


Monday, I laid out the initial events surrounding a student whistleblower at Texas A&M University who exposed gender extremism in a children's literature lecture. (Get caught up with the scandalous details by clicking here.) Since that time, I have conducted research on the major public university systems in Texas, and what I found is astonishing. Texas A&M is just the tip of the iceberg.
When the trans folks arrived in Austin earlier this year to protest an incoming legislature that was bent on keeping men out of women's sports and predators in skirts out of girls' bathrooms, they held signs that read, "It was never about the bathrooms." Now, those chickens have come home to roost. Their fight was never about freedom to pee next to the gender of your choice, but to indoctrinate the masses who would then forfeit enough power to make a difference.
We see this struggle over and over in capitols across the United States. Sometimes the evidence is obvious, with drag queens reading stories of a misgendered crayon that finds its true identity with the help of a friend. (Grooming, anyone?) Sometimes, though, the devil is in the tangled web of university course catalogue details. This is where I have spent a few hours this week, combing through the files most academic advisors wouldn't expect anyone to actually read if they're not a current student.
Both President Trump and Gov. Abbott prohibited tax dollars from funding ridiculous initiatives, from Critical Race Theory to Gender Dysphoria. Alas, this indoctrination continues anyway, as evidenced in the 2025-2026 course catalogues. Republican Texas State Representative Brian Harrison of Ellis County (immediately south of Dallas) said in an X post:
It appears, dear reader, that Harrison might be correct. Below are selected course offerings from state-funded universities. What do you think?
$320,359,827 revenue from State of Texas sources
Recommended: Texas A&M: Gender Ideology Should Be in Children's Literature
This is by no means an exhaustive search or a complete financial audit of these universities. There are other state-funded higher education entities across the Lone Star State. That being said, the data collected here represents $1,705,146,429 in taxpayer funding.
Texans should be outraged. Americans should be outraged. As the Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division has already found, this problem is rampant.
Which course is the most obscene, in your opinion? Tell me in the comments. Did you go to one of these schools? Do you give money to them?
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