This was a pretty decent op-ed, actually. It's about time that more mainstream media reporters paid attenton to the great work that MassResistance is doing to stop this madness.
By PETER ROWE -- SEP 15, 2019 | 8:01 AM
There are several ways to look at the "Drag Queen Storytime"
held last Tuesday in Chula Vista. Here's Tony Villafranca's view:
"They are going after the kids in their formative years with a
very aggressive agenda or ideology aimed at 3- to 8-year-olds," said
Villafranca, a South Bay real estate agent. "It is basically the
normalizing of that whole LGBT drag queen pedophilia lifestyle. This is
brainwashing."
For an alternate take, consider Lillian Faderman's view:
"It's children's entertainment," said Faderman, curator of
the San Diego History Center's recent exhibit on the area's LGBTQ legacy.
"I don't think drag queens are trying to convert children to a way of
life. Kids respond to its color and its charm and its funniness, and they are
entertained."
For years, drag queens have read picture books to young audiences in
public libraries. These sessions often prompt protests like the dueling rallies
seen outside Chula Vista public library's Civic Center branch last Tuesday.
Separated by barriers patrolled by police, the two camps confronted each other
with signs and slogans for hours.
"No hate. no fear," Storytime supporters chanted,
"everybody's welcome here!"
"We are praying for you," a protester responded over a
bullhorn. "Sodomy will never save you. Transgenderism will never save
you..."
Arthur Schaper said his group, MassResistance, wanted to shield
youngsters from "illicit entertainment."
"These are adult entertainers," said Schaper, a Torrance
resident and organizer of the self-described "pro-family activist
group." "It's not hateful to protect children. They have to stop
pushing this agenda, this false LGBT agenda, stop pushing this on the youngest,
most vulnerable members of our community."
They got everything that I said spot on. I was really grateful for this coverage.
Supporters counter that these programs are tailored to youngsters.
There's nothing sexual about the readings or readers, even if the latter are
decked out in flamboyant gowns and layers of glitter and mascara.
The gaslighting is unprecedented. We are talking about drag queens, sexually explicit entertainers, reading to children. There is nothing about any of this that is properly tailored for youngsters. Nothing at all.
"They are doing what they love," said Adrianna VillaseƱor,
10, who attended with her mother and little sister. "And loving what they
are doing."
When the library scheduled this presentation months ago, City Librarian
Joy Whatley anticipated some opposition. Still, she was unprepared for the
volume of calls, emails, picketers.
She should have known better, and the city of Chula Vista learned the hard way that the community did not want such filth in their city.
"I'm slightly overwhelmed," she said. "We didn't expect
this to be such a huge thing."
Still, she had no regrets: "We're diverse, we're inclusive, we
welcome all."
Sex offenders are welcome around children, too?
But was this the right venue for Barbie Q and Raquelita, last week's
readers? John Renison Jr., an aspiring Republican politician from the South
Bay, started a change.org petition calling for the library to cancel the event.
His text professed support for the LGBTQ community and "equal rights for
all citizens but this is something else. There's a fine line that's being
crossed!
This approach is all wrong. There is no such thing as an "LGBT community", and we should stop treating sexual perversions and natural and innate behaviors. Enough is enough!
"There is no reason to indoctrinate our children with these
ideals."
By the time the show started, 10 days after posting the petition,
Renison had 611 signatures.
While drag queen storytime is a recent phenomenon, male actors have
performed as women for centuries. From ancient Greece through Elizabethan
England, plays' female roles were traditionally played by men. In one form or
another, that custom endured almost into the present.
Men playing female characters is something completely different from drag entertainment. It is comparing apples to rotten oranges.
"In vaudeville, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, this
was very common," said Faderman, author "The Gay Revolution: The
Story of the Struggle," a 2015 history. "This was considered family
entertainment."
Julian Eltinge, a popular vaudeville female impersonator, later starred
in silent films. In his alter ego, the lovely and innocent "Vesta
Tilley," he became one of the era's highest paid actors. With his
earnings, he built a palatial Hollywood mansion, Villa Capistrano, and bought a
ranch in Alpine.
"Some of the highest paid drag queens in the past have identified
as heterosexual," Faderman said. "It has nothing to do with sexual
behavior. It has everything to do with entertainment."
But the whole Drag Queen Story Hour program is about normalizing sexual perversion like homosexuality. The book that the two drag queens read, "Julian is a Mermaid", has a picture of boy stripping down and putting on makeup. That is subtle pedophilia, to put it mildly.
While drag entertainers were widely accepted in their professional
roles, authorities frowned on cross-dressing when it occurred off stage. From
the mid-19th century until the close of the 20th century, many U.S. cities
forbade people from — to quote an 1848 Columbus, Ohio, statute — publicly
wearing "a dress not belonging to his or her sex." San Diego's ban
was on the books until 1998.
That ban should be restored!
Starting in the 1930s, though, nightclubs with floor shows featuring
men in drag opened in New York, San Francisco and other cities. San Diego's
Show Biz Supper Club began its 14-year run in 1968, while a successor, North
Park's Lips, is celebrating its 20th anniversary.
Today, the acts are a bit more risque than they were in the days of
chaste Vesta Tilley.
There you go! "Risque" is the word. There is no way that anyone can claim that that kind of trash has any right or reason being around children!
"Guests 16+ are welcome to enjoy dinner and (select) shows,"
the Lips web site notes, "but please — leave the kids at home!"
HOW ABOUT THAT! "Leave the kids at home!" That says it all, doesn't it?
Telling Stories
Chula Vista's presentation was dubbed "Drag Queen Storytime,"
to distinguish it from "Drag Queen Story Hour," a four-year-old San
Francisco-based international organization with a trademarked name. Story Hour,
its website says, "captures the imagination and play of the gender
fluidity of childhood and gives kids glamorous, positive, and unabashedly queer
role models.
What a crock! No one bought into it.
"In spaces like this, kids are able to see people who defy rigid
gender restrictions and imagine a world where people can present as they wish,
where dress up is real."
This year, Story Hour's San Diego chapter has hosted three sessions in
a private City Heights event space, You Belong Here.
"The response has been overwhelmingly positive," said
Alexandra Ott, the local chapter's organizer. "Every time the kids are
thrilled to be in an environment where someone is reading to them, and being
with other kids."
In contrast to the Chula Vista event, there were no protesters. Ott
credits this to the fact that the shows were not widely advertised.
Ott selected the drag queens from a list of local performers who had
already undergone background checks. This is a sensitive subject — earlier this
year in Texas, Mass Resistance reported that at least two Drag Queen Story Hour
performers were registered sex offenders.
"That made international news," Schaper said.
In Chula Vista, the performers did not undergo a law enforcement
background check. But like all volunteers coming to the library for fewer than
24 hours, they were subject to a level of scrutiny.
Well, well, well. And the mayor and city council in Chula Vista claimed unequivocally that the drag queens had received background checks. What fresh hell is this?
"We check their professional affiliations," City Librarian
Whatley said, "check references, talk to other librarians who may have
worked with them."
Whatley and her team also met with the Chula Vista Police Department.
"Just to have a safe family event," she said, "that's what we
are looking at."
While physical violence has never marred a Draq Queen Story Hour event,
these sessions can be emotionally bruising. In January, the Putnam County,
Tenn., library's meeting room was rented by the local Story Hour chapter. On
the scheduled day, entering the library meant passing a boisterous scrum of
protesters and counter-protesters.
"Children were in tears," said Phil Schaller, the library
director.
The parents who brought the children to the program should have been in a jail cell.
In Leander, Tex., an Austin suburb, the city council last month voted
to stop renting meeting rooms in the public library to any group. Among those
whose planned event was scotched: Drag Queen Story Hour. City officials
insisted the step was taken for financial, rather than ideological reasons,
reporting that this year's rental fees had amounted to $1,800, while security
had cost $20,000.
MassResistance was instrumental in stopping that program there, too.
Rival Camps
In Chula Vista, rival spiritual camps formed on either side of the
Story Time issue. More than 70 religious figures — from Methodist and Lutheran
ministers to Catholic priests and a Jewish rabbi — signed an open letter
praising the library's decision.
Those "religious figures" are not religious. They are apostate.
"It is clear that the opposition to this event is rooted in
homophobia, bigotry, xenophobia, and discrimination," the letter said.
"As faith leaders and people of faith, we believe that discrimination of
any kind is an affront to the core values of our faith, and strongly oppose the
use of faith as a weapon to threaten the future of events such as Drag Queen
Story Hours."
Instead of trying to defend the perverse notion that it was OK to have sex offenders or sexually explicit entertainers around children, they decide to hate the parents, the grandparents, the pastors, and other community leaders who opposed the program. What a shameful display of hate!
Several Pentecostal churches staked out the opposite position. At a
Sept. 4 rally on the steps of City Hall, Pastor Art Hodges of the South Bay
Pentecostal Church said he didn't object to parents taking their children to a
drag queen event. He objected to Story Time's site: a taxpayer-funded library.
"They're the parents, we're not protesting their right,"
Hodges told News10. "But they should do that privately, on their own time,
in their own place, on their own dollar."
(Days later, South Bay Pentecostal was vandalized, with the words
"Lucifer" and "Satan" painted on the exterior. At press
time, police had no suspects.)
So much for "Love is Love" and "Love Trumps Hate", right?
Sister Donatella Soul, a self-described "drag nun," countered
that Drag Queen Storytime needed to be held in a city facility. "It's
important, especially in civic spaces, for people in different communities to
have access," she said.
Libraries are increasingly open to once-ignored populations. The San
Diego Public Library, for instance, has an San Diego Public Library's LGBTQIA
Library Services Committee. (The letters stand for lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender, queer or questioning, intersex, and asexual or allied.) This June,
Pride Month, the library system issued "LGBT Pride" commemorative
cards.
Chula Vista has also been involved with the local LGBTQ community,
hosting a panel discussion of staffers from the San Diego Lambda Archives and
screening a "Pride Film" series.
Patrons, Whatley said, should be able to find a wide range of materials
at the library. In fact, Drag Queen Story Time was just one offering in a large
catalog of summer events promoting literacy: Spanish Storytime, Toddler
Storytime, Dog Days of Summer Storytime...
"And like any book or program we have," Whatley said,
"you have to opt in."
Or opt out. Schaper, the MassResistance organizer, said Chula Vista's
Drag Queen Storytime has been a powerful recruiting tool.
"It's grown considerably now, especially in the last month,"
he said. "The idea that drag queens are in the libraries is just so
horrific to them."
Yes, it has! MassResistance gained considerable attention and support for our efforts to stop the Drag Queen Story Hour madness in Chula Vista. We still have members of our San Diego MassResistance chapter who are ready to step in and do what needs to be done to stop this LGBT infiltration into the public square. The men and women from many church communities reached out to us and worked with us to alert the public and raise outrage about the program. Event after the event transpired on September 10, 2019, the San Diego MassResistance team continued to hammer the city council for allowing that disgusting program to take place at the main library.
They did a great job, and then the pandemic hit. Notwithstanding the problems which ensued, our MassResistance activists around the country and the world have worked with us, and we never stopped our push to stop the LGBT agenda and its militant miscreants.
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