Friday, October 18, 2019

LGBTQP Cereal

Kellog's has introduced an "LGBT themed" All Together Cereal. The campaign includes a $50,000 pledge to GLAAD for "LGBTQ advocacy work." So if you love breakfast, and also corporate sponsored gay propaganda, there is now a cereal just for you. (For more, see the Newsbusters article on the subject.)

When I was a kid, Saturday Night Live created a sketch called Schmitt's Gay, a commercial for a fictional gay-themed beer, with a Phil Hartman voiceover that began, "if you have a big thirst, and you're gay..." The ludicrous concept had the audience in an uproar and become a well-known gag.

We like to point out that yesterday's satire is today's reality, but this goes far beyond what prior satirists would have considered to be funny. Beer is inherently an adult-themed product, since it can only be legally consumed by adults. Kellog's has gone far beyond sexualizing an adult product and is marketing sexuality to children using cartoon characters.

The big push now is to normalize gay indoctrination of children. It's everywhere: in schools, in libraries, and in children's products. States such as Illinois have made "gay history" mandatory for all schoolchildren, and nationwide they are making October into Gay History Month. Yes, they already have June as Gay Pride Month, but that falls inconveniently outside the school calendar, so an additional month is being added. Gay history is a fictional subject; it is merely the promotion of homosexuality wrapped in the veil of academic credibility. For instance, there is some debate amongst historians that Alexander the Great may have had a relationship with a male assistant. By and large, no one cares. Alexander made history because he forged an empire of unprecedented scope at an early age - not because of whatever alleged sexual proclivities he may have had. There is no such thing as gay history, only history.

Just yesterday, someone told me of a mutual acquaintance who took his 12-year-old niece to the annual Gay Pride Festival in our town's public square. At one point, the child declared "I'm gay! I'm gay!" This, mind you, is in a red city in a red state. There are increasingly few safe places left for children to just be children. Not in schools, not in conservative town squares, and now not even in the cereal aisle.

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