Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Survey Handed Out At High School Asking If 'Queers' Should Be Able To Use 'Normal People' Bathrooms

Survey Handed Out At High School Asking If 'Queers' Should Be Able To Use 'Normal People' Bathrooms
@Christopher Mark/Facebook

A southern Illinois high school has a lot to answer for after a transphobic and homophobic survey was sent around to multiple students.

The survey, was a product of the "Anti-Queer Association" at Anna-Jonesboro Community High School in Anna, Illinois. It asked students if they wanted "Queer kids to go to the bathroom with us normal people."


Christopher Mark, an alum of Anna-Jonesboro Community High School posted a photo of the survey to his Facebook page.

The opening paragraph on the document explained the purpose of the survey, urging Anna-Jonesboro Community High School students to "VOTE WISELY!!!"

"This document is represented by the students of AJCHS."
"This is about all the QUEER Kids in this school."
"This is a vote for all the students of AJCHS, this is not public you do not have to put your name on it or anything like that all we need is a check YES or NO."
"This is an anonymous vote."

The students were then given two choices, with the "Anti-Queer Association" making no attempt whatsoever in hiding their bigoted agenda or how they wanted participants to vote.

"(YES) I WANT QUEERS TO GO IN THE BATHROOM"
"(NO) I DON'T WANT QUEER KIDS TO GO TO THE BATHROOM WITH US NORMAL PEOPLE;"

Mark's post was met with horror in the comments section, with many heavily troubled by the use of the word "normal."

@Christopher Mark/Facebook

@Christopher Mark/Facebook



@Christopher Mark/Facebook


@Christopher Mark/Facebook


@Christopher Mark/Facebook

School superintendent Rob Wright became aware of the survey after it was shared on multiple social media platforms.

While he declined to share any names of students or parents involved in the "Anti-Queer Association," he did release a statement promising there would be consequences for those responsible.

"I can tell you that this type of harassment is taken very seriously and will not be tolerated."
"And once the investigation is complete, the appropriate discipline will take place where warranted."

Michael Coleman, who serves on the board of directors at The Rainbow Cafe LGBTQ Center in Carbondale, Illinois expressed his disgust at how this survey came to be to local NBC affiliate WPSD 6.

"My understanding is that it was an association that was brought upon the students and a parent that's cosigning for it that made the Anti-Queer Association, basically trying to repeal the Keep Youth/Children Safe [and Healthy] Act."

The Keep Youth/Children Safe and Healthy Act was a law passed in Illinois this past August, ensuring Illinois schools teach sexual health education and LGBTQ+ inclusive curriculum.

Coleman also told WPSD 6 he spoke with students at Anna-Jonesboro Community High School and worried for their safety and mental health.

"They really feel very unsafe in that environment in Anna-Jonesboro and that they felt that nothing was going to get done."

In response to students affected by the survey, The Rainbow Cafe LGBTQ Center posted a message of support on their Facebook page.

They also posted a call to action, encouraging readers to copy and paste a message to send to Superintendent Wright, or the school's principal, Brett Detering.

The message included information regarding how the majority of transgender students feel unsafe at their schools, thus affecting their GPA's, as well as the heartbreaking statistic of suicide rates among transgender teens.

This isn't the first time Anna-Jonesboro Principal Brett Detering has come under fire.

A 2019 story in ProPublica Illinois exposed how Anna-Jonesboro's entire staff was White, which didn't help the predominantly White town of Anna's reputation for being a "sundown town" where Black people were frequently met with violent encounters if they were out after dark.

In 2015, when Detering was also athletic director, a bullying incident was captured on the cell phones of multiple students, where a sophomore member of the football team was forcibly tied up and placed in a locker room shower.

Detering and the school were heavily criticized for not alerting parents about the incident until weeks after it occurred, by which time it had become common knowledge.

Coverage of the survey gradually gained more widespread attention, resulting in people taking to Twitter to demand action.


Whatever the consequences for the students responsible for the survey, Michael Coleman still said they are welcome at The Rainbow Cafe any time, and even hopes they all do pay him a visit, so they can have an important conversation.

"I like to tell people: If you don't know something, learn it."
"Don't spew hate about it because you don't understand something."

More from Trending

Flavor Flav
Bryan Steffy - Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images

Flavor Flav's 'Spirit Is Broken' After NBC Kicked Him Out Of Backstage Area At Tree Lighting

Rap icon Flavor Flav was dispirited by the way NBC treated him in a backstage area at the tree lighting ceremony at Rockefeller Center on Wednesday.

The 65-year-old cofounder of the rap group Public Enemy said he was kicked out for no reason.

Keep ReadingShow less
Lindsey Graham; Pete Hegseth
Fox News, Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Lindsey Graham Mocked For Instantly Flip-Flopping On Pete Hegseth Appointment: 'None Of It Counts'

Lindsey Graham doing a swift 180 on his initially negative assessment of beleaguered Secretary of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth gave the internet whiplash.

Hegseth, an Army National Guard veteran, was nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to join his cabinet as Secretary of Defense days after Trump won the 2024 election for a second non-consecutive term.

Keep ReadingShow less
LL Cool J
Gareth Cattermole/MTV EMA/Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for Paramount

LL Cool J Sparks Debate After Claiming He's The 'Most Important Rapper That Ever Existed'

The '80s and '90s were a key period for musical innovation and artists deciding their sound and what they wanted their songs to talk about.

While appearing on the podcast Le Code by Apple Music, LL Cool J boldly stated that he felt that he was the "most important rapper that ever existed," and someday, people would realize he was right.

Keep ReadingShow less
Libs of TikTok creator, Chaya Raichik; Company logo
Fox News, Libs of TikTok

MAGA Account 'Libs Of TikTok' Banned From Bluesky After Just 9 Days—And People Are Cheering

The internet is rejoicing after a homophobic account called "Libs of TikTok" was banned by the microblogging social media site Bluesky, an alternative to that other platform owned by the transphobic billionaire and President-elect Donald Trump's biggest cheerleader.

Libs of TikTok, run by former real estate agent Chaya Raichik, is a handle for various far-right and anti-LGBTQ+ media with content that emboldens the MAGA contingent to spread harmful rhetoric and cause death threats to members of the LGBTQ+ community.

Keep ReadingShow less
John Fetterman; Ron DeSantis
CNN, Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

John Fetterman Jokes He'll Consider Confirming DeSantis—But Only On One Hilarious Condition

Democratic Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman made a wisecrack at Ron DeSantis after being asked if he would vote for the GOP Florida Governor as Secretary of Defense.

"I’ll consider a YES on him if he finally admits to his boots with 4' lifts," Fetterman joked on X (formerly Twitter) accompanied by a screenshot of a news headline stating "Trump may replace Hegseth with DeSantis: WSJ."

Keep ReadingShow less