Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Selling Gender Ideology to Children

 By Gretchen Garrity

"The transgender movement is inherently political." --  Christopher F. Rufo                                                                                                    

Below is a 12-minute documentary By Christopher F. Rufo that details the Marxist and transhumanist agenda behind gender ideology. 


The books below, all in our Christian County Library system, promote gender ideology to children as young as 2.9 years up to 8 years of age. The links take you to where they are located in our library system. These books are by no means the only ones in the Christian County Library. To neo-Marxists, childhood innocence is a patriarchal social construct, something to be exposed and destroyed.

Born Ready

Description: "Just before his fifth birthday, Penelope lets his mother know he is a boy and, with her support and his ninja powers, faces the rest of his family and his classmates. Drawn from the author's memoir, The bold world."



 When Aidan Became a Brother

Description: "Aidan, a transgender boy, experiences complicated emotions as he and his parents prepare for the arrival of a new baby."

 

 It Feels Good to be Yourself  

Description: "A picture book that introduces the concept of gender identity to the youngest reader from writer Theresa Thorn and illustrator Noah Grigni. Some people are boys. Some people are girls. Some people are both, neither, or somewhere in between. This sweet, straightforward exploration of gender identity will give children a fuller understanding of themselves and others..."

 

 Jack Not Jackie

Description: "Susan loves her baby sister, Jackie, but as Jackie grows older and behaves more and more like a boy Susan must adjust to having a brother, Jack, instead."

      

 Sparkle Boy 

Description: "Three-year-old Casey wants what his older sister,   Jessie, has--a shimmery skirt, glittery painted nails, and a sparkly bracelet--but Jessie does not approve. After two boys tease Casey about his appearance, Jessie evolves to a place of acceptance and celebration of her gender-creative younger brother."

 

1 comment:

  1. Great information. I wonder if parents would still want an all access library card for their children knowing these books are put in there areas?

    ReplyDelete