Besieged by the tolerance bullies: If we’re ever to roll back this insanity we’re going to have to show some solidarity with the victims of homofascism and transfascism
Fifteen year-old Andraya Yearwood is fast
notes
Benny Huang (thanks for the link,
Maggie)
—really fast. This high school track star is so fast that he recently claimed the titles for the 100-meter and 200-meter dashes at the Connecticut state championship.
The secret to his success? He’s a boy who competes against girls.
That’s it. This kid “identities” as a girl and no one is willing to say
that he’s not. He runs against girls and beats them every time which is
quite fortuitous considering the fact that he would have placed last in the Connecticut state championships if he had been competing against other boys.
Andraya is not slight or effeminate. Anraya is not undergoing hormone
“therapy” and he has not had his member lopped off—not that any of
those things would render him female. He’s endowed with the physique of a
dude and he’s even got a mustache—albeit a cheesy high school mustache
but a mustache all the same. Andraya will likely return to the state
championships for the next three years and he will no doubt be
significantly stronger and faster than he is now which is already
stronger and faster than the girls he’s competing against. They don’t
have a chance.
“It feels really good,” he said. ”I’m really happy to win both
titles. I kind of expected it. I’ve always gotten first, so I expected
it to some extent… I’m really proud of it.”
Yeah, he’s really proud that he left a bunch of girls in his dust.
It’s no wonder he’s so proud—the media is predictably heralding this
fraud for his “courage.”
What’s perhaps most interesting about this story is the reaction of
the second place runner, Kate Hall, who is a devoted student athlete
from Stonington, Connecticut. As far as I’m concerned she was the real
winner of the 100-meter race and she has legitimate grounds to complain
about being robbed of that victory. Yet she refuses to air her gripes
publicly. Said Ms. Hall to the Hartford Courant:
“It’s frustrating. But
that’s just the way it is now … I can’t really say what I want to say,
but there’s not much I can do about it. You can’t blame anyone.”
She can’t say what she wants to say? She can’t blame anyone? Why not? Who’s going to stop her?
I think we all know the answer to that. Transgenderism is the newest frontier in
“civil rights,” the long awaited “T” in that LGBT acronym everyone’s
been using for about fifteen years. Every inch of progress that this
movement has made has been gained through intimidation. First, they soak
dissidents with shame, then they make them feel isolated, then they
bombard them with dispiriting propaganda. Their opponents are left
believing that they can do nothing to stop this movement’s inevitable
forward motion. They learn to keep their heads down and their mouths
shut. Nearly everyone sees that this is utter madness but no one will
stand up and declare that the emperor has no clothes.
Kristen Quintrall Lavin is a fairly good example of this. She’s the resident blogger at “The Get Real Mom”,
a blog about motherhood. This liberal, 30-something, West Coast mother
prides herself on being tolerant which might explain why she began her post
about a man she encountered in the ladies room at Disneyland by
assuring her readers that she’s not one of those “homophobic mothers
lashing out at Disney.” Transgender people don’t bother her at all, you
see.
Except when they’re in the bathroom with and her and her young son
and when they don’t look sufficiently feminine. The particular man who
wandered into the ladies room that day caused Ms. Lavin alarm because he
made no effort to adopt feminine accouterments; ergo, he must not have
been truly transgender. “Ok there is definitely a very large, burly man
in a Lakers jersey who just walked in here. Am I the only one seeing
this?” she thought.
Actually, she wasn’t the only one who noticed the man and she wasn’t the
only one who was distressed. But no one made a peep. She wrote: “We
were all trading looks and motioning our eyes over to him…like ‘What is
he doing in here?’ Yet every single one of us was silent. And this is
the reason I wrote this blog [post]. If this had been 5 years ago, you
bet your ass every woman in there would’ve been like, ‘Ummm what are you
doing in here?’, but in 2017? The mood has shifted. We had been
culturally bullied into silence. …” …
How satisfying it is to hear about a liberal getting a small taste of
her own bitter medicine. Now she knows what it feels like to be
“culturally bullied into silence,” something that I experience on a near
daily basis. It seems obvious that this incident at Disneyland was the
first time she had ever been on the receiving end of this kind of
silencing tactic and she clearly didn’t like it.
But her writing also makes clear that she’s accustomed to using the
same tactic against others. The lengthy disclaimer at the front end of
her blog post tells me that she still thinks it’s appropriate to label
and shun actual “homophobes” and “transphobes.”
… Still, it’s difficult to imagine this woman’s predicament without
sympathizing with her just a little bit. She makes a very good
point—that our culture has changed so rapidly in recent years that women
are now left feeling helpless when burly men enter their private
spaces. The women feel as if they have no backup because, let’s face it,
they don’t. Everyone’s been cowed into submission, including Disney and
probably including their husbands. Years ago that man in the Lakers
jersey would have been knocked upside the head with a dozen or so heavy
purses but these days that’s a “transphobic” “hate crime.” Literally. If a woman tried that today she would probably spend years in jail and have her face plastered all over MSNBC.
If we’re ever to roll back this insanity we’re going to have to show
some solidarity with the victims of homofascism and transfascism, which
are so inexorably linked that they cannot be separated. We’re going to
have to let people like Kristen Quintrall Lavin and Kate Hall know that
they are not alone. It would make all the difference in the world if
they knew that they wouldn’t be left to twist in the wind when the
bullies attack. People can’t be “culturally bullied into silence” when
their community has their back.
Consider for a moment how the Connecticut state track
championship might have played out differently if Kate Hall had known
that she had the support of her coach and her parents. I think she might
have told that reporter the truth—that an ineligible boy had stolen
what was rightfully hers. But that would mean that her parents and her
coach would have to have some courage too, which they clearly don’t. In
their defense, it’s probably more difficult for them to speak up because
they have jobs and can be fired. Going after people’s livelihoods is a favorite tactic of the homofascist Left.
So her parents and her coach would need to know that they too would
have the support of the community, particularly their employers, if they
were besieged by the tolerance bullies. And on and on it goes, moving
outward in concentric circles of mutual support away from the person who
needs it most.
But we don’t do that for each other. When someone says that a boy is a
boy is a boy, no matter how that boys feels about it, that person is
almost guaranteed to get pummeled. Too often we turn our backs on that
person lest we get pummeled too. Our silence enables them. And that is
why the bullies always win.
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