and a bedroom community in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. Its population was 38,659. 2010 Census. [6] A small area in the northernmost part of the city merges into neighboring Denton County.

    Contents

    • 1 History
    • 2 Geography
    • 3 Demography
    • 4 Climate
    • 5 Mass media
    • 6 Sports
      • 6.1 Gymnastics
    • 8 Education
    • 10 famous people
    • 12 external links

    History

    The Coppell area was settled by German and French immigrants in the 1840s. Members of the Peters Colony also settled here in the 1840s. [7] Originally named Gibbs Station after Barnett Gibbs (an early lieutenant governor of Texas), the town was renamed in 1892 after George Coppell, a wealthy English financier who came to the United States in the 1880s and reportedly took an active part in the finals. construction of a local railroad. It is commonly believed that he was an engineer, but there is little or no evidence to support this claim. [8]

    In 1955, the community was incorporated by a 41-to-1 vote. Influenced by the opening of Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW Airport) in 1974, the city was radically transformed from a tiny farming village to a large suburban upper-middle community. class in the 1980s and 1990s. By 2000, almost the entire area of ​​the city was built up, and the population exceeded 35,000 people. In addition to vacation homes, the city has a growing commercial base of warehouses and transportation centers on the south and west sides of the city closest to the airport.

    Geography

    Coppell is located at 32°58′2″N. 96°59′12″W / 32.96722°N 96.98667°W / 32.96722; -96.98667 (32.967341, −96.986564). [9]

    According to the US Census Bureau, the city has a total area of ​​14.7 square miles (38.0 km 2 ), of which 14.4 square miles (37. 3 km 2 ) is land and 0.31 square miles (0.8 km 2 ), or 2.00%, is covered by water. [10]

    Koppell occupies the northwest corner of Dallas County and is near the DFW airport. Part of the airport’s property is within the city limits of Coppell. It is bordered to the west by Grapevine, to the north by Lewisville, to the east by Carrollton, and to the south by Irving and Dallas.

    Demographics

    This section should be updated . Update this article to reflect recent events or new information that is available. (February 2020)

    Pop

    9.

    Historical population
    Census

    1960 666
    1970 1,728 159. 5%
    1980 3,826 121.4%
    1990 16,881 341.2 %
    2000 35,958 113.0%
    38.659

    7.5%
    2019 (rating) 41.421 [2] 7.1%
    Tenal Census of the United States [11]

    from 3] 2000, the city had 35,958 people, 12,211 households, and 9,781 families. The population density was 2,418.5 people per square mile (933.7 / km 2 ). The 12,587 housing units averaged 846.6 per mile. 2 (326.8 / km 2 ). In racial makeup, the city was 83.23% White, 3.26% African American, 0.34% Native American, 9.30% Asian, 1.90% from other races, and 1.97% from two or more races. Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 6. 92% of the population.

    Of the 12,211 households, 54.6% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 69.7% were married couples, 8.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 19.9% ​​were non-families. About 16.1% of all households were made up of individuals and 1.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. Average household size 2.94, and the average family size is 3.34.

    In the city, the age distribution was 34.7% under the age of 18, 4.5% from 18 to 24, 39.0% from 25 to 44, 19.3% from 45 to 64, and 2.6% are aged 65 and over. The average age was 34 years. For every 100 women, there were 97.3 men. For every 100 women aged 18 and over, there were 93.2 men.

    As of 2007, the median income for a household in the city was $106,783 and for a family was $119,229. Men had a median income of $76,681 versus $43,750 for women. The per capita income for the city was 40,219dollars. About 1.4% of families and 1.9% of the population were below the poverty line, including 1. 9% under the age of 18 and 5.7% of those aged 65 or over. In 2020, the city was ranked as the 10th wealthiest city in Texas.

    Climate

    Koppell experiences a humid subtropical climate. In the US Monthly Energy Review, April 2016, Coppell ranked third (for cities over 30,000 inhabitants) in the US in terms of trees per inhabitant (2.5 trees per inhabitant), slightly behind Sacramento, California (2.6 :1) and Ann Arbor, Michigan (3.2:1).

    Media

    The Dallas Morning News is the newspaper of Dallas.

    B Coppell Citizens Advocate local community newspaper. [12]

    Sports

    Gymnastics

    Koppell is home to the Texas Dreams Gymnastics Club. The club has been coached by Peyton Ernst and Bailey Klyuch and has a strong team of level 10 gymnasts. Head Coach – former Olympian and first American all-around world champion, gold medalist 1991 years old. Kim Zmeskal Burdett. [13]

    Economics

    This section of needs additional citations to check . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Material not received from the source may be challenged and removed. (August 2018) (Learn how and when to delete this message template)

    Koppell’s economy depends heavily on its proximity to DFW Airport, which is directly southwest of it and is accessible via several highway and land routes. Thus, many corporations have shipping and distribution facilities in the large commercial area that includes the southwestern part of the city, including Amazon, Avaya, Nokia, IBM, Container Store, and Mohawk Industries. In March 2010, Samsung opened a new cell phone manufacturing and distribution facility in the city. [14]

    Education

    Coppell residents are served by one of three school districts. [15]

    The Coppell Independent School District (CISD) is responsible for Year 12 Kindergarten education for most children in the City of Coppell. The CISD portion also covers portions of northern Irving in the Valley Ranch region and those portions of Lewisville that fall south of the current Dallas/Denton County border. His secondary schools are Coppell High School, a day school, and the recently opened New Tech High.

    Carrollton-Farmers Branch ISD serves easternmost Coppell, south of Sandy Lake Rd. and east of Macarthur Blvd., including the Riverchase area, and students go to Barbara Bush High School and Ranchview High School in Irving. [16] [17]

    Lewisville ISD serves the northernmost portion of Coppell falling into Denton County, including the Coppell Greens subdivision. This area is just north of State Highway 121.

    All elementary schools in the Coppell Independent School District are rated “Exemplary” by the Texas Education Agency (in 2008), as are Coppell High School North and Coppell High School East. Coppell Middle School West, Coppell High School and the district as a whole are rated “recognized”. New Tech High received an “exemplary” rating in its first year, in 2008–2009academic year. Riverchase Elementary School (in the Carrollton-Farmers Branch Independent School District, but located in Coppell) received a “Recognized” rating. Students from this school continue to attend Barbara Bush High School and Ranchview High School on nearby Valley Ranch. They are rated “Academically Acceptable” and “Recognised”, respectively.

    Coppell ISD was named the best music program in the United States by the Association of Music Educators in 2000. In August 2001, Coppell voters approved a sales tax increase to provide funding for the arts in the school district. Coppell High School Marching Band Won Texas 4A UIL at 1999 and finished third in 5A in 2009. Coppell High School North Group won the Texas State Championship in 2006, 2011, and 2016. Koppell High School’s East Group was ranked fourth in the state in 2011. [18]

    Koppell High School news program KCBY-TV has won several national awards for its work with video production. The broadcast department of KCBY features local stories that appeal to the community at the school as well as the community outside of the school. The sports department of KCBY offers live coverage of all home sports games. The head of KCBY is Irma Kennedy, who worked with NBC before taking the job. In the summer of 2010, KCBY received about $500,000 worth of new equipment as it prepared to take on live broadcast calls in the spring of 2011. The news program also features a movie-related segment every week, with new movies hitting the market and more. . [ citation needed ]

    The New Tech High film program, NT Fuze, has hosted several productions at major film festivals, including South by South West and the Dallas International Film Festival. NT Fuze gives students the opportunity to learn the art of filmmaking and use the latest production tools. NT Fuze produces quality content not only for New Tech and Coppell ISD, but also for local businesses and organizations. [ need quote ]

    Transportation

    Koppell is located near the northeast corner of DFW Airport. There are no highways through the city, but the entire perimeter is served by Sh221 and the Sam Rayburn Tollway (west and north), Interstate 635 (south), and President George W. Bush’s Turnpike and Interstate 35E (east).

    Coppell has no public transport; he was a core member of the Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART), but voters decided to leave DART in 1989. These elections remain controversial today, because in 19In the 1980s, the city had a much smaller population, and the lack of DART membership likely prevents the city from participating in the planned Silver Line commuter rail system. [19] [20] Since Coppell borders the DART member cities of Carrollton, Dallas, and Irving, he can join later if he wishes, provided he can calculate the mandatory 1% sales tax. Future Cypress Waters station at Coppell is expected to be operated by Silver Line. [21]

    Famous people

    • Kelly Finglass – Director of Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders
    • Core Cluberi – Pither of the Texas Rangers
    • Bennett Ratliff – Member of Texas from Coppella (2015)
    • Superon for San Francisco 49ers
    • Connor Williams – offensive lineman for the Dallas Cowboys
    • Kim Chung-ha – Korean solo artist, former member of K-pop girl group I.O.I 9 DART Community Meeting Notice for the Cotton Belt Corridor Project. City of Carrollton. Retrieved October 3, 2019.
    • external links

      • [Coppell Historical Society website http://www.coppellhistoricalsociety.org/ ]
      • [City of Coppell – History of Coppell website http://www.coppelltx .gov/about-coppell/history-of-coppell ]
      • Coppell Citizens Advocate
      • Dallas Morning News
      • Coppell Student Media

      Addison, Texas Addison, Texas

      Addison is a city in Dallas County, Texas, USA. Addison is located north of the city of Dallas. The city’s population at the 2010 census was 13,056. Addison and Flower Mound were the only two Texas municipalities named “towns” with populations over 10,000 in the 2010 census; since then, the population of the municipalities of Prosper and Trophy Club, also called towns, has also exceeded 10,000. Addison is best known in the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington metro area for its abundance of restaurants and nightlife.

      CONTENT

      • 1 Geography
      • 2 Demographics
      • 3 Climate
      • 4 History

        • 4.1 List of mayors
      • 5 Education

        • 5.1 Public schools
        • 5.2 Private schools
        • 5.3 Community colleges
        • 5.4 History of schools serving Addison
      • 6 Policy
      • 7 Economy
      • 8 Parks and recreation areas
      • 9 Lifestyle
      • 10 See also
      • 11 Notes
      • 12 Links
      • 13 External links

      Geography

      Addison is located at 32°57′28″N, 96°50′6″W / 32. 95778°N 96.83500°W / 32.95778; -96.83500.

      According to the US Census Bureau, the city has a total land area of ​​4.4 square miles (11 km 2 ).

      Addison borders the cities of Dallas, Farmers Branch, and Carrollton.

      Historical population
      Census Pop. % ±
      1960 308
      1970 593 92.5%
      1980 5.553 836.4%
      1990 8 783 58.2%
      2000 14 166 61.3%
      2010 13 056 −7.8%
      2019 (estimate) 16 263 24. 6%
      1960-2000, 2010

      Demographics

      As of the 2010 census, there were 13,056 people, 7,378 households, and 2,663 family households living in the city. The population density was 3,200.0 people per square mile (1234.7/km 2 ). There were 8,205 housing units at an average density of 1,853.4 per square mile (715.1/km 2). The racial makeup of the city was 67.8% White, 9.6% African American, 0.4% Native American, 7.8% Asian, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 10.8% from other races, and 3.5 % from two or more races. Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 24.0% of the population.

      There were 7,378 households out of which 14.3% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 24.5% were married couples living together, 8.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 63.9% had no family. 52.2% of all households were made up of individuals and 10.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size is 1.77 and the average family size is 2.69.

      In the city, the population was spread out: 14.5% under the age of 18, 11.6% from 18 to 24, 43.9% from 25 to 44, 22.6% from 45 to 64, and 7, 2% aged 65 and over. . The mean age was 32.5 years. For every 100 women, there were 99.4 men. For every 100 women aged 18 and over, there were 99.1 men.

      The median household income in the city was $56,761. The per capita income for the city was $45,655. 7.7% of the population and 13.1% of people were below the poverty line. The average house price has been steadily rising in recent years. In 2007, the median home price was $350,000.

      Climate

      Addison is considered part of the humid subtropical region.

      History

      Joe Chow, mayor of Addison from 2005 to 2011 and 2017 to present.

      Land occupied by Addison was inhabited as early as 1846 when Preston Witt built a house near White Rock Creek. In 1902, the community named itself Addison, after Addison Robertson, who served as postmaster from 1908 to 1916. The first industry was the cotton gin, which opened in 1902 on Addison Road.

      The community was formerly known as Noell Junction, after settler Sidney Smith Noell, after whom Noel Road and Knoll Trail are named.

      City of Addison incorporated on June 15, 1953. The first mayor of Addison was M. W. Morris and the elders were Guy Dennis, Robert W. Wood, J. E. Julian, Jr., Dr. H. T. Nesbit, and Seldon Knowles. In 1982, the name was changed to “City of Addison”.

      List of mayors

      # Mayor Start date End date
      one MW Morris 1953 1969
      2 Milton J. Noell 1969 1973
      3 William K. Cook 1973 1975
      four Jerry Redding 1975 1988
      5 Lynn Spruill 1988 1993
      6 Rich Beckert 1993
      9009one

      1999
      7 Scott Wheeler 1999 2005
      eight Joe Chow 2005 2011
      9 Todd Meyer 2011 2017
      ten Joe Chow 2017 active

      Education

      Public schools

      Most residents are zoned to the Dallas Independent School District, while residents of Spring Valley South and Vitruvian Way are zoned to the Carrollton-Farmers Branch Independent School District.

      All Addison County DISD residents can attend George Bush Elementary School in Addison. Bush’s attendance boundary covers most of Addison. DISD Addison residents who reside outside the Bush Visitor Area are not provided with transportation to visit Bush. Other DISD elementary schools serving Addison sections include Anne Frank Elementary School in Dallas and Jerry Junkins Elementary School in Carrollton.

      The City of Addison asked Dallas ISD to build the Bush with sustainable materials. The PreK-5 school was built as part of a mortgage approved in May 2008. Bush is adjacent to Greenhill School and is located along the Addison trail system; therefore, the school will be accessible by bike or on foot from Les Lacs and Midway Meadows. Bush has a 60,000 square foot (5,600 m 2 ) first floor and a 30,000 square foot (2,800 m 2 ) second floor. Bush has two athletic fields located just north of the playgrounds. Out of school hours, Addison residents can use the fields.

      Residents located in the Bush and Junkins area are divided into Walker High School and WT White High School in Dallas. Residents located in the Frank area are divided into Benjamin Franklin High School and Hillcrest High School.

      Part of the C-FBISD area is served by Stark Elementary School in the Farmer’s Department. The other part is served by Neil Ray McLaughlin Elementary School (K-2) in Carrollton and Nancy H. Strickland High School (3-5) in the Farmer’s Department. The entire portion of C-FBISD is served by Vivian Field High School at Farm Branch and R.L. Turner in Carrollton.

      Private Schools

      Addison has two private schools, both coeducational: Greenhill School with over 1200 students from preschool to high school age and Trinity Christian Academy with over 1400 students from preschool to high school age.

      Community Colleges

      The Texas Legislature designates areas in Dallas County and areas in CFBISD as within the service area of ​​Dallas College (formerly the Dallas County Community College District).

      History of Schools Serving Addison

      The Addison School building was opened in 1914. In 1954, the school became part of the Dallas ISD and the school closed in 1964. The school building is now the Magic Time Machine restaurant.

      McLaughlin was built in 1959. The field was built in 1960. Stark opened in 1963. R.L. High School Turner opened in 1962, replacing Carrollton High School.

      Until the fall of 2006, all Addison residents were divided into Frank Kindergarten through 4th grade, ED Walker Elementary School for 5th and 6th grades, and Marsha Middle School for 7th and 8th grades. In the fall of 2006, Junkins Elementary School opened, releasing Anne Frank, and Tom S. Gooch Elementary School occupied an additional portion of Frank’s attendance area. Walker became a high school that year, serving the Frank and Junkins zoned areas of Addison while the Gooch zoned section was still assigned to Marsh.

      In the fall of 2008, boundary changes rezoned Addison’s Frank-Zone Precinct from White T White and Walker to Hillcrest and Franklin. In addition, Strickland was dedicated in 2008.

      George Herbert Walker Bush Elementary School opened in Addison in 2011. As a result of the boundary changes during this year, it is speculated that Bush is taking back the attendance area from Tom S. Gooch, Frank, and Junkins elementary schools. Due to the Bush opening, the Walker MS and White MS now served the Junkins and Bush zones, while the Franklin continued to serve the Frank zone. Because Gooch no longer serves parts of Addison, Marsh High School no longer serves parts of Addison.

      Politics

      Addison City vote
      by party in the presidential election
      Year Democratic Republican Third parties
      2020 60.08% 4.465 38.27% 2 844 1.65% 123
      2016 51. 05% 3.050 42.88% 2.562 6.07% 363
      2012 44.10% 2,170 54.05% 2.660 1.85% 91

      Economy

      Joe’s Italian Cafe, a local dish.

      Today, Addison is the result of rapid business growth since the 1980s. Although Addison has a little over 13,000 residents, the daytime population is over 100,000.

      With over 170 restaurants, there is one restaurant for every 79 residents of Addison. Addison is a popular location for many Dallas restaurants because Addison allows restaurants to serve alcoholic beverages right with the drink, while many nearby municipalities do not. Addison has 22 hotels with a total of at least 4,000 hotel rooms and meeting rooms.

      Addison Airport occupies approximately half of the city’s 11. 5 square kilometers (4.4 sq mi) and is the third largest general aviation airport in the country. Major corporate headquarters in Addison include Dresser, Daseke Inc. and Mary Kay Cosmetics. Other major employers in Addison include Bank of America, Concentra, and IWG.

      Addison is also home to Hand Drawn Pressing, the world’s first fully automated vinyl record plant.

      Parks and Recreation

      Addison has 118 acres (48 ha) of parkland. Addison’s first city park opened in 1978. The Dallas Independent School District operates the Alfred J. Loos Athletic Complex in Addison.

      Addison Athletic Club is a 52,000 sq. ft., which has indoor and outdoor pools, a gym, exercise equipment, and racquetball courts.

      lifestyle

      Addison Circle

      Because of Addison’s purely commercial atmosphere, Addison’s residents enjoy a unique lifestyle not found in other suburbs.

      Residents and visitors alike can enjoy Addison’s many attractions. 22 weekends a year, Addison hosts special events. The WaterTower Theater puts on plays and musicals and hosts the annual Out of the Loop festival. The Cavanaugh Flight Museum houses a collection of World War I aircraft. Addison Circle Park, built in the early 2000s, is home to several seasonal outdoor events such as Addison Kaboom Town!, Addison Oktoberfest, and the Fork & Cork gourmet entertainment event. The Addison Improv Comedy Club hosts weekly regular shows featuring famous headliners.

      Addison is known for being home to the original locations of both Texas de Brazil and Fogo de Chão, two Brazilian Churrascaria franchises that are in the process of rapid national expansion.

      See also

      • Drawings at Addison Circle
      • Vitruvian Park

      Notes

      references

      external links

      • City of Addison Official Website
      • Addison
      • Community Website

      • Rotary Club Addison
      • Addison Town Guide
      • George Herbert Walker Bush Elementary School
      • “Addison” entry in Handbook of Texas

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      10 gruesome kills |

      10 Nurse Kills Hit Man Her Husband Hired To Kill Her

      Photo Source: Nurse.org

      In 2006, emergency nurse Susan Kuhnhausen (later Susan Walter) divorced Mike Kuhnhausen, her husband of 17 years. Mike responded by hiring a hitman to kill her. Mike lost his job after the divorce and wanted to get their house for himself. He paid Edward Huffey $50,000 to kill him.

      Susan returned home that fateful day to find her apartment unusually dark. She was still trying to figure out what was wrong when Huffy hit her with a hammer. Instead of screaming and trying to escape like most people would, Susan fought back by overpowering Huffy and choking him to death. Mike was sentenced to ten years in prison. He died six months before release.

      9 Man Mistakenly Sends Texts To Former Boss Instead Of Hit Man

      Photo Source: Jeff Lytle/Facebook

      In 2017, Jeff Little was arrested after sending suspicious text messages to his former boss. The message, which included the line, “Do you remember, you said you would help me kill my wife,” was intended for the hitman, whose only name was “Shane.” The messages also included details of how they would split the money he would receive from his wife’s insurance. They planned to split it 50/50.

      Little calculated that they would receive $1.5 million for his wife. He told Shane that they could get an extra $500,000 if he also killed their daughter. Little provided information about his wife, telling Shane that she worked at Walmart and left work at 11:00 pm. He also advised Shane to present the murder as an accident or a failed robbery.

      Little was arrested after his former boss showed text messages to the police. Little denied planning the assassination, saying he only wrote the lyrics because he was angry.

      8 Man Hires Undercover Cop To Kill Another Police Officer – Man Hires Undercover Cop To Kill Another Police Officer Houston Police Department, who liked to give him tickets.

      The officer issued him several tickets for having too many cars parked at his logistics and transportation company.

      Mohammed thought he could save money by spending $2,000 to kill a police officer instead of paying him tens of thousands of dollars. move cars. In 2018, he hired a hitman who eventually became an undercover cop. Mohammed initially assumed that the hitman had thrown acid in the officer’s face, but changed his mind after realizing that the officer could survive and give him more tickets.

      Undercover officer returned with staged photographs of his dead colleague. Mohammed was probably impressed, but he was immediately arrested by a SWAT team. He had previously given an undercover officer $500 and had to pay the remaining $1,500 after the target was killed. The money was found in his pocket.

      7 Woman Hires Husband’s Friend To Kill Husband

      Photo Source: Houston Chronicle

      Maria Sosa was planning to divorce her husband Ramon Sosa when she decided to speed things up in 2017 . By “acceleration” we mean that she decided to kill her husband. She hired a hitman who, unknown to her, was a friend of her husband. Keeler briefed Ramon, who briefed deputies in Montgomery County, Texas.

      A friend of Ramon then directed Maria to an undercover officer who introduced himself as another hitman. Maria promised the undercover cop $2,000 and Ramon’s pickup truck. Two days later, the police and Ramon falsified the scene of the murder. They made Ramon pretend to be dead. The side of his head was made to look like he was being shot at. The undercover officer gave the photos to Maria, who was so impressed that she gave him another thousand dollars. Maria was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

      6 Woman Survives Assassination Attempt And Discovers Her Husband Was Behind It All

      Photo Source: Denton County Records

      August 18, 2012 her home in Carrollton, Texas, and found the killer waiting for her. Nancy did not realize that she was dealing with a hitman and mistook him for a robber.

      the killer grabbed her from behind, put his arm around her neck and pointed the gun at her head. Nancy pulled herself out of his grip and turned to face him. He asked for her purse and then shot her. The bullet went through Nancy’s head, damaged her left eye, and entered her right lung. The killer fled with her purse. Surprisingly, Nancy survived.

      The police soon discovered that Nancy’s husband, John Franklin “Frank” Howard, was behind the attempt. Frank planned the murder for many years. He had previously hired several hit men, but they never killed Nancy and continued to collect more money from him. Frank wanted Nancy dead so he could marry another woman he was dating. He knew that Nancy would not agree to a divorce. He was sentenced to life imprisonment.

      5 Hit Men Refuse To Kill Victim Because They Do Not Kill Women

      Photo Source: BBC News

      In 2015, Noela Rukundo from Australia traveled to Burundi for her stepmother’s funeral when she was abducted at gunpoint and dragged into a car. She was blindfolded and taken to a safe house.

      Inside, her captors asked her why her husband wanted her dead. Noela told the men that it was impossible because her husband would never want to kill her. The men proved her wrong when they called her husband, Baleng Kalala, and told him they had his wife. Balenga told them to kill her. Noela was so shocked that she fainted.

      After all, the hitmen didn’t kill Noela because they had a policy against killing women and children. However, they told her husband that she had died. They released Noela a few days later, but not before giving her a memory stick with phone calls and some pay stubs they had received from her husband.

      Noela secretly returned to Australia where her husband told everyone who didn’t care. hear that she is dead. He received the mourners at his home and saw some off when Noela appeared. Balenga said he wanted Noela dead because he thought she wanted to divorce him. He was sentenced to nine years in prison.

      4 Woman Hires Hit Man To Kill Husband For Insurance, Ex-Wife Gets The Money Clevelander Uloma Walker-Curry hired her daughter’s boyfriend, Chad Padgett, to kill her husband, William Walker. Uloma and William had only been married for four months, but Uloma was heavily in debt and hoping to cash out his $100,000 life insurance policy.

      Padgett ordered the assassination of his cousin Chris Hine, who failed to kill Walker. . Hine assigned the job to Ryan Dorthy, who shot Walker four times. After the murder, things quickly went wrong. First, Uloma never received the money because Walker still listed his ex-wife as his next of kin. So the ex got the money.

      Padgett was sentenced to 28 years to life for his part in the murder. Dorthy got 23 years and Hine got 18 years. Uloma’s 17-year-old daughter was sent to kindergarten. Uloma’s lawyers claimed that the murder was planned by the daughter.

      3 Man Fails To Kill Target At Point-Blank Range

      The shooter, later identified as 25-year-old Oktay Enimehmedov, attempted to shoot the party leader twice. but the gun did not fire. Enimekhmedov was immediately seized and arrested. He also had two knives with him. Records show that he was previously arrested for drugs and robbery.

      The attempted murder was seen live. The footage clearly shows Yenimekhmedov holding a gun a few inches from Dogan’s head. The investigation showed that it was a gas pistol. Gas pistols are classified as non-lethal weapons, although they can cause serious injury if used at close range.

      The police said the shooting was not an assassination attempt, but a stupid ploy to gain fame. The police only charged Enimekhmedov with “serious hooliganism” and “threatening to kill.” However, Lutvi Metsan, who became party leader after Dogan resigned due to the incident, said that Enimehmedov told Dogan that he really wanted to kill him.

      2 Woman Hires Undercover Cop For Hit Job, Is Acquitted By Court

      Photo source: CTV News

      Now everything is upside down. In Digby County, Nova Scotia, Canada, in 2008, Nicole Ryan (later Doucet) got fed up with her marriage to Mike Ryan. Instead of filing for divorce, she hired a hitman to kill Mike. She did it for the money. She knew she would get nothing if she divorced Mike, but would inherit three estates and receive his $500,000 pension if he died.

      Nicole had trouble finding the perfect man for the job. The first hitman she hired escaped after paying $25,000, and two more hired workers refused the contract. Finally she found a fourth one who was ready. However, he didn’t really want to, because he was an undercover officer in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

      The officer played along and even asked if he should kill Mike’s new girlfriend. Nicole said no, she just wanted Mike dead. He also asked if Mike beat her. She said no. Nicole also told the cop that she had been trying to kill Mike for nine months. She was arrested after a second meeting with an undercover agent.

      After her arrest, Nicole changed her story. She said Mike physically abused and beat her. The police officer was not allowed to testify, and neither was Mike. The judge agreed that domestic violence was sufficient reason for Nicole to hire the killer, so he dropped all charges against her. The case reached the Supreme Court, where the judge’s decision was upheld.

      1 Man Says He Was Only Researching A Novel And Never Planned To Kill His Wife

      Photo Source: Sky News

      In 2017 David Harris 68 years, former producer of the British television drama Bill , was sentenced to 17 years in prison for hiring an undercover officer to kill his wife Hazel Allinson so he could inherit her property. Harris paid £200,000 for the hit and hoped to make £800,000 from the property sale. He then planned to spend the rest of his days with a 28-year-old woman he met in a brothel.

      Harris hired Duke Dean, who introduced him to an undercover officer posing as a hitman. called Chris. Chris recorded the meeting, and the next day the police arrested Harris. Harris denied plans to kill his wife. He said he was just doing research for a murder novel he intended to write.

      Death of the West Buchanan Patrick J.

      Prev. chapter

      Contents

      Next head

      • Full text
      • Death of the West: how population extinction and increased immigration threaten our country and civilization
      • Introduction
      • Chapter 1. Endangered species
      • Europe
      • Germany. Revenge of Clemenceau
      • Italy. Amusement park
      • Russia
      • Great Britain
      • Japan
      • Chapter 2. “Where have these children gone?”
      • A. New economy
      • B. End of “family rent”
      • C. “Population bomb”. Hysteria
      • Feminism
      • D. Mass-Culture
      • E. Collapse of morality and religion
      • Chapter 3. Revolutionary catechism
      • “Cancer of humanity”
      • Crimes of hatred
      • Chapter 4. They committed the Frankfurt School of Frankfurt School to America
      • Chapter 5. The New Great Migration
      • The Catastrophe
      • For Whom the Bell Tolls
      • Iran and the Persian Gulf
      • Europe is a Living Corpse
      • The Ultimate Solution to Aging
      • Israel and the Middle East
      • The return of the prophet
      • Israel as a metaphor
      • Chapter 6. New reconquest
      • Who ruined the Reagan coalition?
      • American Quebec?
      • What is a nation?
      • Chapter 7. War against the past
      • Former history
      • Farewell, Columbus!
      • The Founding Fathers
      • Only yesterday
      • New History0020
      • Gay and civil rights?
      • The Great Experiment
      • Boy Scouts become fanatics
      • Why is the Boy Scout battle so important?
      • Chapter 9. The intimidated majority of
      • Two America
      • Chapter 10. “House divided …” (15)
      • Assimilation
      • issue personnel
      • Open resistance to political correctness
      • Countering racial propaganda
      • Laws on abortion
      • Civil boycotts
      • Initiatives and referendums
      • Commercial Hunger
      • Censorship
      • Gratitude

      9000 9201 9201 9201 9,0002 9,000,000 920 [437].

      Alexander Pope

      People without faith will eventually find they have nothing to live for[438].

      Thomas S. Eliot, 1939

      In the great war of 1914-1918, Catholic France fought Catholic Austria, and Protestant Germany fought Protestant England. Nine million Christians died on the battlefields, but only Orthodox Russia was defeated by the communist revolution, and it was more cour d’etat than a mass conversion. Gramsci argued that two thousand years of Christianity had rendered Western man immune to Marxism. Before the West can be conquered, it must be stripped of its faith. But how?

      Gramsci’s answer is a detour through the mastery of social institutions. Marxists must cooperate with progressive forces and, along with them, seize those institutions that form the souls of a new generation – schools, colleges, cinema, music, art, new mass media devoid of censorship, as well as radio and – invented after Gramsci’s death – television . After mastering the cultural institutions, the united left will be able to begin the de-Christianization of the West. In a few generations, this goal will be achieved, and then the West will cease to be the West, it will turn into a completely different civilization, and the management of culture will inevitably be followed by government.

      But when Christianity in the West began to lose its positions, another event occurred – Western man began to refuse procreation. After all, the correlation between faith and a large family is absolute. The more people are devoted to a faith, be it Christianity, Islam or Judaism, the higher the birth rate of a particular nation. In New Square, New York, the first Orthodox Jewish community in the United States, the average family has ten children[439]. In Kostroma, Russia, Vladimir Alekseev, an exemplary father of sixteen children, and his constantly pregnant wife have a house full of icons. “We did it consciously,” Alekseev said in an interview with AP, “even before we turned to the faith.”[440] In the Baptist state of Texas, white birth rates are higher than those of the same race in Sybarite California. Where the worldly things triumph, the population gradually dwindles and dies out.

      In 1999, Pope John Paul II called on the Episcopal Synod to heed the pulse of faith in Europe. What I heard was not very encouraging. Secularism, the bishops reported, “poisons a significant part of the European population. There is a serious threat of de-Christianization and paganization of Europe”[441]. Less than 10 percent of young people in Belgium, Germany and France go to church regularly. There is not a single large city in northwestern Europe where at least half of the newborns were baptized.

      A Newsweek study (1999) states that 39 percent of French people have no religion and that only 56 percent of English people believe in God[442]. In Italy, only 15 percent attend Sunday mass, while in the Czech Republic Sunday sermons are forces of 3 percent of the country’s population[443]. Czech President Václav Havel declared:

      “We are creating the first atheistic civilization in the history of mankind[444]. May not the nature of the present civilization—with its short-sightedness, with its protrusion of individualism…with its infinite faith in the human ability to know the universal by reason—might not the present civilization itself be the natural result of what, to put it in simple and understandable terms, is the loss of the Divine? ?”[445].

      And the more reliably this “atheistic civilization” strengthens in Europe, the faster the peoples on whose shoulders it was created die out. It seems that this is an immutable pattern: deprive the people of faith – and they will stop reproducing themselves, and foreign soldiers or immigrants will come to the liberated territories. By de-Christianizing America, the Cultural Revolution found a contraceptive as effective as Dr. Rock’s pills. However, why is a nation as “churched” as the Americans, and so committed to Christianity as America 1950s, meekly allowed to deprive yourself of faith?

      “America is a Christian country,” Mississippi Governor Kirk Fordyce declared in 1992[446]. However, as Gary Demar writes in his book A Christian History of America: What’s New About the Known, the governor’s words were true for the first 250 years of the American state.

      Protestants founded the first settlements in America. Jews and Catholics were then tiny minorities. When the author of these lines went to 19In the 1940s at parochial school, the nuns proudly talked about the fact that one of the fifty-seven signers of the Declaration of Independence was a Catholic—Charles Carroll of Carrollton, Maryland.

      In Virginia’s first charter, the colonists declared their goal “to spread the faith of Christ among those who live in the darkness of unbelief and paganism, who are in shameful ignorance and do not comprehend the true nature of the Godhead. ” The first four words of the Mayflower Agreement were: “In the name of the Lord, amen,” and then it said: “by the grace of God … undertaking our deeds for the glory of the Lord and for the promotion of the Christian faith.” In the Basic Laws of Connecticut 1639year it says: “The Word of God requires, in order to maintain peace and unity among people, to establish a reasonable and just government according to the Divine commandments … in order to preserve the freedom and purity of the gospel word of our Lord Jesus Christ”[447].

      Recalling all this at morning prayer during the International Council of Christian Leaders in 1954, Chief Justice Earl Warren said:

      on this continent we have been guided by the Scriptures and inspired by the example of the Savior… Whether we turn to the first charter of Virginia… or to the New England charter… or to the Massachusetts Bay charter… or to the Basic Laws of Connecticut, the same thesis is everywhere: America is a Christian land governed by Christian laws”[448].

      Demar only confirms the obvious with his book. A century before Governor Fordyce, in 1892, the U.S. Supreme Court declared, “This is a Christian country.” observance of the commandments set forth in the Holy Scriptures”[450]. In 1931, Judge George Sutherland upheld the 1892 Supreme Court ruling, calling Americans a Christian people.[451]

      In Placentia Bay, where he drafted the Atlantic Charter with Winston Churchill, Franklin Delano Roosevelt declared that America was “founded on Christian principles”; under his direction, a choir of American and British sailors sang the hymn “Forward, Warriors of Christ”[452]. In a 1947 letter to Pope Pius the Twelfth, Harry Truman repeated: “We are a Christian people”[453]. In a 1951 Supreme Court decision, pronounced Judge William Douglas, says: “We are a religious people and our whole culture is based on the presupposition of the Most High.” .

      The reaction to Fordyce’s words – hostile, vicious, antagonistic – tells us more about our cultural elite than about the faith of the Great Silent Majority. But the Cultural Revolution is rewriting our history and replacing it with fictions—including the following: America was never a Christian country, and only hypocrites like Governor Fordyce can claim otherwise. As for President Carter’s assertion of “responsibility to create a form of government that would be in accordance with the will of God,” for the first person of the country, such statements, according to the decision of the Supreme Court, are prohibited by the First Amendment. If you want to legitimately change American society, the court says, you can take the writings of Karl Marx, Rachel Carson, Betty Friedan, or Al Gore as your guide, not the “writing” of Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John.

      How is America being de-Christianized? Tyrannically and with surprisingly little resistance from people whose ancestors are among the most violent opponents of undemocratic rule.

      Half a century ago, the Supreme Court was subject to an ideological contagion, with the help of which some “dark forces” tried to reform our society. Using one of the clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, the court confirmed the right of the federal government to impose on the states all the restrictions that the constitution imposes on Congress. By that time, the Tenth Amendment had already been repealed, and the states became subjects of the Supreme Court.

      The First Amendment forbids Congress from passing laws “regarding the establishment of religion” and requires respect for “religious freedom,” but the Supreme Court used those words in a preemptive strike against Christianity. By a court decision, all Bibles, writings of the church fathers, crosses, and other Christian symbols were withdrawn from public and school libraries, ceremonies and church holidays were canceled. Instead of the story of Adam and Eve, the book “Heather has two mothers” appeared. Gone are the images of Christ ascending into heaven; drawings of monkeys turning into Homo erectus appeared. Passover is gone, replaced by Earth Day. Gone were the biblical instructions regarding the immorality of homosexuality – but homosexuals came and began to talk about the immorality of homophobia. The Ten Commandments are gone, but condoms are here.

      This fifty-year-old decision led to a string of triumphant victories for the Cultural Revolution and crushing defeats for old America. In 1948, schools banned the voluntary study of religion. In 1963, additional Bible studies were declared unconstitutional. In 1980, a Kentucky law that called for the Ten Commandments to be hung on the walls of classrooms was defeated by the legislature because the commandments were “devoid of worldly significance.” At 1985 in Alabama declared unconstitutional “a moment of silence” before the start of school hours. In 1989, the Supreme Court ordered the removal of the nativity image from the grounds of the Allegheny District Court. In 1992, all prayers were banned in schools and colleges. In 2000, there was a ban on prayers and

      making the sign of the cross during school and student sports competitions.

      Chief Justice Rehnquist, who has been in office for thirty years, has seen and heard a lot. This is the decision of the court, according to him:

      “…breathes hatred towards all manifestations of religiosity in the society… Neither the essence nor the tone of the court’s ruling correspond to the American spirit. George Washington himself, at the request of the Congress that approved the Bill of Rights, declared that “this day shall henceforth be a day of thanksgiving and prayer to the glory of Almighty God, who has endowed us with his unspeakable mercy”[456].

      Imitation is the most blatant form of flattery. Sensing that Christianity was being hunted down, the lower courts began to compete with each other in an effort to surpass the “holiness” of the Supreme Court. At 19In 96, the Ninth Circuit Court ruled that a large cross on a memorial to fallen soldiers in Eugene, Oregon, was unconstitutional. In 1999, the Sixth Circuit ruled that the Cleveland Board of Education was barred from opening its meetings with prayer, despite the fact that this happens every day in Congress. The Eleventh Circuit Court banned all forms of address to the Deity, whether prayers, blessings or swearing, in schools and colleges.

      Since 1959, the state of Ohio has had the motto “With God’s help all things are possible” [In the Russian synodal translation of the Bible, this phrase sounds like this: “with men it is impossible, but with God all things are possible” (Matt., 19:26).

      It was reproduced on official documents and tax returns, as well as on a bronze plaque at the entrance to the state legislature. In 2000, three judges in the Sixth Circuit ruled that the motto be removed. On what basis? On the fact that these words are from the New Testament; moreover, these are the words of Christ himself. Now, if the state of Ohio took Nietzsche’s words “God is dead” or Dostoyevsky’s phrase from The Brothers Karamazov about the death of God as its motto, then everything would be all right.

      Rocker Marilyn Manson once said: “There must be at least one brave man in every age who will try to do away with Christianity; True, no one has yet been able to do this” [457]. Rejoice, Marilyn, the Supreme Court heard you! In May 2001, this government agency upheld an appeals court ruling requiring the mayor’s office of Elkhart, Indiana, to remove a granite stele engraved with the Ten Commandments from the lawn in front of the mayor’s office. This stele stood in front of the city hall for forty years. By a vote of six to three, the Supreme Court refused to hear the city’s appeal. However, the dissident chairman of the court pointed out to his fellow judges that the portrait of Moses, carrying tablets with the text of the Ten Commandments, adorns the reception hall in the building of the Supreme Court[458].

      Religious rivalry is a deliberate game for a draw. Every achievement of one faith is a loss for another. The rise of Christianity was recognized by Saul of Tarsus, who led the people who stoned Stephen the Martyr, a deadly threat to Jerusalem. The Islamic conquest of Arabia and North Africa alarmed Christian Europe. The Reformation and the rise of Protestantism led to a crisis in Rome. The triumph of communism was marked by the persecution of Christians. Finally, the introduction of secularism into the American school system led to a resounding defeat for Christianity.

      From kindergarten to twelfth grade, children are instilled with the worldview with which they will enter adulthood, and thus shape the future of the nation. Children are taught what to believe, what to value, what to listen to and how to live. Today, Christianity in the schools has found itself in the position of a poor relative, who is being persecuted from everywhere. Another triumph of the revolution – how long is it?

      Leafing through the 1973 Humanitarian Manifesto. It contains all the provisions that are hammered into our children in schools today[459].“Faith in a God who listens to prayers… is faith in the unprovable, a relic of the past… Traditional ethics have failed to meet modern needs…[460]The promises of posthumous salvation and eternal damnation are equally illusory and unsafe for the psyche…[461]Science claims that the human race is the result of the evolution of nature. ”[462] Children leave schools full of such ideas, as teachers zealously carry out the wishes of the Cultural Revolution and try to convey to the students the new truth in all its naked abomination, and Christianity is not even allowed on the school doorstep.

      The “secular humanists” make no secret of their purpose. The manifesto proclaims the right of every person “to birth control, abortion and divorce” and adds: “Many types of sexual behavior cannot and should not be considered bad by definition”[463]. Freedom includes “recognition of the right of every person to a dignified death, euthanasia and suicide.”[464] And now that the activists of the revolution have achieved the expulsion of Christianity from the school system, these principles, these dogmas are being taught to our children. Thus, although America remains a generally Christian state, its public institutions and popular culture have long been completely de-Christianized.

      In a remarkable coincidence, The Humanitarian Manifesto was published a few months after Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew achieved a forty-nine-state victory over George McGovern during the 1972 election campaign, codenamed “three A’s” – amnesty, abortions, drugs (acid). Despite liberal defeats in 1972, 1980, 1984, 1988, and 1944, the Humanitarian Manifesto, initially perceived as the height of radicalism, gradually became the ideology of the Democratic Party as Republican resistance weakened. However, one of his theses is ambiguous. It states that “separation of church from state and ideology from state are mandatory requirements”[465]. However, “secular humanism” is itself a religion, the religion of the American elite, enforced in society by the Supreme Court. Perhaps the greatest success of this most formidable rival of Christianity lies in convincing Christians that it is not about rivalry, but only about a rational approach to ideology.

      Christians have been defeated by a militant minority whose beliefs are alien to the American hinterland, but who have managed to sneak into the Supreme Court and get their wishes through. The revolution can be blamed for anything but a lack of patience. As Cervantes said, let’s give the devil his due.

      Christians who believe that the court only established equal rules for all religions have lost their sense of reality. The court took from them everything they had and handed them over to their rivals. And what they lost they will not be able to return without a fight. In When Nations Die, Jim Nelson Black lashes out at Protestants:

      “One of the most important reasons for the decline of American society in the past century is the tendency among Christians to give up territory without a fight for practical purposes. This is especially true of Protestants, who use every opportunity to retreat. Most Christians have actually given up the “arenas” of political and ethical battles, and have given in voluntarily, long before the emergence of fighters for individual freedom, the fear of which drives us back to the churches” [466].

      It may sound harsh, but Christians need a good shake if they don’t want to lose their country. They also need leaders ready to fight. C. S. Lewis warned against making compromises, which he called a cloak to hide the nakedness of indecisiveness and timidity:

      we need to be firm. We must show everyone what a true Christian is, devoted to Jesus Christ. We cannot remain silent or yield in everything.”[467]

      By the twenty-first century, the de-Christianization of society will be completed. Easter celebrations, Christmas performances and hymns, Christian books, films, processions will disappear not only from school curricula, but also, as they say, from everyday life. After all, schools build the educational process as it is convenient for them, without listening to the wishes of parents and taxpayers; they are guided by the instructions of the courts distributing the theses of the University of California and the “Humanitarian Manifesto”.

      In Republican, Missouri, revolutionary activists succeeded in getting the fish figure removed from the city seal “because the fish is a symbol of Christianity…and most people who send letters identify the fish with Christianity”[468].

      In May 2001, two students filed a constitutional charge against the Virginia Military Institute for requiring students to pray before the evening meal.

      The removal of God from American public life was by no means democratic, on the contrary, dictatorial, and our ancestors would never have tolerated this. Why would today’s Americans allow this – after all, the majority approves of prayers, and Christmas carols, and Bible readings, and keeping the ten commandments? Because we live under the rule of judges, and Congress does not want to fight them. If America ceases to be a Christian country, it will be because it ceases to be a democratic country. Here it is, the real cour d’etat.

      “Our people rule, sir,” the Americans once proudly declared. Alas, this is no longer the case. America is ruled not by the majority, but by a handful of minorities, whose vision of the future of our state and our nation is supported by five members of the Supreme Court – despite the fact that only one in ten Americans will remember their names …

      * * *

      ethics based on the principles of the Judeo-Christian religion; it was replaced by a new ethics based on the theses of the Humanitarian Manifesto. Again, this happened not as a result of the free will of the people, but by a court decision. Abortion was considered a crime, now it is a perfectly acceptable act. That’s what the court said. Prayers at school before school breaks the First Amendment, but naked girls in a nightclub in no way corrupt the youth. When the state of Colorado voted in a referendum to prevent the legalization of homosexuality, the Supreme Court ruled that the vote was flawed and overturned the results.

      “Our laws and social institutions must be based on the words of the Savior of mankind and embody his teachings,” states the 1892 Supreme Court ruling in Holy Trinity v. the United States. “Our civilization and our institutions are entirely Christian.” [469]. By the decision of the modern court, America got rid of Christianity. The old ethic has perished, and the society it united no longer exists.

      Since America accepted his decisions without a murmur, the Supreme Court continued its dirty work. In the Richmond Papers judgment (1980), Judge William J. Brennan described the new order. Judges, he said, “are not mere arbitrators, but, in their field, full-fledged legislators.”[470] by and large, they do not work”[471]. The role of the court is “to declare the enduring value of individual principles, a value that does not depend on the biases of the current political majority.” Judge Brennan meant to say that what is enduring are his own values, which he imposes on the majority of the people.

      “The court, not the people, is now the source of change in American society,” writes Professor William Quirk, author of Judicial Dictate. This state of affairs is in stark contrast to what Jefferson called “the fundamental principle,” namely, “government remains republican as long as it perceives the will of the people and carries it out”[472].

      Warren, Douglas, Brennan and Blackman won. We no longer have a republic. And Christianity, expelled from schools and city streets, is gradually losing ground. In a Gallup Poll 19For 99 years, 62 percent of young people agreed that “religion is losing influence in American society”[473]. of non-believers, half belong to the “Gen X” and 31 percent – to the generation of baby boomers. Only 42 percent of Americans still consider Christianity to be the only true religion[475]. In 1996, 62 percent of Protestants and 74 percent of Catholics said that all religions are equally important to them[476]. America is still the most “Christianized” country in the West, but for the majority, the current faith is no longer the militant and harsh faith of their ancestors. The prediction of Catholic Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, made in 1931 years old. We create, Shin argued:

      “…a broad-minded society that does not see the difference between God as the First Cause and God as a “mental projection”, which compares Christ and Buddha, St. Paul and John Dewey, and then soars to a mountain synthesis and begins to say that Christianity is no better than other religions and that all world religions are the same”[477].

      Until now, no court has yet ordered the church to rewrite hymns, prayers and the Bible so that these texts correspond to the new secular catechism. The Church itself did this, without any coercion. Why? For the most human of reasons.

      Many young priests themselves do not believe in the irrefutability of the truths taught to them in the seminaries, and do not want to lag behind their generation, “going into the distant future”; so they are trying to do the impossible – to reconcile Christianity with the counterculture. But in their desperation to bring about this “fusion” they only make themselves look ridiculous.

      “Good news! How sweet is the sound that saved the wretched slave!” – such is the first line of perhaps the most famous of the hymns, written by the repentant slave ship captain John Newton in 1779year. In some versions, this line is changed to “saved and strengthened me” or “liberated and saved me”[478]. Why? To get rid of an unnecessary reminder of the sinfulness of the human race and the atonement of this sinfulness by Jesus Christ.

      The stanzas “To America the Beautiful” with the lines “How good for the feet of a pilgrim / Tortured by harsh roads / And accustomed to freedom …” are often omitted from hymnbooks and songs[479]. Why? Because, explains Rev. Harold Jacobs of the Lamber Indian tribe, “the whites trampled the Indians and made their way to freedom through their bodies”[480].

      Lines “White as snow. Lord, make me…” from the hymn “All is in thy hand, O God” is often sung as “Wash me, Lord, wash me”[481]. Obviously, the phrase “white as snow” has a racist connotation. The title “Father, Son, and Holy Spirit” has now been changed to “Creator, Redeemer, and Sustainer,” making the phrase more gender-neutral[482]. , the One Lord, the Mother of Man”[483].

      Mother of God, pray for us.

      The hymns “Forward, Soldiers of Christ” and “I am a Soldier of the Cross” are rejected as overly warlike. The hymns “He led me” and “The Lord, the Father of men” are recognized as chauvinistic. The hymn “God rest you” is also unacceptable; the hymn “The Faith of Our Fathers” is constantly criticized. Those who like the melody but dislike the words may substitute “mothers” or “ancestors” for “fathers.” The hymn “Lord of Our Fathers” has become “Lord of the Ages”, and instead of “Son of Man” some congregations sing a hymn called “Child of Man”.

      In 1980, the National Council of Churches established a commission of feminist scholars who were tasked with creating a new vocabulary of church expressions. “Supreme being” instead of “Lord”, “Child of God” instead of “Son of God”, and so on. The Lord’s desire to create Adam and Eve was formulated in this way: “It is not good that a human being should wander about alone; you need to create a mate for him”[484].

      When the first volume of the Complete Linguistic Lexicon went out of print at 19In 1983, Rhodes College political science professor Michael Nelson wrote: “After two weeks of alternating rage and bouts of wild merriment, the church sent this volume to where it deserves to be – to the landfill.”[485]

      On his deathbed, the atheist Voltaire said: “I would like to turn to God with a single prayer. Oh my God! Let my enemies be ridiculous.”[486] And God answered Voltaire: “Not a single court forced churchmen to expose themselves to ridicule. They tried to fit in, but as a result, they were out of work. And before reproaching fifteen-year-olds for addiction to sex and drugs, the church should take care of the souls of the adults who rule the country.”

      Provocations

      In the communist vocabulary, “peaceful coexistence” did not mean the real world at all. This term meant the continuation of the struggle by other, non-military methods. The struggle for ethical hegemony will also end only when one side loses and the other triumphs. If traditionalists think they can coexist peacefully with the Cultural Revolution, they should recall recent lectures at the National Endowment for the Arts on the desecration of Christian symbols and attacks on Christian ethics.

      “The Pissing Christ” by Andreas Serrano is a photograph of a large crucifix immersed in urine. Robert Mapplethorpe turned an altarpiece of the Virgin Mary into a bloody tie and published a photo of himself with a whip sticking out of his anus. In the novel Strange City, a certain poet describes Christ as a six-year-old boy who was abused by an adult. In a National Endowment for the Arts catalog of art, an AIDS activist refers to the late Cardinal John O’Connor as “the fat cannibal from the swastika house on Fifth Avenue.” Patrick, defiled by homosexuals who once showed up for Sunday mass and spit out consecrated bread and water on the floor. The centerpiece of the Sensations exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum of Art was the painting The Holy Virgin Mary, which depicted the Virgin from head to toe in elephant feces, against the backdrop of female genitalia, forming a kind of halo. In the adjoining room, mannequins were displayed in human height – naked girls with penises protruding from their bodies in the most unexpected places.

      “Art is something you can always do without,” said Andy Warhol. Picasso took art more seriously: “Art is not for decorating apartments… Art is a weapon of revolution”[488]. Wheeler Williams, one of the greatest American sculptors, admitted that the purpose of modern art is “the destruction of faith in cultural heritage”[489] In other words, art is another front in the ongoing war waged by the Cultural Revolution against Christianity.

      In 2001, the Brooklyn Museum presented René Cox’s exhibition Mommy Yo’s Last Supper. In one of the photographs, a stripped-down Miss Cox portrayed Jesus, eleven black friends acted as apostles, and a single white one personified Judas[490]. Bronx Fernado Ferrer said the mayor’s proposal reminded him of “Berlin 1939 years old”[491].

      In fact, all the filth that the creative communities are throwing at Catholics and their sacred symbols really does remind Berlin of 1939, especially Der Sturmer by Julius Streicher, where Jewish beliefs were subjected to the same ridicule that Mapplethorpe, Serrano and Cox are subjected to today Catholic beliefs. What is the difference? Anti-Catholicism, this anti-Semitism of intellectuals, is the “fashion” of the modern political elite. And a skeptical, to say the least, attitude towards Catholicism is typical not only for the capital and large cities.

      In early 2001, the Santa Fe Museum of International Art exhibited a computer-generated collage titled “Our Lady of Guadeloupe,” a nearly nude, bare-breasted woman in the arms of an angel[492]. J. Sheehan expressed his protest, and an angry crowd of local residents approached the museum, museum director Thomas Wilson spread his hands: “We did not expect anything like this.” in an interview with The New York Times, she stated that images of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the most sacred icon of Mexican Americans, are very common and that Our Lady was depicted as a Barbie doll, and in a karate kimono, and as a tattooed lesbian … “[49four].

      As you know, art is a mirror of the soul. T.S. Eliot called art the embodiment of human religion. If this is true, what is the soul of the “artists” mentioned above? What happens if they decide to make fun of the Holocaust – for example, put up a computer collage of naked Anne Frank flirting with the SS in Auschwitz? Or put on a theatrical show that makes fun of Dr. King?

      We know the answer. When the French company Alcatel, with the permission of the King family, used an excerpt from Dr. King’s speech in a television advertisement, NHAACP spokesman Julian Bond declared: “At least something must remain sacred. “[49]5]. In the new paganism, a pornographic postcard with the Virgin Mary is quite acceptable, but Dr. King’s speeches are sacred and inviolable.

      Years ago, when the film “The Prophet” was released, in which the viewer was shown the face of Muhammad, which in itself was a blood insult to Muslims, cinemas refused to rent this film for fear of bloody retribution. When Salman Rushdie published The Satanic Verses, a novel deemed offensive to Islam, he had to spend several years abroad hiding from a fatwa, the death sentence pronounced by Ayatollah Khomeini. Of course, fatwas and terrorist attacks are not the American way of expressing protest; we are more accustomed to economic boycotts and political strikes. When Christians are advised to “turn the other cheek,” we must remember that in such cases we are responsible for ourselves, and not for the Lord. Christ himself drove the money changers out of the temple with a whip …

      In 1990, American Arts Quarterly editor James F. Cooper published an advertisement. Just as Horace Greeley urged Civil War veterans to go to the West, Cooper addressed Cold War veterans: “Bring back our culture!”[496] Conservatives, in Cooper’s words:

      culture war against the West. Meanwhile, Mao’s writings were required reading for Generation 1960s, inspired by Herbert Marcuse, the generation that is in power today … Conservatives stubbornly ignore the fact that contemporary art – long forgotten the idealism of Manet, Degas, Cezanne and Rodin – has become a supplier of everything destructive, stupid, ugly, pornographic, Marxist, into a conductor of anti-American ideology” [497]

      The response of Christians to the attacks on the Lord, to the desecration of holy things, to the exercises of Serrano, Mapplethorne, Cox and company was, one might say, almost inaudible and very pathetic. As Regis Philbin puts it, “Is that your final answer?”

      Gay rights and civil rights?

      The battle for the soul of America does not stop. In the spring of 2000, a lesbian student at Taft University filed a discrimination charge against the local chapter of the Intercollegiate Christian Society, which denied her the right to attend a meeting. Defensively, the leader of the society said: “When we are asked to give up the Bible, it means for us to give up the essence of our religion”[49].eight].

      Result: The student court dissolved the local chapter of the Christian Society, withdrew its funding, and prohibited members from meeting on college grounds. The department had to remove any mention of Taft University from its name. Most of the students applauded this decision: after all, to bully homosexuals, they explained, means to behave incorrectly. The university went to state court and won. But this incident was only a harbinger of subsequent events.

      There was a ver. conflict at Taft University. The Catechism of the Revolution teaches that homosexuality is a virtue, not a sin, and that people who disapprove of homosexuals and lesbians are conservatives who need to be reeducated. According to the Bible, homosexuality is unnatural and vicious. And here we come to the core of the culture war: on what beliefs—more precisely, on whose beliefs—should laws be based? At Taft University, the new faith briefly replaced the old one, and the Christians had to submit. The revolution recognizes coexistence only until it achieves hegemony. And then he starts dictating his terms.

      But who is right? What is homosexuality – immoral promiscuity or a completely moral and legal way of life? Dr. Charles Socarides, author of numerous books, winner of the British Health Society’s Association of Psychoanalysts Award, has studied homosexuality for forty years. A third of his patients after a course of treatment returned to normal life, got married or married and had children. Dr. Socarides describes how the Cultural Revolution turned “pathology” into the norm. He writes:

      “The activists did not become petty. They started processing the world – not national! – the luminaries of the psychological community and managed to neutralize them by a complete rethinking of the very term “homosexuality”. In 1972 and 1973, they re-elected the governing bodies of the American Psychiatric Association and, through a series of maneuvers and intrigues, “healed” homosexuality as a phenomenon literally overnight

      . The association, at their instigation, stated that same-sex attraction is not unnatural. This is just an individual feature – as neutral as, say, left-handedness[499]. Those who disagreed with this political rethinking were soon silenced by administrative measures. Our lectures were canceled without warning, our research and articles were rejected without explanation by scientific journals. Meanwhile, much more serious things were happening in society[500].

      Television and film producers began to make films promoting homosexuality as the norm. “Blue” magazine taught Hollywood what to shoot and how. Publishers stopped accepting manuscripts that even hinted at objections to the gay revolution. Gays and lesbians led sexual education in schools, infiltrated deans and university councils. One by one, state legislatures repealed laws making sodomy a crime.”[501]

      In Philadelphia, Tom Hanks plays an AIDS lawyer who is harassed by abusive colleagues. Hollywood gave Hanks an Oscar for this politically correct role. But Socarides, who claims that homosexuality is as curable as alcoholism at the Bury Ford Clinic, didn’t give up. And traditionalists need to follow suit. After all, homosexuality is not freedom, but slavery; it is not a way of life, but a way of death. With the spread of AIDS, Dr. Socarides’ patients increasingly began to tell him: “Doctor, if it weren’t for you, I would die”[502].

      Those who think that the gay rights movement is the forerunner of the twenty-first century civil rights movement are missing a crucial difference. In the struggle for civil rights, one can and should rely on the Bible, the laws of nature, and on the words of Thomas Jefferson about the equality of all people before the law. As far as homosexuality is concerned, everything is different. Jefferson treated homosexuality as the gravest crime. As governor of Virginia in 1779In the same year, he imposed the same punishment for homosexuality as for violence[503]. The Bible, Catholic doctrine and the laws of nature, to put it mildly, do not approve of this phenomenon and recognize the society in which it thrives as decadent. It is up to Christians to reform such societies—or move away from them.

      In “Letter from Birmingham Jail” Martin Luther King wrote: “A just law is one that is invented by people and is in accordance with ethical or God’s law. And an unjust law is one that contradicts the ethical law. To use the terminology of St. Thomas Aquinas, an unjust law is a law that is not rooted in an eternal and natural law”[504]. However, modern laws on homosexuality are in no way consistent with “God’s law”, they are by no means “rooted in an eternal and natural law.” By Dr. King’s definition, these laws are unjust and contrary to ethics. Christians do not and never will accept these laws. They can hardly become an incentive for the unification of society.

      The only way the gay rights movement can succeed in its quest to force society to accept homosexuality as the norm is to first de-Christianize that society. And it must be admitted that the first steps on this path have already been taken.

      Great experiment

      We are making an extremely daring attempt. Like Lucifer and Adam, Western man decided that he could disobey God without any consequences and become God himself. Rejecting Christianity, the Westerner seems to be saying: “With the help of biology and medicine, we have learned how to prevent the origin of life, how to prolong life, how to create life, how to clone it. With the help of military technology, we have learned how to win wars without losing a single soldier. With the help of monetary financial policy, we have learned how to prevent economic crises. Soon we will find out how to prevent recessions. The global economy promises prosperity to all people on the planet thanks to the free market and free trade. Global democracy will bring us universal peace, instead of national governments we will have a world government. The Lord was an excellent flight instructor, but now we have learned to do without him. Then we will go by ourselves.”

      The de-Christianization of America is a risky game in which our civilization is at stake. America has thrown overboard the “ethical compass” that the Republic has followed for two hundred years and is now drifting at random. Only the mind lays the course – we neglect the Divine revelation. The Founding Fathers warned that this was a bridge to nowhere. No country can remain free if it is deprived of virtue, and virtue cannot exist in the absence of faith. “Do not be under the illusion that morality is possible without religion,” Washington warned in his farewell address to the nation. “Many roads lead to wealth and prosperity, and on each of them you will be supported only by faith and morality”[505]. John Adams agreed with his predecessor: “Our constitution is drawn up only for religious and moral people, for all the rest it is unsuitable”[506].

      Let’s look at what happened to our society after the overthrow of the old ethical order:

      out of every four white babies one is born out of wedlock. In 1960, there were 2 percent of such babies[507]. Three out of four unmarried white women lose their virginity by the age of nineteen. In 1900, that figure was 6 percent[508]. The teenage suicide rate has tripled since the early 1960s.[509] High school tests show that today we have the lowest level of education of any industrialized country.

      There are 1.2–1.4 million abortions per year in the US today; this is the highest rate in the West, with a total of 40 million abortions since Roe v. Wade. The number of children born in marriage in the United States fell from 4 million in 1960 to 2.7 million in 1996[510].

      The divorce rate has risen by 350 percent since 1962; at least a third of American children live with one parent[511].

      Almost 2 million Americans are in prison, 4.5 million are on parole or on bail. In 1980, the number of prisoners in the United States was 500,000[512].

      There are six million drug addicts in the United States today[513].

      in the African American community, 69 percent of babies are born out of wedlock, two-thirds of children live with one parent, 28.5 percent of boys are expected to go to jail[514]. In large cities, four out of every ten black men aged sixteen to thirty-five years are in prison, or released on bail or on bail. Drugs are distributed in a pandemic. Children do not want to study, conscious children are humiliated and beaten. Girls are raped by members of youth gangs who are addicted to drugs and rap.

      These are the statistics of a decadent society and a dying civilization, these are the first fruits of the Cultural Revolution de-Christianizing America. Studying this data, you can’t help but recall the words of Whittaker Chambers in The Witness: “History is strewn with the rubble of peoples who have lost their God and died.”[515] John Nelson Black adds:

      any society has always been served by religion. Whether it was India, China, Palestine, Greece, Carthage, Africa, or the civilizations of South and Central America, the same thing happened everywhere: civilizations arose from religion, and when traditional beliefs ceased to influence society for one reason or another, nations perished” [516].

      Europe has long resembled the United States. In Canada between 1960 and 2000 the number of children born out of wedlock increased from 4 to 31 percent; in the UK, from 5 to 38 percent; in France, from 6 to 36 percent.

      People have lost their moral compass, said Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, Archbishop of Westminster, in an address to a priestly convention in September 2001. People seek pleasure in alcohol, drugs, pornography, sex,” the cardinal echoed the Bishop of Canterbury, Dr. George Carrey, who spoke at a similar convention a year earlier. “Silent atheism flourishes. It is believed that death will sum up everything, that there will be no posthumous reward, so there is no need to worry about eternal values”[517].

      But what is grief for one is happiness for another. For the zealous Marxist, Castro’s Cuba is a real communist paradise compared to the Cuba of the 1950s, a society far more dignified and just than the one created by the exiles and refugees in Miami. For our cultural elite, divorces, abortions, and the withering away of Christian institutions like church-sanctioned marriage can serve as milestones on the road to freedom.

      But how can we create a moral society if we cannot even agree with each other what is moral and what is not?

      Boy Scouts become fanatics

      “Culture is religion, reified and explained,” said theologian Henry Van Til. Echoing the historian Christopher Dawson, Russell Kirk wrote that all culture is rooted in a “cult”, that is, in religion. “It’s not just a play on words,” adds Bruce Fronen, professor at the Russell Kirk Center for Cultural Renewal:

      cultivating a garden or educating themselves… Dawson argued that a people arises from a community of worship. As people develop shared liturgical practices—whether actual liturgy or simple chanting of hymns—so do social customs relating to food, art, and daily rituals. These common skills unite people into a people, into a culture, and also forever connect the people with religion”[518].

      The goal of the secularists is to destroy the connection between culture and religion. If they achieve this, the culture will die. Dr. Kirk writes:

      “All culture springs from religion. When faith weakens, a culture declines, although it often appears that a culture flourishes against the backdrop of the withering of the faith that nourished it. However, neither religion can exist without a healthy culture, nor culture can remain indifferent to the withering or “weathering” of the transcendent”[519].

      Thus, the cultural war is at the same time a religious war, as evidenced by the last skirmish – the battle of the Boy Scouts.

      The 1911 Boy Scout book contains the following commandment: “A boy will not become a citizen without recognizing his obligations to the Lord”[520]. are incompatible with the need to observe “moral purity” prescribed in the charter of the organization[522].

      Since its inception, the American Boy Scouts have held fast to these principles. However, public opinion had time to change, and the scouts did not seem to notice. In the end, what seemed morally right in 1980 became bigotry in 2001. For The New York Times, today’s Boy Scouts are “something like a hate group.” revolutions will achieve their elimination.

      A revolution simply cannot coexist with a Boy Scout organization that is numerous, respected and loved, and which instills in boys respect for values ​​that the revolution itself rejects. Therefore, an ultimatum is laid on the table: the Boy Scouts are guaranteed the preservation of their position in society on one condition – they will give up part of their traditions and give up part of the principles. In particular, the constitution of the organization must allow scouts and their mentors to be atheists and homosexuals.

      “Make him an offer he can’t refuse,” Don Corleone used to say. The Revolution makes the Boy Scouts an offer they really can’t turn away from, because they have little choice: surrender or die.

      Considering what happened to the Catholic Church, in the bosom of which, as it turned out, pedophile priests who persecuted acolytes took refuge, the desire to prevent the penetration of homosexuality into the ranks of the Boy Scouts would be, first of all, a manifestation of common sense. However, ideology denies common sense. The University of California today champions the right of homosexuals to lead scout troupes—and the right of the North American League of Men’s Love to publish manuals on “matching” partners without attracting the attention of the police (in other words, manuals for pedophiles “How to Seduce an Innocent Boy”). The League is opposed by the parents of a ten-year-old boy who was raped and killed by a member of this organization[524].

      Why is the Boy Scout battle so important?

      Rejecting the Scouts’ claim that they are a private organization that is not subject to state anti-discrimination laws, the New Jersey State Supreme Court ordered the Boy Scouts to now accept homosexuals into their ranks – in the name of the higher goal of “eliminating discrimination in society”[525]. Thus, the court once again confirmed the conformity of the Scout charter to Christian morality: both according to the Bible and the Scout charter, homosexuality is a perversion, a “sore” on the body of American society.

      Then, by a five-to-four vote, the court spared the Scouts from having to decide whether to keep the Lord’s commandments or be destroyed by the state machine. However, the stubbornness of the scouts cost them a shortfall of one million dollars. In New York, California, Massachusetts and Minnesota, school boards have banned Scouts from public school grounds. So did Miami Beach and Fort Lauderdale, Thirty-two local Scout chapters lost contact with each other, and Levi-Strauss, Wells Fargo, and Textron withdrew their financial support. The Union of Jewish Congregations USA circulated a memorandum stating the need to break with the Scouts. Film director Steven Spielberg resigned from the Boy Scouts’ board of trustees, saying, “The past few years have saddened me deeply that the American Boy Scouts have openly and actively engaged in discrimination against others. Shame on you!”[526] When the Scouts took the stage at the opening ceremony of the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles, the delegates greeted them with hoots. Reporter Valeria Richardson wrote:

      “Under normal circumstances, this would be taken as an excuse to remove delegates from the room. But those who thought that the Democrats would stand on ceremony with the scouts clearly came to the wrong address … Support for gay rights has become an integral part of democratic ideology, as important as the fight for civil rights.

      In April 2001, the Cultural Revolution rolled out its mortar—the CB5 show Sixty Minutes—and, as columnist Nat Hentoff put it, “destroyed the Scouts in one gulp.”528 Hentoff also took the liberty of quoting Democracy in America. Alexis de Tocqueville: “The right to associate is as inalienable as individual freedom”[529].

      However, these rights have become the first casualties in the cultural war, which is being waged without respite and truce. Traditionalists are forced to retreat, but it is impossible to throw resistance. Following the de-Christianization of public schools and city streets, there will be a takeover of private schools and private organizations. Seduced by public money, people will be forced to abandon God and accept the catechism of the revolution, which states unequivocally: “All styles of life are equal.” Anyone who claims otherwise will be anathematized. What future, in this case, awaits the West? Eliot again:

      “If Christianity perishes, our entire culture perishes with it. And you have to start all over again, slowly and painfully, and a new culture will not appear out of nowhere. You need to wait until the grass sprouts, then feed it to the sheep, then cut off the wool, and only then knit yourself a sweater. Long centuries of barbarism await us. Most likely, we will not live to see the flowering of a new culture, like our great-great-great-great-grandchildren – and if we do, it is unlikely that any of us will be happy. ”[530].


      [437] The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations (London: Oxford University Press, second edition, 1966), p. 381.

      [438] Russell Kirk, Eliot and His Age (Peru, 111: Sugden, 1971), p. 390.

      [439] Lawrence Auster, “Scam Artists or Victims? The Hasidic Defendants of New Squares, NewsMax.com, January 31,2001,p. 1.

      [440] Sarah Karush, “Couple with 16 Kids, and Counting, Defies Russia’s Population Trend”, Associated Press, April 28,2001.

      [441] Peter Ford, “Churches on Wane in Europe”, Christian Science Monitor, October 25, 1999, p. 1.

      [442] “Has Christianity Lost Its Identity in Europe?” Classical Christian News, October 8, 1999. http://www.prayerbook.ca/psalm699.htm

      [443] Ibid.

      [444] Nadia Rybarova, “Czech President Vaclav Havel: Man May Have Lost God”, Associated Press, September 4,1997.

      [445] Ibid.

      [446] Larry Witham, ” ‘Christian Nation’ Now Fighting Words; Fordice Fumbles in PC Territory,” Washington Times, November 23,1992, p. 1.

      [447] Gary DeMar, America’s Christian History: The Untold Story (Atlanta: American Vision, 1995), pp. 51–58.

      [448] Ibid., p.l.

      [449] Ibid., p. 12.

      [450] Ibid., p.3.

      [451] Ibid., p. 11.

      [452] Ibid., p.2.

      [453] Ibid.

      [454] Ibid., p. 11.

      [455] Ibid., p. 3.

      [456] Excerpts from Supreme Court Opinions on Prayer,” New York Times, June 20, 2000, p. 22.

      [457] Marina Zogbi, “Marilyn Manson – a Controversial Conversation with the Irreverent Reverend”, Metal Edge, July 1996. http://vww.cfaweb.com/manson/press/me796.htm

      [458] Charles Lane, “High Court Lets-Ruling on Church, State Stand.” Washington Post, May 30, 2001, p. 3.

      [459] American Humanist Association, Humanist Manifesto II, 1973. http://humanist.net/documents/manifesto2.html

      [460] Ibid.

      [461] Ibid.

      [462] Ibid.

      [463] Ibid.

      [464] Ibid.

      [465] Ibid.

      [466] Jim Nelson Black, When Nations Die (Wheaton, 111. : Tyndale House Publishers, 1994), p. xix.

      [467] C. S. Lewis, God in the Dock: Essays on Theology and Ethics, Walter Hooper, ed. (Grand Rapids, Mich.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1972), p. 262.

      [468] “ACLU Asks Judge to Reel in Republic’s Fish Symbol”, Associated Press, May 6, 1999.

      [469] Bishop Norman McFarland, “A July 4 Meditation on the Faith of the Founders: One Nation Under God”, Orange County Register, July 2, 1995, p. 1.

      [470] Richmond Newspapers, Inc., et al. Appellants v. Commonwealth of Virginia et al, 448 U.S. 555, no. 79–243, Supreme Court of the United States, Concurring Opinion, Argued February 19, 1980. Decided July 2, 1980.

      [471] J. William J. Brennan, Jr., “To the Text and Teaching Symposium”, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., October 12, 1985. http://www.politics.pomona.edu/dml/ LabBrennan.htm

      [472] William J. Quirk and R. Randall Bridwell, Judicial Dictatorship (New Brunswick N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 1995), p. xiii.

      [473] The Galiup Organization, Princeton, N.J., Poll taken August 12–13, 1997. http://www.gallup.com/poll/indic-ators/indreligion.asp

      [474] Christie Storm, “Communities of Faith,” Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, October 30, 1999, p. 2.

      [475] Theodore Caplow, Louis Hicks, and Ben J. Wattenberg, The First Measured Century: An Illustrated Guide to Trends in America, 1900–2000 (Washington, D.C.: AEI Press, 2001), p. 117.

      [476] Ibid., p.116.

      [477] Fulton J. Sheen, “A Plea for Intolerance”, 1931.

      [478] Patricia Rice, “Singing Out: Revisions Steal Poetry, Meaning from Hymns, Professor Says”, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Jme 21, 1997,p.31.

      [479] Marjorie Hyer, “Discord on Hymn Changes; United Methodists Aim to Delete Sexism, Racism from Songs,” Washington Post, March 1, 1986, p. B6.

      [480] Ibid.

      [481] John H. Adams, inclusive Language for God Is ‘Battleground’ in PCUSA”, Layman Online, October 24, 2000. http://www.layman. org/layman/news-from-pcusa/ inclusive- language-is-battleground.htm

      [482] “Debating Baptismal Language”, The Christian Century, September 27, 1995, p. 880.

      [483] Sen. Robert Byrd, “Polytheism in Modem Garb,” Speech to Senate, July 22, 1992. http://www.se-nate.gov/-byrd/speech-polytheism.htm

      [484] Richard N. Ostling, “ O God Our [Mother and] Father; New Translations Seek to Rid Bible of “Male Bias”, Time, October 24, 1983, p. 56.

      [485] Michael Nelson, “Language Revision Sings; Methodist Hymnal Shows Amazing Grace in Rooting Out Hints of Sexism, Racism”, Commercial Appeal, September 29, 1991, p. 6.

      [486] “Quotes from Nontheists”, http://memberstripod.com/-Rhatheist/quotes.html

      [487] Patrick J. Buchanan, “Yes, Mario, There Is a Culture War”, Chicago Tribune, September 14, 1992, p. 17.

      [488] David A. Noebel, The Legacy of John Lennon: Charming or Harming a Generation? (Nashville, Tenn.: Thomas Nelson, 1982), p. 38.

      [489] Ibid. , p. 39.

      [490] “In the Bosom of Jesus: Yo Mama’s Last Supper”, Nation, May 28, 2001, p. 30.

      [491] Elizabeth Bumiller, “Affronted by Nude Last Supper, Giuliani Calls for Decency Panel”, New York Times, February 16, 2001, p. Al.

      [492] Michael Janofsky, “Uproar over Virgin Mary in a Two-Piece Swimsuit”, New York Times, March 31, 2001, p. 11.

      [493] Ibid.

      [494] Ibid.

      [495] Justin Bachman, “Critics Say King Heirs Are Selling Out His Image”, Associated Press, March 30,2001.

      [496] James F. Cooper, “The Right Agenda: Recapture the Cultures, American Arts Quarterly, Spring/Summer 1990, p. 3.

      [497] Ibid.

      [498] Jay Lindsay, “Christian Group Says Tufts Decision to Cut Funding Threatens Religious Freedom”, Associated Press, May 3, 2000.

      [499] Charles Socarides, “How America Went Gay”, America, November 18, 1995, p. 20.

      [500] Ibid.

      [501] Ibid.

      [502] Ibid.

      [503] Harry V. Jaffa, Homosexuality and Natural Law (Montclair, Cal. : Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy, 1990), p. 31.

      [504] Martin Luther King, Jr., “Letter from a Birmingham Jail”, April 16, 1963. http://www.tcf.ua.edu/courses/Jbutler/T112/King-BirminghamJail.htm

      [505] George Washington, “Farewell Address”, Philadelphia, Penn., September 17, 1796. a Mission for Marriage,” Creators Syndicate, September 7, 2000.

      [507] William J. Bennett, Index of Leading Cultural Indicators (New York: Broadway Boob, 2000), p. 48.

      [508] CaplowetaL.p. 70.

      [509] Bennett, p. 145.

      [510] Bennett, p. 52.

      [511] Bennett, p.69.

      [512] Bennett, p.27.

      [513] Bennett, p.35.

      [514] Bennett, pp. 50, 27.

      [515] Anthony Harrigan, “The New Anti-Civilization,” Chronicles, June 2001, p. 44.

      [516] Jim Nelson Black, When Nations Die (Wheaton, 111: Tyndale House Publishers, 1994), p. 8.

      [517] Ruth Gledhill, oChristianity Almost Beaten, Says Cardinal, London Times, September 6, 2001.

      [518] Bruce Frohnen, “T. S. Eliot on the Necessity of Christian Culture”, Witherspoon Lectures, Family Research Council, http://www.frc.org/papers/witherspoon/index.cfm?get=WT01&arc=yes

      [519] Russell Kirk, Eliot and His Age (New York: Random House, 1971), p. 324.

      [520] Boy Scouts of America, Handbook for Boys (Boyscouts of America, 1911), p. 215.

      [521] Jeffrie A. Herrman, “cBSA Supports Spiritual Direction in Life,” Sun-Sentinel, October 16, 2000, p. 25.

      [522] Boy Scouts of America, “Position Statement on Homosexuality and the BSA”, February 15, 1991. http;// www.religioustolerance.org/bsa0.htm

      [523] Peter Ferrara, “The Battle over the Boy Scouts”, Weekly Standard, June 11,2001, p. 21.

      [524] Transcript, “Should the ACLU Defend NAMBLA?” The O’Reilly Factor, January 2, 2001; Bill O’Reilly, “Corrupters Setting the Standards”. Washington Times, May 21, 2001, p. A16.

      [525] Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, A-2427-95T3 James Dale v.