An 11-year-old Mainer confronted school board members. Knox Zajac read the smut available in the library to the Windham Raymond School Board’s meeting held on February 15. The book is titled “Nick and Charlie” and Knox checked the book out so that he could show it to his dad. The librarian had asked him if he wanted the more graphic version, but he decided that Smut light was good enough. Knox said the library had the book out on display.
The passage contains a graphic, blow-by-blow description of a sexual encounter between two boys. Literally. It also contained bad language. After Knox was finished, his father stepped up to the lectern.
Adam Zajac said:
“Listen to the parents. I will be more than happy to focus my time and effort to the security of my child and children in this school.”
“I will be a thorn in your sides. I just want you to be aware of what you’ve awoken.”
“The parents are here right now, and they’re speaking. And you need to listen and do something about it quickly. It should not take “four months” to remove books of this nature from a middle school library.”
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELLarry Lockman told The Blaze Saturday in a statement:
“The stone-cold indifference of school board members to 11-year-old Knox’s presentation was telling. In effect, they have enshrined a new state religion in Maine classrooms, in defiance of the First Amendment.”
Lockman served in Maine’s House of Representatives from 2012-2020. He is the president and the founder of the Maine First Project. Lockman is offering a training session in March in order to instruct parents on how they can fight back at the grooming of their children.
Knox, still at a tender-enough age that he mispronounced “library” without the final “r,” read a brief, sex-drenched passage from “Nick and Charlie” to school board members.
The passage contains a graphic, blow-by-blow description of a sexual encounter between two boys. The passage also contains profanity.
According to Lockman, the books the Zajac father-son duo addressed at the school board meeting are “smut” put forward by “porn pushers.”
“The bad news is that this sort of depravity is the rule rather than the exception in Maine’s dysfunctional K-12 government-run schools. Meanwhile, academic achievement has flatlined over the past decade and a half,” Lockman added.
Knox’s parents did not return TheBlaze’s request for comment in time for publication.
Watch Knox Zajac, Adam Zajac, and other community members address the school board below. Knox’s portion begins at 09:58.




















