Pastor Rob McCoy, who has stood beside Charlie Kirk and helped shepherd a generation of conservative activists, gave an urgent wake-up call that every freedom-loving parent should hear. McCoy has been a visible spiritual leader for Turning Point Faith and a familiar voice at memorials and rallies, and when a man like him warns that our children have been “raised by Caesar,” patriots must listen.
What McCoy means by “raised by Caesar” is painfully plain: a generation shaped more by secular bureaucracies than by moms and dads, more by woke curricula than by Judeo-Christian truth. For years left-wing education policy and cultural elites have treated schools like political factories, not places to teach reading, writing, and the moral anchors that made this nation great. The result is a yawning moral vacuum—one the church and families must fill immediately.
Don’t wait for Washington to save your children; the fight starts at the school board, the PTA meeting, and the kitchen table. McCoy’s blunt demand—that believers stop outsourcing their duty to strangers in government and instead take responsibility for their local schools and communities—should inspire every conservative to get involved. If you care about decency, common sense, and the truth, showing up at school board elections is not optional, it’s patriotic duty.
This is not mere culture-war rhetoric; it is a strategic call to reclaim institutions from ideologues who swapped education for indoctrination. Conservatives have let civic institutions drift while arguing over national politics, and now we’re watching the consequences play out in our children’s classrooms. Rebuilding begins close to home: recruit principled parents, support teachers who teach honestly, and replace administrators who view schools as social laboratories for radical agendas.
The late Charlie Kirk made politics an on-ramp to faith for many young people, and McCoy has repeatedly reminded believers that the political won’t fix what the family and church must restore. That message—faith guiding action and families reclaiming authority—resonated across the movement at memorials and rallies where McCoy spoke plainly about spiritual renewal and civic responsibility. Now more than ever, conservatives must turn that talk into ballots, board seats, and everyday courage.
We are at a crossroads: either we cede another generation to bureaucratic Caesar or we stand up and rewrite the script with Godly, American values at the center. That means running for local office, volunteering in schools, and teaching children the truth about history, biology, and human dignity. The children in our custody are not political props; they are souls entrusted to our care, and protecting them is the truest expression of love for country and Creator.
Hardworking Americans should take Pastor McCoy’s warning as a call to action, not a sermon to be nodded at and forgotten. Roll up your sleeves, show up at the next school board meeting, and demand curriculum that teaches kids how to think, not what to think. If we reclaim our schools, churches, and communities now, future generations will remember us not as passive bystanders but as patriots who refused to let Caesar raise our children.

