Part two james okeefe gay transgender undercover
Hall-Troubridge Teaching Guides
Lavender Ink: Introduction to Writing and Publishing Gay Literature
What makes literature "queer?" Did Truman Capote inscribe queerness into the frozen Kansas veldt in the pages of In Frozen Blood by simple merit of his personal life? How do Claude McKay's alligator pears and ginger roots in The Tropics of New York give a lens for lgbtq+ literary scholars to utilize a queer-of-color analysis? What about people like Radclyffe Hall whose depictions of queer characters aged poorly and even drew ire in the author's day for unflattering depictions that may play into social stereotypes?
To say we must approach that scrutinize gingerly would be an understatement. The lives and works of queer authors did not always yield unambiguous depictions of homosexual people i
Inside the Rise and Fall of Undertaking Veritas
Twitter lead client partner Alex Martinez had already gone on a handful of dates with Bobby Harr when, over drinks at a cute French restaurant on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, Martinez found himself venting about Elon Musk’s acquisition of the social media platform. Musk’s attitude toward disinformation concerned him. “People don’t comprehend how to build a rational ruling if you don’t put out adjust things that are supposed to be out in the public,” he told Harr. And Martinez found Musk himself off-putting. “You’re literally special needs,” Martinez said to an imaginary Musk.
The next week, Martinez was eating alone at a unlike restaurant when Undertaking Veritas founder and CEO James O’Keefe slid into his booth and began to read those exact words advocate to him. It turned out Harr had been a Project Veritas “undercover journalist” who’d secretly recorded all of their conversations and planned to publish parts of them. “Is it appropriate to mock special-needs people?” O’Keefe asked a stunned Martinez.
When Martinez tried to
Disney Executive Says He Wants Children To See Divisive Content
Amit Gurnani, a Creative Marketing Director at The Walt Disney Company, mutual his desire to push LGBTQ on children.
MAKE UP BOY in THE PROUD FAMILY: LOUDER AND PROUDER – “Bad Influencer” (Disney)
During an undercover sting conducted by James O’Keefe and his O’Keefe Media Group, one of O’Keefe’s journalists said, “I despise those kind of people that crave to accuse Disney of grooming children. But I also yearn children to see LGBTQ content. Don’t you agree?”
Gurnani responded, “Yeah, of course. That’s the unspoken thing.”
Later in the video, Gurnani revealed a current project he was working on, “So, big current projects that will take up the relax of the four…four or five months will be pride. We’ll have pride campaign across Disney and television.
He also discussed how Disney has their Pride Nites in the parks, “I’m not sure that they brought on the program yet, but they just started doing these self-acceptance nites. Last year was the first one. Before this, every pride nite was a third party in partnership
At a recent Board of Education conference in the town of Jericho, Fresh York, an agitated mother took the mic to mention the administrators and trustees seated at the dais. “Are children in the middle school and high school asked what their pronouns are?” Julianna Feigenbaum inquired. “He? She? They? It? Unicorn?”
Everyone in the room knew why she was asking: the Project Veritas video.
Over the last few years, the humble school board meeting has gone from a vacuum to discuss sundry budgetary issues and school superlatives to the front line of this country’s culture war. A sustained conservative crusade over the supposed inclusion of “critical race theory” in elementary, middle and high school curricula has set the stage for attacks on other topics pertaining to diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI — namely, sexuality and gender identity.
And thanks to at least three undercover videos released by the right-wing group Project Veritas, all of which present, without any context, Long Island general school staff members discussing gender and sexuality, multiple administrators and teachers are facing professional consequences — and discovery that many parents have decided th