


Over the weekend, Joe Biden took to the White House lawn to celebrate Pride Month — ostensibly celebrating sexual minorities like me, a bisexual.
And how did one of the invitees, trans activist Rose Montoya, respond?
She promptly removed her top in front of onlookers, exposing and juggling her fake breasts alongside other trans activists who did the same.
It was shocking and disgusting.
But sadly it was not surprising.
Thirty years ago, the argument by folks in the gay, lesbian, and bisexual community was that we wanted to be accepted.
That meant things like serving in the military without fear of discharge.
Or to rent a home or have access to health care without fear of discrimination.
We wanted equality.
In fact, Equality was in the name of the March on Washington in 1993 for Lesbian, Gay and Bi Equal Rights.
One of the marchers captured that era well. “We want to be left alone, to just be ourselves. We’re just like everybody else in America.”
And that was a powerful argument. We didn’t want special rights. No special demands. Just basic equality, decency, and liberty.
It was a cause worth fighting for. But decades later, tolerance is not enough — radicals have insisted on forced promotion.
We see it in the nation’s gay activist groups, like the Human Rights Campaign.
For instance, HRC operates a “Corporate Equality Index” that tells businesses how they must comply with their queer demands to get a good ranking from the organization.
If not, a business loses equality points — and their reputations.
They even tell businesses what products they must sell in order to be in their good graces.
In other words, the goal isn’t equality or decency. It’s to steal the liberty and voices of others if they don’t comply. To silence dissent and debate.
Meanwhile, LGBT radicals like Dylan Mulvaney claim that if you use the “wrong” pronoun with a trans person, that should be an actual crime.
But perhaps most distressing are the efforts by radical activists to target the one group of people that should be off-limits: children.
There’s an activist group called The Transition Closet operating in some US school districts where kids who are allegedly curious about being transgender are told to go into a closet, disrobe, and change into opposite gender clothes.
Then, at the end of the day, they change back into their normal clothes their parents put them in — and, critically, teachers are not allowed to tell the parents about the experiment.
That’s not about equality. That’s just creepy.
But perhaps most horrifying is the targeting of disabled children.
According to analysis shared by National Public Radio, people who identify as transgender or “non-binary” are six times more likely to have autism.
In fact, two leading trans psychologists — Dr. Diane Ehrensaft and Dan Karasic — have said that autistic kids make up “an astonishing percentage” of their trans patients.
Indeed, Karasic has said, “Anyone who is doing gender work sees a lot of people with autism spectrum disorder . . . more than expected, for reasons we don’t know.”
That should cause a degree of alarm or pause within both the medical community and LGBT world. According to the CDC, people with autism suffer from, amongst other ailments, delayed cognitive and learning skills. They fixate and obsess. They can be impulsive.
In other words, autistic kids who identify as trans may not be trans at all.
But these “trans-affirming” doctors, psychologists, and their parents are indifferent to logic and reason. Autistic children go on puberty blockers, under the knife, and have life-altering injections of cross-sex hormones.
That is horrific. And outrageous. Every sane person knows that children — autistic or otherwise — cannot understand nor consent to this kind of experimentation. But especially the disabled.
And yet it continues. Embraced by the modern queer community.
So that’s why, for me, this moment in American history is the stuff of nightmares. It’s not what so many of us fought for 30 years ago. We wanted equality. Liberty. Decency.
But that’s no longer the case. LGBT activists now embrace submission. Censorship. Prosecution of opponents who might use the “wrong” pronoun.
They embrace the experimentation on and mutilation of children, including disabled children.
Meanwhile, they disgrace the White House lawn with pornography. They aren’t helping the movement. They are shaming it.
It’s a revolting and monstrous conclusion to a movement I no longer recognize.
And that’s why this Pride Month offers no pride at all.
Instead, June is a month to mourn what we have become. And reject it.
Bryan Dean Wright is the host of The Wright Report news podcast and former Operations Officer at the CIA.