Hundreds signed a petition calling for a ban on "hate speech" at school board meetings after one parent quoted the Bible in his public comments criticizing the board.
At the Dec. 13 school board meeting, many parents demanded board members resign, in the wake of a grand jury report that indicted the former superintendent and another school official for their handling of sexual assaults.
The school's transgender policy has been a focal point of criticism by parents after two female students were sexually assaulted by a boy wearing a skirt in 2021.
During the public comment section, one speaker accused the board of promoting "immoral" behavior that was against God's "design" and "natural order."
"[LGBT] behaviors should never have been promoted, taught, or encouraged in the schools that you oversee," Mark Winn said, before paraphrasing Jesus in the Gospels.
"If any man or woman causes one of these little ones to stumble, it would be better for [them] if a millstone to be put around your neck and thrown into the lake," Winn said, adding, "Get back to reading, writing and arithmetic and quit grooming and pimping."
Those comments provoked 19-year-old Loudoun County community organizer Andrew Pihonak to start a petition banning "hate speech" at future school board meetings.
Pihonak's petition currently has 873 signatures and says comments like Winn's "empower people to commit acts of violence" against the LGBTQ+ community.
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"Hate speech incites violence, yet if it occurs, the Loudoun County School Board procedurally has to listen to it during public comment, say ‘thank you’ to the inciter, and then stream it for all to hear on their website. During the School Board meeting on December 13th, A man said that people in the LGBTQ+ community are better off with ‘millstones around their necks at the bottom of a river.’ Many people in the audience cheered," the petition reads.
"Platforming hate speech like this empowers people to commit acts of violence against oppressed groups of people, and causes people like me in the LGBTQIA+ community to be bullied (often into suicidal ideation or suicide), tortured, and killed. I demand policy in the School Board that requires them to cut off a person speaking during public comment the second hate speech is spoken," it concluded.
However, Winn said the Bible should not be considered "hate speech."
"To the best of my knowledge, words of God, words from the Bible have never been considered hate speech," he said to Fox News Digital. "So I was rather taken aback by it."
The Loudoun resident said since that meeting, people have been "making threats" against him online and trying to hurt his business.
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The school board's current policy expects speakers to show "civility, decorum and respect" and "refrain from vulgarity, obscenities, profanity or other like breaches of respect for the dignity of the School Board or other people."
Pihonak told Loudoun Now that "the First Amendment doesn’t protect hate speech, or hateful rhetoric against marginalized people."
The LCPS did not respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.