The Washington Post opinion section has come out in favor of incorporating pornographic books in grade school, disguised as “LGBTQ+” education.
It is no secret legacy media leans radically liberal with its viewpoints, but the Washington Post opinion section has been progressively spreading radical ideologies disguised as “Women’s Rights” and “LGBTQ+” allyship.
The debate over including certain books in school libraries has shown increasing concern over the last few years. Activist groups and teacher unions have been working tirelessly to ensure certain books including Gender Queer and I Am Jazz remain in classrooms.
Over the summer, the battle of incorporating inappropriate books to school summer reading lists brought the Post to defend certain books, underplaying the pornographic imagery displayed in the picture books.
“Part of me is like, ‘Wow, people are really putting all this emphasis on picture books?’” said Kaylani Juanita, who illustrated When Aidan Became a Brother, which features a transgender protagonist. The title was the second most-challenged picture book identified by The Post. “They’re treating these books like weapons.”
The nationwide push received attention from senators including Sen. John Kennedy from Louisiana, who read passages from the Gender Queer book and All Boys Are Blue in front of Democratic witnesses whose states “defend the indefensible.”
Sen. Kennedy reads passages from pornographic books Genderqueer and All Boys are Blue.
The Illinois Sec. of State Alexi Giannoulias responds by saying "those words are disturbing coming from your mouth."
His state's new law stops parents from being able to remove it from… pic.twitter.com/eDehdhctQL
— Greg Price (@greg_price11) September 12, 2023
“The main thing was it was very clear that the senator picked the one page out of a 240-page book that he thought would be the most shocking,” Gender Queer author Maia Kobabe told the Post. “And it’s interesting he chose to read the words without showing the images.”
We thought it would be best to share the more “salacious” of images:
The writer of the Washington Post article says that they’d recommend this book to minors who are “looking into chest binding.”
Publications like the Washington Post as well as transgender activists argue that keeping these books in the classroom will help navigate a child’s journey of discovery within their own self-identified gender.
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