I checked her reading list. Apart from a few decent novels - The Old Man and The Sea, Middlemarch, North and South, Daniel Deronda etc (mostly from the 19th century) and some practical home making stuff, the rest is mostly propaganda. There is nothing with even a tiddly bit of science in it. I suppose such things are not for Christian ladies, though Caroline Herschel might have disagreed.
She cites the Paluxy River fraud as real, which I'm told even Ken Ham warns against, then we have Nepthilim and alien abductions.
There's a recipe for toothpaste, which would make a useful product, but at what cost for the oregano oil? How does the commercial product compare for price and performance once you have bought the ingedients for the home made material?
No sign of hard science for her 7th grade home schooling curriculum, it's all "nature study", no doubt avoiding any mention of evolution.
The we have her arguing whether the rapture is pre-trib or post trib.Oh dear, Candy, my mother described it as "this silly rapture business." And of course, Candy is anti-Catholic, as expected.
She ticks all the boxes.
Admitting that the Chelyabinsk event might be a rock from space disturbs the world of rose tinted delusion.