By Bill Donohue, Catholic League President
When men with fake female breasts appeared half naked on the White House South Lawn on June 10, President Biden’s press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, said the crude stunt—in full view of children—“was not a normal thing that has happened under this administration.” It took her three days to say this.
While it may
not be normal for this to happen at the White House, it is not unusual for gay
and trans persons to engage in obscene activities, even to the point of going
fully naked in public at LGBT celebrations. It’s been going on for decades. In
short, why was the White House surprised that some would act up, even at a
presidential event?
At the
largest White House Pride event in history, Biden was not only there, he had a
video prepared for the outing. “Happy Pride Month! Happy Pride Year! Happy
Pride Life!” It doesn’t get more effusive than this.
Biden told
the LGBT attendees that they were some of the “bravest and most inspiring
people” he has ever known. One of those “brave and inspiring” persons was a man
who calls himself Rose Montoya. After posing for a picture with the president,
he exposed his large fake female breasts. He could be heard saying, “Are we
topless at the White House?”
The Sunday
before the White House Pride party, West Hollywood featured the California
Pride parade. It was advertised as a “family-friendly” event. Brad Polumbo, a
gay writer, said onlookers “were treated to a public sex display during the
event’s parade.” To be specific, “a man clad in ‘dominatrix’ gear choked and
whipped another man, scantily clad, to a cheering audience.”
The
venerable Washington Post loves stuff like this. “Yes, Kink Belongs at Pride,”
the headline said. The author added, “And I want my kids to see it.” Not to be
outdone, she celebrated “the fact that her elementary school teacher saw a man
in a ‘leather thong’ get ‘spanked playfully by a partner with a flog.’”
Meanwhile,
the august New York Times, which is now a quasi-gay newspaper, was touting to
its readers the best gay and trans books for summertime reading. But they
weren’t just books that had gay and trans characters. No, the headline boasted,
“Six L.G.B.T.Q. Graphic Novels for Your Pride Month Reading List (my italic).”
Was it really necessary to say the books contained “graphic” material? Everyone
knows that’s what the target audience
demands.
Every year
San Francisco hosts the Folsom Street Fair, usually at the end of September.
The big gay event typically features fully naked men in the street beating each
other with chains and other metal devices. This goes on every year.
In 2012, San
Francisco got so upset with naked men sitting next to children in public places
that they banned nudity in public. But they made one exception: homosexuals
were permitted to go naked at the Folsom Street Fair and other events. So even
their elite friends admit there is something weird and impulsive about these
people.
It’s what
they do. It’s who they are.
These gay
and trans persons prove every year that they are not like the rest of us. In
fairness, they are also not like most members of their so-called community, but
I hasten to add that they are not a tiny minority, either. Not a gay pride
parade goes by without some men wearing underwear or jock straps—if that—making
these parades fundamentally different from the myriad of racial and ethnic
parade celebrations that take place across the country.
No matter,
why anyone should be shocked in 2023 about behaviors like these is the real
story. But it looks like the White House is the last to get the memo.
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