Cartoon Network celebrates "Trans Day of Visibility" with comics teaching kids to use preferred pronouns
· Apr 2, 2023 · NottheBee.com

Here's example numero 50 billion that they really ARE coming for your children.

Cartoon Network celebrated "Transgender Day of Visibility" on Friday, posting on Twitter that "[a]ddressing someone using their pronouns and name shows that you RESPECT them as their authentic self."

"We celebrate the journey of our trans and gender-non-conforming friends on this #TransgenderDayofVisiblity," Cartoon Network said on Twitter.

The post included a video with several comic strip panels, made in collaboration with the National Black Justice Coalition (NBJC).

"NBJC is excited to announce the latest installment in our ongoing collaboration with Cartoon Network: this comic strip highlighting the power and importance of respecting gender identity through the use of gender pronouns," NBJC's said on its website. "This new comic strip is timely and important in its ability to increase awareness about pronouns and how to use them."

Ladies and gentlemen, I think we might have found Satan's favorite comic strip of 2023!

"Examples of pronouns are she/her, they/them, and ze/zir," the first panel reads.

"We can't tell someone's gender just by looking at them, and shouldn't assume we know. There are many gender identities beyond 'girl' or 'boy.' Some people don't identify as any gender!"

They want your child to deny what is obvious and true. Deny reality to its face. Deny God to His face.

They want your child to be convicted that they are WRONG to assume they know whether someone is male or female based on the obvious indicators that someone is male or female.

They want your child to believe in a God-less world where there are MANY gender identities beyond girl or boy, and one does not have to identify as ANY of them!

"Wow! I thought there was only she/her and he/him," one character says in the second panel.

They want your child to identify with this character because she says normal things like this. They want your child to feel like he or she needs to open their mind like this character.

"When people use my pronouns, I feel respected, safe, and included," another character says in the second panel.

"Yes! Your pronouns reflect... You! I've learned something new today," one character replies in the second panel.

Notice how the writers slipped that "I feel ... safe" in there, which implies that if you DON'T use someone's preferred pronouns then you are dangerous to "trans people"!

"Wow! It's a relief to know people who affirm who I am," one character says in the third panel.

"Using someone's pronouns shows respect," the final panel reads with five characters, including three that have "they/them" pronouns about their heads. "We all need to be seen and loved for who we are!"

It's not respectful or loving to affirm someone's madness. It is hateful.

To teach children to do so is shameful.

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