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To the editor:
Singer Lady Gaga, always a mindless, unquestioning ally of the LGBTQ bloc, has "called out the hatred" directed toward annoying transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney. The great Lady, shocked by its vehemence, called it appalling.
Only the most proudly tolerant liberals, I suppose, are permitted to be so rabidly and fervently intolerant.
When someone puts themselves out there in a controversial position, they take the chance they'll get some disapproval. Mulvaney, 27, somehow, some way, was chosen to be the face of transgenderism in America. This shameless, attention-starved grifter has profited greatly from his con game.
Mulvaney, a biological male, of course, is the one with whose association Bud Light lost more than a billion dollars in sales in just a few months, and much more in reputation. He's also advertised Nike sports bras (even though he's built like an emaciated plank, and has no breasts) and, of all things, tampons. What actual use he, again, a biological male, might possibly have for those can best be left to (silent) speculation.
The whole idea is ridiculous, naturally, and my question is, who decided this guy would be the one? Why him? He was just another social media "influencer"--which is essentially the internet equivalent of being the weirdo who writes a lot of letters to the Editor (said I, with complete and ironic self-awareness).
There are "better", maybe somewhat more well-adjusted, less embarrassingly exaggerated transgenders than Mulvaney, who could perhaps better exemplify that comparatively still-microscopic population segment.
Two which leap to mind are Caitlyn (Bruce) Jenner, and Blair White, who is a professionally-diagnosed transgender from before the emergence of the present social media contagion, when objective standards still existed; when examination and testing were much more stringent and were, for that matter, required. Self-diagnosis is dangerously rampant, among those people.
Unfortunately for Jenner and White, however, both are rather reserved, interview and speak relatively reasonably and, especially in the case of White, dare to question the legitimacy of the present epidemic of transgenderism. They also disdain the coercive, bullying tactics of the transgender community. In short, they don't collapse in an emotional heap, if you don't use their preferred pronouns.
They're just not freakishly outrageous enough, to properly represent that freakishly outrageous community. Mulvaney, apparently, is.
Also, they both lean right politically -- so, y'know. No.
Myself, I never understood how Mulvaney got the contract for Bud Light, in the first place.
I mean, several times in videos, he stated that he "identifies" as a 12-year-old girl.
Now, the end goal of the whole transgender game, is for others to be emotionally blackmailed and bullied into uncritically accepting these sadly untreated lunatics as what they say they are. Mulvaney repeatedly said he was a 12-year-old girl. That being the case, he, at 12 years old, was nowhere near old enough to legally consume, let alone sell, alcohol. Right?
But as with many things, it is what it is, until it isn't. I suppose one can grow up rather quickly, for a big check.
Rob Denham
Weirton