


Chaya Raichik, the creator of the conservative Twitter account Libs of TikTok , is seeking new ways to advocate children’s safety against leftist activism in schools.
Raichik recently published her first children's book with Brave Books titled No More Secrets: The Candy Cavern , which will be released on March 14.
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“These activists want to sexualize kids and destroy childhood innocence and confuse the children about their identity,” Raichik told the Washington Examiner. "One of the ways that they do that is they try to sever the parent-child relationship and cause that division.”
Raichik said she hopes her book will instead be a tool to build up the parent-child relationship.
“Parents are, I think, the best advocate for their children,” Raichik added. “Parents know their children. The best parents have their children's best interests at heart, and that's the baseline that we, as a society, used to all agree on up until I feel like a couple of years ago.”
“These far-left activists are coming in with this new line of thought that parents who don't conform to to their ideology, and to their worldview, are bad somehow,” she continued. “And I think that's just really dangerous, and [I] think that it shouldn't be political, it shouldn't be partisan.”
Raichik also appeared on Fox & Friends Monday morning, sharing an excerpt from her book.
“Rose raised her hand. ‘Excuse me, Mr. Wooly, sir? I would love a sweet, but my parents told me I shouldn’t eat too much candy at once,’” the book reads. “‘No, no, no,' Mr. Wooly interrupted. 'Don’t worry, it’ll be fine! You should eat as much candy as you want! Your parents will never know; my class is a safe space.’ Mr. Wooly laughed evilly to himself.”
“Children are the people we have to protect at all costs,” Raichik said, adding that she hopes her book will give parents the tools to do that.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINERThe Libs of TikTok creator also teased the idea that No More Secrets could be just the beginning of her role as a children’s book author.
“It’s possible we'll do a whole line of books,” Raichik told the Washington Examiner. "I think we need to flood the market with good books that have good messages and positive messages for children.”