Friday, June 26, 2026

Enforcing Ideological Conformity: Brazil’s Imprisonment Of Parents And A Global UN Campaign To Eliminate Parent-led Education

Enforcing Ideological Conformity: Brazil’s Imprisonment Of Parents And A Global UN Campaign To Eliminate Parent-led Education


The stakes for home educators just got much higher. In a ruling that exposes the ideological intolerance now driving education policy in much of the world, a Brazilian court just sentenced a loving mother and father to 50 days in prison for home education.

Their crime? Homeschooling and declining to teach the far-left Brazilian regime’s curriculum on “gender and sex education” along with “tolerance and diversity.” Yes, really. But critics are speaking out as the horror makes headlines around the world and especially across the United States.

In 2020, Audato and Ieda Denardi of São Paulo began educating their daughters, Alice, 15, and Lorena, 11, at home. The reason was simple: the failures of pandemic-era remote government schooling became painfully obvious amid Covid. Millions of Americans had the same experience.

Like tens of thousands of other Brazilian families, the Denardis sought to provide a rigorous, values-based education free from the ideological pressures now ubiquitous in state institutions. Instead of praise or even tolerance, they received a criminal conviction for so-called “intellectual neglect.”

The horrifying persecution in Brazil comes amid a global campaign by the United Nations to eliminate independent, parent-led education. In a report released last year, the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) declared that government must take charge under supposed international “human rights” law.

As this writer has been warning in articles, shows, and speeches nationwide for years, a powerful global network of totalitarians is waging a quiet war against home education and parental rights. The goal is to enforce government-approved ideas and worldviews on every child around the globe.

From German police kidnapping homeschool children and threatening parents under a Nazi-era ban to Swedish and French authorities now targeting home education, Europe is quickly sliding into tyranny. Latin America and Asia are also seeing growing interest in homeschooling, and major efforts to suppress it.

The United States has more protections than many other nations. But the war has even reared its head here. Just this year, Connecticut lawmakers passed a law forcing parents to obtain approval from “child welfare” authorities before homeschooling. Multiple states are moving in that direction.

In Brazil, the lower court in April 2026 handed down the sentence despite a prosecutor’s recommendation for acquittal. Indeed, an independent educational psychologist consulted by the court found no neglect whatsoever. But facts apparently do not matter when indoctrination of children is at stake.

The girls themselves described a structured daily routine. They study multiple languages, play piano at a high level, and read dozens of books each year — far exceeding typical public-school benchmarks. Their mother holds degrees in pedagogy and mathematics.






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