SCOTUS- Actually Parents Do Matter

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Thursday, March 5, 2026

There is something almost breathtaking about the fact that this even has to be said out loud.

Parents matter. Not bureaucrats. Not school boards. Not activist teachers. Not the state of California. Parents.

Yet here we are in 2026, with the United States Supreme Court having to step in and remind a massive public-school system that the people who actually raise children are still supposed to be involved in their lives.

In a divided ruling this week, the Court sided with a group of parents challenging California policies that allowed schools to conceal a child’s gender identity decisions from their own families. The justices reinstated a lower-court order that prevents schools from misleading parents and requires them to respect parental instructions regarding how their children are addressed at school.

Think about that sentence for a moment.

The highest court in the land had to tell a state government that schools cannot deceive parents about their own children. 

In plain English, that meant a child could be living one identity at school and another at home — and the adults entrusted with their education were expected to help keep the secret.

That’s not education.  That’s state-sponsored deception.

Parents across the state challenged the policy, arguing that the government had no right to insert itself between families and their children, particularly when issues of identity, faith, and moral formation were involved.

The Supreme Court agreed — at least for now.

The justices granted the parents’ request to reinstate a federal district court order preventing schools from misleading parents and requiring schools to follow parental guidance regarding names and pronouns used for their children.

In other words, the Court acknowledged something most Americans instinctively know: parents are not optional accessories in their children’s lives.

They are the primary authority. That truth is older than the Constitution. Older than the Republic itself. It is rooted in the natural order of things. 

The Supreme Court’s ruling is not the end of this cultural battle. The case will continue through the courts, and similar policies across the country are already being challenged.

But for a moment — a brief but meaningful moment — the highest court in the land reminded America of something profoundly important.

Parents matter. Actually, parents matter more than almost anything else when it comes to children.

Because civilizations rise and fall not primarily on their laws or their politics, but on the strength of their families.

And when a society forgets that truth, history eventually reminds it.

Usually the hard way.

See the full article at Townhall.com 

Original airdate 3/4/26

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