Finally, we are seeing some pushback. In North Carolina, a public library board was disbanded for pushing transsexual indoctrination on little kids.
The Blaze reports:
The controversy involved the “Call Me Max” book that tells the story of a girl asking teachers to refer to her by her chosen identity rather than the biological reality.
The board in Randolph County had reviewed the book and found that it fit within the county’s guidelines in October.
No one who attempts to undermine the sanity of impressionable children so as to groom them for a twisted realm of sexual depravity should be in a position to determine what books are made available to them. Consequently,
The nine-member library board was then disbanded by the Randolph County Board of Commissioners by a vote of 3-2.
The North Carolina Values Coalition responds:
“‘Call Me Max,’ recommended for 5- [to] 9-year-olds, teaches children that their parents may be wrong about their gender and that their gender is actually whatever they feel it is.”
As NCVC notes,
“Planting this lie in a child’s mind at a young age can lead them down a harmful path of social and medical transitioning.”
That would be the point.
Now for the bad news. The book’s author Kyle Lukoff, a transsexual, is not happy.
No worries, Kyle. There are plenty more liberal social engineers for the next library board — even in Randolph County, which Trump won by nearly four votes to one. Keeping them from corrupting children will require constant vigilance.
On a tip from Eddie_Valiant.
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