Brodigan - May 20, 2021 at 12:54PM
Liberals have an unhealthy obsession with exposing children to drag queens. It's bad enough when it's adults choosing to sign up their kids for sexually suggestive story time. Or hiring a queen to give a horrified little girl a chair dance at a family party. That's between you, your kid's therapy bills, and God willing, child protective services. It's different when it's New York City (imagine that) hiring drag queens and broadcasting them into your homes through remote learning.
This is what's available via "Let's Learn," made possible in part through public television, the New York City Board of "Education," and unwilling taxpayers like you. Here's Daily Caller with the scoop:
A children's show on PBS featured drag queen and author "Little Miss Hot Mess" singing, dancing, and reading a book about drag queens to an intended audience of three to eight-year-olds.
"I think we might have some drag queens in training on our hands."
To kids ranging from pre-K to third grade. Let that simmer in your noggin for a bit.
The episode is part of the series “Let's Learn," a public television series produced in partnership by PBS member station WNET and the New York City Department of Education, WNET spokeswoman Lindsey Horvitz told the Daily Caller News Foundation.
WNET claims only a few people have complained since the program has been available. Unsurprisingly, the New York City Department of "Education" did not respond to the Daily Caller's request for comment. Yes, "Education" should always be said with finger quotes.
A common excuse for this is "people dress up in costume and read to kids all the time." Find me a single person — man, woman, or zi — who dressed up as the Cat in the Hat and twerked for children while reading "Oh, the Places You'll Go." When I dressed up as Ronald Reagan to give a grade school book report, I didn't replace "well, there you go again" with a few bars off "Push It." We're not talking about a dude dressing up like Elsa and reading a story about Olaf getting a library card. We're talking about a sexually suggestive act that is meant to be sexually suggestive and pushing it on children under the age of ten. All with the full endorsement of the New York City government.
This would be every bit as offensive if instead of a man dressed as a woman, it was a woman dressed like a woman doing the same act to the same kids. If you'd be okay with that as well, the problem is you.
Looking for a fashionable way to support Louder with Crowder? Get your swag at Crowdershop today!
from Steven Crowder Says