OK, full disclosure: I went to kindergarten. We had “show and tell,” snack time, reading time, and learned basic math too. Some things I never learned in kindergarten: how to hold up a liquor store, where to buy a gun, how to shoplift, and other illegal activities that would land me in front of a judge.
A Republican state representative from New Hampshire has voiced some unique kindergarten-based fears. State Rep. Bob Kingsbury told a Belknap County Convention meeting on Monday night that kindergarten programs leads to higher crime rates.
Kingsbury addressed the county convention Monday night during a discussion about building a new county jail in Laconia, New Hampshire, and why the inmate population in the state was rising. According to the Laconia Daily Sun, Kingsbury then revealed he had been working on a theory since 1996: he discovered that communities offering kindergarten had high crime rates, as opposed to surrounding towns without public kindergarten options.
“We’re taking children away from their mothers too soon,” Kingsbury told the crowd.
The Laconia Daily Sun also reports that Kingsbury has written to state representatives about his research before, but his efforts to ban mandated public kindergarten failed.








